-News for Sat. 20 April & Sun. 21
April 2002 US-Philippine Military Exercises Set to Begin
Ron
Corben Bangkok 21
Apr 2002 14:27 UTC

More than 5,000
troops from the United States and the Philippines are gearing up for Monday's
start of almost two weeks of joint military exercises in the northern
Philippines. Over 300 additional U.S. troops arrived in the southern Philippine
Saturday to speed up the pursuit of a Muslim rebel group, the Abu
Sayyaf.
The two
week-long joint military exercises known as Balikatan 2002 bring together move
than 5,000 troops from the United States and the Philippines.
The arrival of
the 2,700 U.S. military troops for the exercise brings to nearly 4,000 the
number of U.S. troops in the Philippines over the next three
weeks.
Philippine Army
spokesman Col. Jose Mabanta says the aim of the exercises is to improve the
Philippine Army's combat readiness. "The main thing really is for the Balikatan
exercise to improve the Philippines and U.S. forces combat readiness in joint
and combined operations," he said, "as well as the two countries
inter-operability through the training exchange of skills and techniques in
both conventional and non-conventional warfare."
Col. Mabanta
said the training will include humanitarian exercises to ready Philippine
troops for U.N. peacekeeping operations.
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| AP |
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| The first group of U.S. Navy engineers arrive on the southern
Philippine island of Basilan |
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Meanwhile, 340
U.S. military engineers were deployed on the southern Philippine island of
Basilan over the weekend. U.S. officials said the engineers will be building
roads, airstrips and port improvements to assist in the offensive against the
Abu Sayyaf, the al Qaida linked Muslim rebel group.
Currently,
there are 160 U.S. special forces training Filipino troops in the pursuit of
the Abu Sayyaf rebels in the southern Philippines. The group is still holding,
after ten months, a U.S. couple and a Filipina nurse in the jungles of Basilan.
The special forces are part of a 660-member U.S. military contingent taking
part in the so-called Operation Enduring Freedom-Philippines.
Col. Mabanta
says the infrastructure work will also provide a much needed economic boost to
Basilan province. "The figures for the engineering forces, their works will be
$4 million," he observed. "This will really be a big boost to Basilan which is
considered one of the poorest areas in the country."
Philippine
weekend media reported that, despite sporadic demonstrations, surveys show
overwhelming support in the Philippines for the deployment of U.S. troops,
backing President Gloria Arroyo's decision to ask for the U.S. presence in the
fight against the Abu Sayyaf.
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