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AFP seeks almost triple defense spending amid China dispute


The Armed Forces of the Philippines on Wednesday asked Congress to almost triple the annual defense spending over the next five years to upgrade equipment amid an escalating marine dispute with giant neighbor China.

The Philippines currently is in the middle of a P998 billion 15-year plan to modernize its military in the face of rising tensions in the South China Sea.

"The gaps between our needed defense articles and the levels of our current inventory are too wide to ignore," Brig. Gen. Guillermo Molina told a national defense panel hearing at the House of Representatives.

"As a way ahead, the Philippine Congress may want to consider pegging the defense annual budget to at least 2 percent of annual GDP."

This year, Congress set aside P115.8 billion, or less than 1 percent of GDP, for defense. Next year, the government has requested P129.1 billion. The military would need P308 billion to get its desired 2 percent of GDP.

"Comparing the military spending of the Philippines with our neighboring countries, the Philippines has one of the lowest spending levels," Molina said, adding security was complicated by China's occupation of Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal.

It was not immediately clear where the money would come from. Magdalo Rep. Francisco Acedillo, a former air force pilot, said the House of Representatives would have to study the military's proposal.

"The figure is mind-boggling, but if our country needs that, we'll have to find ways to support it," he told Reuters.

China claims most of the potentially energy-rich South China Sea, through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year, and rejects the rival claims of Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan.

China seized control of the rocky Scarborough Shoal in 2012 after a three-month stand-off with Philippine coast guard ships, preventing Filipino fishermen from getting near their traditional fishing grounds.

Molina said Philippine air space was vulnerable to intrusions. The Philippines has no fighters or surveillance aircraft to detect and monitor activities within its vast maritime borders.

Molina said the navy had two former U.S. coast guard cutters, three former British Royal Navy corvettes and Vietnam War and World War II-vintage patrol boats. It has a fleet of helicopters and several trainer jets and transport planes.

The military currently is seeking more than 520 billion pesos in the 15-year plan to 2022 to achieve a "full credible defence posture on the West Philippine Sea", or South China Sea. —Reuters

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