China Calls Japan-Philippines Sea Border Talks 'Illegal'
The talks also include an intelligence-sharing pact as both countries seek to counter Beijing’s maritime assertiveness, with China calling the plan illegal.
- On Thursday, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi announced plans to begin formal negotiations to delimit their maritime boundary and pursue an intelligence-sharing pact during the President's state visit to Tokyo.
- Manila and Tokyo have drawn closer in recent years due to shared grievances over Chinese maritime territorial claims, as both nations seek seas governed by international rules rather than force.
- Japanese businesses committed $3.4 billion in investments during the visit, while Prime Minister Takaichi announced plans to accelerate transfer of Abukuma-class destroyer escort vessels to bridge capability gaps for the Philippine Navy.
- Beijing expressed strong opposition on Friday, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning calling the maritime border talks "illegal" and asserting exclusive control over waters in the East and South China seas.
- Analysts suggest strengthened ties aim to enhance defense capabilities and regional resilience, positioning both nations to manage security independently amid uncertainty regarding the United States' commitment to the Indo-Pacific.
14 Articles
14 Articles
Japan commits to defense equipment transfer to Philippines
JAPAN has pledged to strengthen defense cooperation with the Philippines by providing military equipment and technology to enhance security and defense capabilities.The commitment was made after a meeting between President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in Tokyo on Thursday.In a joint statement, the two nations vowed to step up collaboration to facilitate the transfer of defense equipment, including destroyers, T…
China blasts ‘illegal’ Japan-Philippines sea border talks
China expressed strong opposition on Friday to a decision by Japan and the Philippines to start maritime border negotiations, calling the talks "illegal" and claiming exclusive control over the waters concerned.
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