Defense chiefs from US, Australia, Japan and Philippines vow to deepen cooperation

Soldiers participate in an airfield seizure exercise as part of the US-Philippines Balikatan joint military exercise at San Vicente Airport in Palawan on May 1, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 03 May 2024
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Defense chiefs from US, Australia, Japan and Philippines vow to deepen cooperation

  • Defense chiefs from the four nations held their first meeting in Singapore last year

HONOLULU: Defense chiefs from the US, Australia, Japan and the Philippines vowed to deepen their cooperation as they gathered Thursday in Hawaii for their second-ever joint meeting amid concerns about China’s operations in the South China Sea.
The meeting came after the four countries last month held their first joint naval exercises in the South China Sea, a major shipping route where Beijing has long-simmering territorial disputes with a number of Southeast Asian nations and has caused alarm with its recent assertiveness in the waters.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters at a news conference after their discussion that the drills strengthened the ability of the nations to work together, build bonds among their forces and underscore their shared commitment to international law in the waterway.

HIGHLIGHT

The meeting came after the four countries last month held their first joint naval exercises in the South China Sea, a major shipping route where Beijing has long-simmering territorial disputes with a number of Southeast Asian nations and has caused alarm with its recent assertiveness in the waters.

Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles said the defense chiefs talked about increasing the tempo of their defense exercises.
“Today, the meetings that we have held represent a very significant message to the region and to the world about four democracies which are committed to the global rules-based order,” Marles said at the joint news conference with his counterparts.
Austin hosted the defense chiefs at the US military’s regional headquarters, US Indo-Pacific Command, at Camp H.M. Smith in the hills above Pearl Harbor. Earlier in the day, Austin had separate bilateral meetings with Australia and Japan followed by a trilateral meeting with Australia and Japan.
Defense chiefs from the four nations held their first meeting in Singapore last year.
The US has decades-old defense treaties with all three nations.
The US lays no claims to the South China Sea, but has deployed Navy ships and fighter jets in what it calls freedom of navigation operations that have challenged China’s claims to virtually the entire waterway. The US says freedom of navigation and overflight in the waters is in America’s national interest.
Aside from China and the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei also have overlapping claims in the resource-rich sea. Beijing has refused to recognize a 2016 international arbitration ruling that invalidated its expansive claims on historical grounds.
Skirmishes between Beijing and Manila in particular have flared since last year. Earlier this week, Chinese coast guard ships fired water cannons at two Philippine patrol vessels off off Scarborough Shoal, damaging both.
The repeated high-seas confrontations have sparked fears of a larger conflict that could put China and the United States on a collision course.. The US has warned repeatedly that it’s obligated to defend the Philippines — its oldest treaty ally in Asia — if Filipino forces, ships or aircraft come under an armed attack, including in the South China Sea.
President Joe Biden’s administration has said it aims to build what it calls a “latticework” of alliances in the Indo-Pacific even as the US grapples with the Israel-Hamas war and Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

Beijing says the strengthening of US alliances in Asia is aimed at containing China and threatens regional stability.

 


Congo-Brazzaville president set to extend decades-long rule

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Congo-Brazzaville president set to extend decades-long rule

BRAZZAVILLE: At the age of 82 and after more than 40 years in power, Denis Sassou Nguesso is the clear favorite to win Sunday’s presidential election in Congo-Brazzaville.
With the opposition divided, sidelined and largely absent, observers say voter turnout could slump to a record low in the oil-rich but impoverished central African country.
Sassou Nguesso ranks as one of Africa’s longest-serving leaders, along with Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema and Cameroonian President Paul Biya.
“Honestly, I don’t see the point of voting on March 15. Whether I vote or not, we’ll have the same winner,” said Cyril Massamba, who lives in the capital Brazzaville.
Sassou Nguesso, a career military officer, first led Congo under a one-party system from 1979 to 1992 before losing the first multi-party elections to former prime minister Pascal Lissouba, whom Sassou Nguesso then overthrew in a civil war in 1997.
He has maintained a firm grip over the former French colony, which gained independence in 1960 and has traditionally maintained close ties with both France and Russia.
Six candidates are bidding to unseat him but few have the resources to compete with the ruling Congolese Labour Party (PCT).
The party’s red Soviet-style flags and giant Sassou Nguesso portraits have filled city streets since the campaign began.
Lacking broad support, opposition candidates have been unable to rally behind a single challenger.
The two main opposition parties have chosen not to stand, one of them arguing that conditions for a free and transparent election have not been met, and urging supporters to vote “according to their conscience.”
“Denis Sassou Nguesso controls the entire electoral process,” said Clement Mierassa, an opposition figure, former minister and previous presidential candidate.
He argued that all those running against the president were just placeholders.
Two prominent candidates who challenged Sassou Nguesso in the disputed 2016 election remain in prison, serving 20-year sentences for “endangering state security.”

- Turnout fears, unemployment -

“I’ll go to a polling station the day my own child is a candidate,” joked shopkeeper Monique Ouollo.
Sassou Nguesso has urged his supporters to turn out and vote in Sunday’s first round, telling a rally in Pointe?Noire: “No abstention!” No date has yet been given for a second round of voting.
But many young people in the port city voiced frustration over chronic unemployment and the lack of economic prospects in a country rich in oil and gas.
Despite GDP growth of 2.9 percent in 2025, about half the population of six million lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.
Congo-Brazzaville depends heavily on hydrocarbons, which account for more than three-quarters of export earnings.
Authorities say proven oil reserves will last another 25 years at current production rates and aim to reach 500,000 barrels a day by 2030.
Gas production reached three million tons of LNG last year.
Although it has 10 million hectares of arable land, only about four percent is farmed, mostly for low-yield subsistence crops.
The country imports much of its food, leaving households exposed to swings in global prices, shipping costs and exchange rates.
Officials hope Congo’s location — between the Congo Basin and the Atlantic Ocean — will help turn it into a regional trading hub, tapping existing rail and road networks to boost links with neighbors.

- Diplomatic balancing act -

At Sassou Nguesso’s first campaign rally last month, foreign paramilitaries were spotted on rooftops nearby, including a sniper.
Their presence fueled speculation about Russian mercenaries providing security, mirroring arrangements in the Central African Republic.
A ruling party official confirmed to AFP that the men were Russian personnel, without detailing their mission.
Seen as a relatively stable hub in a volatile region, Congo-Brazzaville retains close ties with Paris, its largest development aid donor, and is home to around a hundred French companies.
But Russia is also a longstanding partner: Congo was allied with the Soviet bloc from 1968 to the early 1990s.
Though Sassou Nguesso maintains tight control over the security apparatus, some of his allies acknowledge that fears of a power grab remain.
The president told AFP in an interview in early March that he does not intend to “remain in power forever.”