MANILA (AFP): The Philippines has said it would seek more US military help during top-level talks next week, as it ignored a warning from China not to "internationalise" a tense territorial dispute.
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said Thursday that the Philippines was looking to the United States to help it achieve a "credible" defence system, and wanted to extract maximum benefits from a mutual defence treaty between the allies.
Signed in 1951, the treaty calls on both sides to come to each other's aid in times of external attacks, and the Philippines has highlighted the pact as it stands up to Beijing over rival claims to the South China Sea.
"We are going to the United States in order to be able to maximise the benefits derived out of this mutual defence treaty," del Rosario told reporters.
"The idea of achieving a minimum credible defence posture is something that we should try to do."
Del Rosario and Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin are expected to meet with their US counterparts Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta in Washington on April 30.
The meeting comes as the Philippines is locked in an increasingly tense dispute with China over Scarborough Shoal, a group of islets in the South China Sea where vessels from both sides have been in a stand-off since April 8.
China on Wednesday warned the Philippines not to "internationalise" the issue and force other countries to take sides.
But del Rosario said Thursday the dispute also impacted other countries that wanted unhampered access to vital sea lanes.
"I think all nations who have an interest in keeping freedom of navigation... should be watching carefully as to what is happening there," he said.
"We would want all nations, including the United States, to make a judgement on what is happening there and what the implications are to their own country," he said.
Philippines seeks US defence boost amid China row
Article Posted on : - Apr 27, 2012
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