US warships are seen docked at Subic bay in Olongapo city, north of Manila.
Reuters/Manila
The Philippines will station new fighter jets and two frigates at the former US naval facility in Subic Bay from early next year, officials said, the first time the massive installation has functioned as a military base in 23 years.
Using Subic Bay would allow the Philippine air force and navy to respond more effectively to Chinese moves in the disputed South China Sea, security experts said. Subic Bay’s deep-water harbour lies on the western side of the main Philippine island of Luzon, opposite the South China Sea.
“The value of Subic as a military base was proven by the Americans. Chinese defence planners know that,” said Rommel Banlaoi, a Philippine security expert.
Once one of the biggest US naval facilities in the world, Subic Bay was shut in 1992 after the Philippine Senate terminated a bases agreement with Washington at the end of the Cold War.
Manila converted the facility, which was never home to the Philippine military, into an economic zone.
Defence undersecretary Pio Lorenzo Batino told Reuters the Philippine military signed an agreement in May with the zone’s operator, the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority, to use parts of the installation under a renewable 15-year lease.
US warships have called regularly at Subic Bay since 2000, but only to dock during exercises with the Philippine military or to use its commercial facilities for repairs and resupply.
Officials said once Subic Bay was a military base again, the US Navy could have much greater access to it under a year-old agreement that gives US troops broad use of local military facilities, although that deal is on ice after it was challenged in the Philippine supreme court.
Using Subic would be the latest Philippine military move to combat China’s maritime ambitions.
Besides beefing up security cooperation with the United States, Japan and Vietnam, the military plans to spend $20bn over the next 13 years to modernise its armed forces, among the weakest in Southeast Asia.
China, which claims nearly all of the South China Sea, said it was aware of reports of the arms buildup.
“We hope that the Philippines does more to benefit regional peace and stability,” the defence ministry said in a statement faxed to Reuters.
Two FA-50 light attack fighters made by Korea Aerospace Industries, the first among a dozen ordered last year, would be based at the former Cubi Naval Station in Subic Bay from early 2016, two Philippine generals told Reuters. The two planes arrive in December.
The full squadron of FA-50s would be based at Subic, as well as the 5th Fighter Wing, which would relocate from a rundown base in northern Luzon, said the generals, who declined to be identified.
Two naval frigates would be stationed at Subic Bay’s Alava Port.
The generals cited proximity to the South China Sea and the ease in making the base operational as reasons for the move.
“There are existing facilities in Subic Bay. We need only to refurbish them,” one officer said.
Since Subic Bay hasn’t functioned as a military base for more than two decades, it was not among eight locations the Philippine armed forces has said the US military could use under the stalled 2014 defence deal.
The Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement would allow the US military to deploy at Philippine bases for longer periods than under existing accords as well as build barracks and facilities for logistics purposes.
The agreement has been frozen since left-wing politicians challenged its constitutionality last year. The supreme court is expected to issue a ruling in the coming months.
“(Subic) could be one of the locations ... under the Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement,” Batino said.
The Pentagon has said there were informal talks about Philippine base locations but that no plans would be implemented until the Supreme Court issues a ruling.
Security experts noted that Subic Bay is only 145 nautical miles from Scarborough Shoal, which China seized from Manila in 2012 after a three-month standoff with the Philippine navy.
The disputed Spratly islands, where China is building seven man-made islands, some with military facilities, lie further to the southwest of the shoal.
China might one day also turn Scarborough Shoal into an artificial island, which could make it harder for the Philippines to protect its 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone off Luzon, said Patrick Cronin, a regional expert at the Center for a New American Security in Washington.
“New Korean-built light fighter aircraft could reach Scarborough Shoal in just minutes, and maritime patrol aircraft or drones could eventually provide persistent coverage of Chinese movements in the area,” Cronin said.
“A return to Subic Bay, this time led by the Philippine air force, would seem to be a prudent defensive response.”
Defence department spokesman Peter Galvez said, “It’s location is very strategic.” “If we need to deploy to the West Philippine Sea, it (Subic) is already there, we do not deny that. It’s a deepwater port.”
After the Americans left, the sprawling base about two hours’ drive north of Manila was converted into a trading zone and industrial hub with tax concessions for businesses who set up shop.
The Philippine military has recently leased back some of those facilities from the government authority that manages the business zone, presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma said.
Following a stand-off between Chinese ships and the weak Filipino Navy in 2012, China took control of a rich fishing ground called Scarborough Shoal that is within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone.
Subic Bay is 198km east of Scarborough Shoal.
The Philippines said Wednesday it was also repairing a crumbling ship serving as its lonely outpost in the disputed waters.
The move, which will ensure the rust-eaten World War II-vintage BRP Sierra Madre remains livable for a tiny unit of marines guarding Second Thomas Shoal, was lambasted by China, who branded the Philippines a “hypocritical troublemaker and rule breaker”.