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The Philippines is Building a New Naval Base in South China Sea

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October 8, 2013 — The Philippines is building a new naval base in the South China Sea amid growing tensions with China, Philippine officials told local and international media outlets for the first time last week.

The new naval base will be located on Oyster Bay, “a postcard-perfect cove on Palawan Island,” according toReuters. Oyster Bay is 550 km (340 miles) southwest of Manila, the Filipino capitol city, and just 160 km (100 miles) from the Spratly Islands, a fiercely contested area in the South China Sea.

Talking to Reuters about the Oyster Bay base for the first time last week, Commodore Joseph Rostum O. Peña, commander of the Philippines' western navy, said “It will be a mini-Subic,” a reference to the large air and naval bases the U.S. used to maintain in the Philippines before the parliament voted to expel Washington from the country in 1991. It was the United States’ largest military installation in Southeast Asia.

The Philippines is currently modernizing the Subic Bay Naval Base, which sits on the eastern side of the Philippines away from the South China Sea. The U.S. and the Philippines are currently negotiating a new bilateral agreement that will give U.S. naval forces greater access to Subic and other parts of the Philippines.

Oyster Bay, located on the western side of the Philippines closer to the South China Sea, is likely to be one of those places. Philippine President Benigno Aquino has approved initial funds of nearly US$11.6 million to construct the new base, which is expected to be ready by the time he leaves office in 2016.

Calling the base a “capability upgrade,” Peña told the local newspaper, The Inquirer, that the funding would come out of the US$1.8 billion President Aquino has vowed to spend on modernizing the Philippines’ Armed Forces before his term ends in 2016.

The Inquirer said that the Philippines was installing various radar outposts around the base to allow the military to better monitor events in the South China Sea.

“The coastal watch program should allow us eventually to monitor our seas in real time,” Peña said.

Once completed, the base should hold “at least four large naval vessels,” Peña told The Inquirer.

Two of these ships will likely be four-decade-old Hamilton-class cutters the Philippines has purchased from the U.S. in recent years. These are the largest ships in the vastly underfinanced Philippine navy.

Reuters said that the purchase of these two cutters was the proximate impetus behind President Aquino’s decision to reactivate old plans to transform Oyster Bay into a naval base. However, the report went on to say that the base would ultimately host U.S. naval and other military assets. Patrick Cronin, the director of the Asia-Pacific program at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), said that limited funding from the U.S. defense budget’s contingency funds could be allocated to help with the construction of the naval base at Oyster Bay, which experts estimate will cost well over the US$11.6 million dollars the Philippines has approved.

Reports that the U.S. will have access to the base are consistent with reports in Japan’s Kyodo News Service last month, which cited an unnamed Philippine maritime official as saying that U.S. Marines are building advanced command posts on Palawan Island to monitor the South China Sea.

“The plan is to station 50 to 60 American marines in Palawan as an advance command post in the region,” the official told Kyodo.

The report went on to say: “The officer said the 1.1 kilometer airstrip inside the reservation will be extended to 2.4 km to accommodate big U.S. military transport planes.”

The U.S. and Philippine militaries also conducted a mock amphibious landing in the area during recent joint drills.

One obstacle to the construction of the Oyster Bay base could be local opposition. Oyster Bay is rich in marine resources and Palawan Island locals tell reporters that the Philippines Navy has already prohibited them from continuing to fish in the area.


The Philippines is Building a New Naval Base in South China Sea | The Center for a New American Security
 
It seems that Threat issued by China every alternate day have become an amusement for the neighboring country of China. Few days back Taiwan said that it is ready to counter China. Vietnam navy fired on Chinese troops.
 
What are these Hindi trolls have to do with the South China Sea. This is Philippine-Chinese situation, not a situation where Indians can intervene without consent.
 
@Fsjal ain't you proud of it ??
 
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Please build more naval base. We are very scare right now. LMAO
 
Small ASEAN nations should change their strategy to counter China if they are serious. Their strength (military/economy) means nothing in front of mighty China
 
Comeon false flagging stop hiding behind another's flag. Pakistani don't you feel proud of your flag ?? ;)

I'm not a bloody Pakistani. I don't come from a poor, corrupt nation that's waiting to implode because of terrorism.

People like you are blind eyed.
 
I guess all upgrade financed by US military aid.
Don't devaluate any movement
 
Pinoy government selling their young girls to American soldiers like meat on a skewer.
 
October 8, 2013 — The Philippines is building a new naval base in the South China Sea amid growing tensions with China, Philippine officials told local and international media outlets for the first time last week.

