• Monday, February 24, 2025

Asia

Philippines to work with India on defence more: president

In April, the Philippines took delivery of India’s BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles as part of a $375 million deal signed by the two countries in 2022.

Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos Jr. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

PHILIPPINE president Ferdinand Marcos Jr has said that his government will pursue “more robust collaboration” with “friends” such as India as collaborative endeavours to build pillars that support the architecture of regional stability.

“Under our Comprehensive Archipelagic Defence Concept, we shall develop our capacity to project our forces into areas where we must by constitutional duty and by legal right protect our interest and preserve our patrimony…And as we build our defence capabilities, so shall we continue to invest in diplomacy,” he said at the annual Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on Friday (31) night.

According to Marcos Jr, the Southeast Asian archipelago would “also pursue more robust collaboration with friends such as South Korea, India, amongst others, collaborative endeavours among a few states that share specific interests built into pillars that support the architecture of regional stability”.

Read: Eyeing China threat, India delivers BrahMos missiles to Philippines

“As we work to uphold the rule of law in international affairs, so shall we build our capabilities to protect our interest in our maritime domain and the global commons,” the president said, underlining the increasing tension in the South China Sea and the vast Indo-Pacific region.

In April, the Philippines took delivery of India’s BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles as part of a $375 million deal signed by the two countries in 2022.

Read: India’s Jaishankar backs ties with Philippines, targets China indirectly

BrahMos Aerospace Private Limited (BAPL), a joint venture company of India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation, signed a contract with the Philippines in January 2022 to supply Shore-Based Anti-Ship Missile System.

Observers said such deals, and many more to be expected, put Manila-New Delhi in growing diplomatic and trade relations amidst China’s aggressive activities in the region.

Recently, an Indian naval ship paid a goodwill visit to the Philippines and there are multilateral cooperation agreements between India and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which the Philippines is a leading member.

India-ASEAN regularly holds maritime exercises and naval ship visits are part of the total understanding to gain knowledge of each fellow member country’s maritime capacities, the observers opined.

Addressing the defence-security-focused three-day dialogue that kicked off last week, Marcos underlined commitment to ASEAN centrality, saying it shall remain a core element of his country’s foreign policy.

“Simultaneously, we shall strengthen our alliance with the United States and our strategic partnerships with Australia, Japan, Vietnam, Brunei and all the other ASEAN member states. In this spirit, we pursue trilateral collaboration with Indonesia and Malaysia in the Celebes Sea,” he told international diplomats and delegates comprising defence experts at the event.

(With PTI inputs)

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