logo
Hegseth dangles second Typhon missile system for Philippines

Hegseth dangles second Typhon missile system for Philippines

Asia Times01-04-2025

MANILA – US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's visit to Manila brought a sigh of relief to his Filipino hosts and new cause for military concern in China.
Top Philippine officials and strategists have fretted for months about potential disruptions and possible downgrades in strategic relations amid signs of an isolationist turn in Washington's foreign policy under Donald Trump.
Last month, Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose Manuel Romualdez publicly warned that his country should actively prepare for the day when it can no longer rely on its century-old American ally.
The high-profile visit by the US defense chief, who will soon be followed by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has likely put those strategic doubts somewhat to rest.
During his courtesy call at the Malacañang Palace, Hagseth told Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr that President Trump sends his well wishes and 'thinks very fondly of this great country.'
Crucially, Hegseth underscored how both the US president and he 'want to express the ironclad commitment we have to the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) and to the partnership, economically, militarily, which our staffs have worked on diligently for weeks and weeks and months.'
In response, the Filipino leader praised how the visit was 'a very strong indication and sends a very strong message of the commitment of both our countries to continue to work together, to maintain the peace in the Indo-Pacific Region within the South China Sea.'
Beyond diplomatic niceties, Hegseth also announced crucial upgrades to bilateral military cooperation to 're-establish deterrence' in light of rising tensions between Manila and Beijing over contested territories in the South China Sea.
In particular, Hagseth announced the deployment of the Navy-Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System (NMESIS), a naval strike missile-equipped unmanned ground vehicle capable of striking targets up to 100 nautical miles away, for this year's edition of Philippine-US Balikatan exercise.
The US defense chief also announced the deployment of unspecified 'highly-capable unmanned surface vehicles' for planned joint drills in the South China Sea. He was likely referring to US-made Maritime Tactical Systems T-12 MANTAS and Devil Ray T-38 drones, which were used by American troops deployed to the Philippines earlier.
Moreover, special forces from both sides are also slated to conduct joint exercises in Batanes, the Philippines' northernmost province facing Taiwan. Despite the ongoing freeze on US overseas aid, Hagseth also reassured his hosts of the $500-million commitment in foreign military financing this year to help modernize the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).
The two sides also announced further improvements to military facilities used by rotational US forces in the Philippines under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).
'We will enhance our current EDCA locations and we will make improvements. Mind you, these are Philippine bases of which we have to invest in. We will enhance them for logistical support,' Philippine Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro Jr said during a joint press conference with his American counterpart.
Most crucially, in a move that will deliberately irk China, Hegseth's visit paved the way for the United States Indo-Pacific Command (Indopacom) to deploy a second mid-range Typhon Missile System battery to the Philippines for upcoming joint exercises.
The current Typhon system is capable of striking strategic targets within a 500 to 2,000-kilometer range, which means it could conceivably hit many of China's southern military bases. It was first deployed to the Philippines as part of joint exercises last year but was not removed after the drills were completed.
China has strongly protested the highly mobile system's deployment to the Philippines, claiming that the US is fueling a regional arms race. The Wall Street Journal noted it marked the first time since the Cold War that the US military has deployed a land-based launching system with such a long range outside its borders.
The Lockheed Martin-built system, which has four launchers, a battery operations center, modified trailers and prime movers, boasts a vertical launch system that utilizes Tomahawk and Raytheon-built Standard Missile-6 missiles.
In the event of a conflict in the South China Sea or neighboring Taiwan, the Typhon missile could counter China's famed 'DF' anti-cruise ballistic missile (ASBM) launchers.
Accordingly, the vaunted American medium-range mobile missile system provides a tremendous deterrence effect, especially if deployed on a large scale and across strategic locations in the Philippines.
'This is a welcome development for the Armed Forces of the Philippines. We can say that the more the merrier. So the more assets that we have, the more also that we are able to train more personnel on our part. So we accept this willingly,' AFP spokesperson Colonel Francel Margareth Padilla told reporters after the announcement of the potential deployment of an additional Typhon missile battery as part of joint exercises this year.
'We welcome events like this because this would help our personnel train faster. So we welcome if it will arrive,' Philippine Army spokesperson Colonel Louie Dema-ala said. Last year, Philippine officials welcomed the 'permanent' stationing of the weapons system in EDCA facilities and, down the road, even direct acquisition for the AFP.
The US Army's 3rd MDTF, headquartered in Hawaii, is also slated to soon receive its own Typhon battery, underscoring the growing importance of advanced missile systems in America's regional defense strategy.
'We're constantly looking for opportunities to exercise capability like that forward in theater…We learn enormous lessons by bringing capability into the theater,' Col. Michael Rose, the 3rd MDTF commander, told reporters recently.
Crucially, the US official confirmed that the Typhon deployment will undirgird Operation Pathways, a series of year-round exercises aimed at establishing an 'integrated deterrence' strategy with Asian allies to counter China's rising power.
Before Hegseth's visit, China hoped to steer the second Trump administration away from closer defense cooperation with Manila.
At a press briefing last week, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun warned the Philippines that 'nothing good could come out of opening the door to a predator [America]' and that those willing to be pawns in great power competition 'will be deserted in the end.'
China's statements came amid growing doubts about America's commitment to its frontline Asian allies, including the Philippines. The rise of isolationist figures in the Pentagon, the so-called 'restrainers', has been a great source of concern among America's traditional Asian allies, not least in Manila.
In an essay months ahead of his appointment as Pentagon's Southeast Asia chief, Andrew Byers, for instance, advocated for Washington to effectively abandon its Philippine ally in exchange for cooperative schemes with China to de-escalate tensions in the South China Sea.
A top US general also played into anxieties among Filipinos when he announced that the US forces would not conduct a live-fire operation of its the Typhon Missile System during upcoming exercises in the Philippines.
'We are not planning to conduct live-fire in the Philippines right now,' Major General Jeffrey VanAntwerp, deputy chief of staff of operations, plans and training at US Army Pacific, told reporters ahead of Hagseth's visit. His comments raised fears in Manila of potential retrenchment by the Pentagon in exchange for improved relations with Beijing.
But the US defense chief's visit and largely dispelled those worries as the Trump administration's plans for confronting China in the Pacific start to come into clearer view.
Follow Richard Javad Heydarian on X at @RichHeydarian