The new naval base will be located on Oyster Bay, “a postcard-perfect cove on Palawan Island,” according toReuters. Oyster Bay is 550 km (340 miles) southwest of Manila, the Filipino capitol city, and just 160 km (100 miles) from the Spratly Islands, a fiercely contested area in the South China Sea.

Talking to Reuters about the Oyster Bay base for the first time last week, Commodore Joseph Rostum O. Peña, commander of the Philippines' western navy, said “It will be a mini-Subic,” a reference to the large air and naval bases the U.S. used to maintain in the Philippines before the parliament voted to expel Washington from the country in 1991. It was the United States’ largest military installation in Southeast Asia.

The Philippines is currently modernizing the Subic Bay Naval Base, which sits on the eastern side of the Philippines away from the South China Sea. The U.S. and the Philippines are currently negotiating a new bilateral agreement that will give U.S. naval forces greater access to Subic and other parts of the Philippines.

Oyster Bay, located on the western side of the Philippines closer to the South China Sea, is likely to be one of those places. Philippine President Benigno Aquino has approved initial funds of nearly US$11.6 million to construct the new base, which is expected to be ready by the time he leaves office in 2016.

Calling the base a “capability upgrade,” Peña told the local newspaper, The Inquirer, that the funding would come out of the US$1.8 billion President Aquino has vowed to spend on modernizing the Philippines’ Armed Forces before his term ends in 2016.

The Inquirer said that the Philippines was installing various radar outposts around the base to allow the military to better monitor events in the South China Sea.

“The coastal watch program should allow us eventually to monitor our seas in real time,” Peña said.

Once completed, the base should hold “at least four large naval vessels,” Peña told The Inquirer.

Two of these ships will likely be four-decade-old Hamilton-class cutters the Philippines has purchased from the U.S. in recent years. These are the largest ships in the vastly underfinanced Philippine navy.

Reuters said that the purchase of these two cutters was the proximate impetus behind President Aquino’s decision to reactivate old plans to transform Oyster Bay into a naval base. However, the report went on to say that the base would ultimately host U.S. naval and other military assets. Patrick Cronin, the director of the Asia-Pacific program at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), said that limited funding from the U.S. defense budget’s contingency funds could be allocated to help with the construction of the naval base at Oyster Bay, which experts estimate will cost well over the US$11.6 million dollars the Philippines has approved.

Reports that the U.S. will have access to the base are consistent with reports in Japan’s Kyodo News Service last month, which cited an unnamed Philippine maritime official as saying that U.S. Marines are building advanced command posts on Palawan Island to monitor the South China Sea.

“The plan is to station 50 to 60 American marines in Palawan as an advance command post in the region,” the official told Kyodo.

The report went on to say: “The officer said the 1.1 kilometer airstrip inside the reservation will be extended to 2.4 km to accommodate big U.S. military transport planes.”

The U.S. and Philippine militaries also conducted a mock amphibious landing in the area during recent joint drills.

One obstacle to the construction of the Oyster Bay base could be local opposition. Oyster Bay is rich in marine resources and Palawan Island locals tell reporters that the Philippines Navy has already prohibited them from continuing to fish in the area.


The Philippines is Building a New Naval Base in South China Sea | The Center for a New American Security


I don't know why the Scatlanders and bollywooddaydreamers are so happy about a 11 million USD military base. Good news news for the Phillipinos slumdogs who see where the money is going-to finance US military base for the US war mongerers. Anyway the Scatlanders and Phillipinos slumdogs would see the real military base China is building in Gwadar with assets worth billions USD and not a mere 11 millions USD. The Gwardar will house the indigeneous tye 052D destroyers, the 071 amphibious ships etc ready to help Pak to launch an attack on Scatland. :rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
@Fsjal @Pakchina

so sad to see that now trolls don't even bother to check the source..:disagree:
also,seeing garbage post which does contribute $h!t into this thread,I'm deciding to ask moderators to remove these posts with personal attack...
@Oscar @Aeronaut @WebMaster

can you help buddy??please watch the posts directing against me/Indians just for posting this article by myself..

I don't know why the Scatlanders and bollywooddaydreamers are so happy about a 11 million USD military base. Good news news for the Phillipinos slumdogs who see where the money is going-to finance US military base for the US war mongerers. Anyway the Scatlanders and Phillipinos slumdogs would see the real military base China is building in Gwadar with assets worth billions USD and not a mere 11 millions USD. The Gwardar will house the indigeneous tye 052D destroyers, the 071 amphibious ships etc ready to help Pak to launch an attack on Scatland. :rofl::rofl::rofl:


atleast they don't beg money from IMF to open it..

indigeneous tye 052D destroyers???? :cheesy: the 071 amphibious ships?? :laughcry: in Gwadar??? :rofl:
 
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