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Xi urges strategic linkup in call to S Korea's Lee
Xi urges strategic linkup in call to S Korea's Lee

RTHK

timean hour ago

  • RTHK

Xi urges strategic linkup in call to S Korea's Lee

Xi urges strategic linkup in call to S Korea's Lee Xi Jinping told Lee Jae-myung that their two countries should inject more certainty into the regional and international situations. File photos: Reuters President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday that China and South Korea should promote their strategic cooperative partnership to a higher level. He made the call over the phone with South Korean President Lee Jae-myung. China and South Korea should inject more certainty into the regional and international landscapes, Xi said, adding that the two countries should jointly safeguard multilateralism and free trade and ensure stable global and regional industrial and supply chains. "A healthy, stable and continuously deepening China-South Korea relationship aligns with the trend of the times," the president said. Xi added Beijing and Seoul should respect each other's core interests and concerns, and the two countries should deepen people-to-people and cultural exchanges. The call came after South Korea's new centre-left leader was elected in a landslide last week after winning a snap election triggered by his predecessor's disastrous martial law declaration. Seoul has long trod a fine line between top trading partner China and defence guarantor the United States. Relations with Beijing suffered under Lee's predecessor Yoon Suk-yeol, who cleaved close to the United States and sought to improve ties with former colonial master Japan. But both countries' export-driven economies have now found themselves in the crosshairs of US President Donald Trump's tariff blitz. (Xinhua/AFP)

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles
Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles

RTHK

time2 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles Marines prepare to leave for the greater Los Angeles area after being ordered to deploy on active duty on US soil. Photo: AFP The administration of US President Donald Trump said it was sending 700 Marines and thousands more National Guard troops to Los Angeles, sparking a furious response from California's governor over the "deranged" deployment. Trump had already mobilised 2,000 Guardsmen to the country's second most populous city on Saturday, with some 300 taking up positions protecting federal buildings and officers on Sunday. On Monday – the fourth day of protests against immigration raids in the city that have seen some scuffles with law enforcement – the Trump administration announced the mobilisation of the 700 Marines as well as an "additional" 2,000 National Guard troops. A senior administration official said "active-duty US Marines from Camp Pendleton will be deployed to Los Angeles to help protect federal agents and buildings." The official first gave a figure of 500 Marines, but later updated the number to 700. Deploying active duty military personnel like US Marines into a community of civilians within the United States is a highly unusual measure. The US military separately confirmed the deployment of "approximately 700 Marines" from an infantry battalion following the unrest. They would "seamlessly integrate" with National Guard forces that Trump deployed to Los Angeles on Saturday without the consent of California's Democratic governor Gavin Newsom. The deployment was meant to ensure there were "adequate numbers of forces", it added. Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell then announced the mobilisation of "an additional 2,000 California National Guard to be called into federal service to support ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] & to enable federal law-enforcement officers to safely conduct their duties". It was not immediately clear if the "additional" 2,000 guardsmen were on top of the 2,000 that had already been mobilised, or only the 300 that were already in the streets of Los Angeles. Newsom wasted little time accusing the president of sowing "chaos" in Los Angeles. "Trump is trying to provoke chaos by sending 4,000 soldiers onto American soil," the governor posted on X. Earlier, he slammed the "deranged" decision by "dictatorial" Trump to send in Marines. US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth had first mentioned that the Marines could be deployed on Saturday. (AFP)

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles
Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles

RTHK

time3 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles

Trump now deploying Marines to Los Angeles Marines prepare to leave for the greater Los Angeles area after being ordered to deploy on active duty on US soil. Photo: AFP The administration of US President Donald Trump said it was sending 700 Marines and thousands more National Guard troops to Los Angeles, sparking a furious response from California's governor over the "deranged" deployment. Trump had already mobilised 2,000 Guardsmen to the country's second most populous city on Saturday, with some 300 taking up positions protecting federal buildings and officers on Sunday. On Monday – the fourth day of protests against immigration raids in the city that have seen some scuffles with law enforcement – the Trump administration announced the mobilisation of the 700 Marines as well as an "additional" 2,000 National Guard troops. A senior administration official said "active-duty US Marines from Camp Pendleton will be deployed to Los Angeles to help protect federal agents and buildings." The official first gave a figure of 500 Marines, but later updated the number to 700. Deploying active duty military personnel like US Marines into a community of civilians within the United States is a highly unusual measure. The US military separately confirmed the deployment of "approximately 700 Marines" from an infantry battalion following the unrest. They would "seamlessly integrate" with National Guard forces that Trump deployed to Los Angeles on Saturday without the consent of California's Democratic governor Gavin Newsom. The deployment was meant to ensure there were "adequate numbers of forces", it added. Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell then announced the mobilisation of "an additional 2,000 California National Guard to be called into federal service to support ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] & to enable federal law-enforcement officers to safely conduct their duties". It was not immediately clear if the "additional" 2,000 guardsmen were on top of the 2,000 that had already been mobilised, or only the 300 that were already in the streets of Los Angeles. Newsom wasted little time accusing the president of sowing "chaos" in Los Angeles. "Trump is trying to provoke chaos by sending 4,000 soldiers onto American soil," the governor posted on X. Earlier, he slammed the "deranged" decision by "dictatorial" Trump to send in Marines. US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth had first mentioned that the Marines could be deployed on Saturday. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store