HomeAmericaUS, Australia, Philippines hold second joint drills in South China Sea this...

US, Australia, Philippines hold second joint drills in South China Sea this year

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MANILA, April 13 (Reuters) - The ‌U.S. and Australia joined the Philippines for their second joint ​maritime exercises in the South China Sea this year, amid tensions with China in the disputed ⁠waterway.

The four-day drills from April 9 to 12 brought together warships, fighter jets and surveillance aircraft in a series of coordinated operations to strengthen maritime defence ​capabilities, the Philippine military said on Monday. 

The exercises underscored the "deepening defence cooperation among the three ‌nations and their shared commitment to regional security", it said in a statement.

The Philippines deployed its FA‑50 fighter jets, while Australia contributed P‑8A Poseidon aircraft and the United ⁠States the USS Ashland, a dock landing ship.

The drills came ⁠ahead of the April 20 opening of the annual large-scale war games called Balikatan - or "shoulder-to-shoulder" - between Manila and Washington, which for the first time will include Japan as a full participant rather than an observer, alongside Australia.

The Philippines and China ‌have traded accusations over a series of incidents in the South China Sea, including ⁠a recent encounter in which Beijing fired flares nL4N40S0OJ ‌at a Philippine Coast Guard aircraft. 

Zhai Shichen, spokesperson ​for China's Southern Theater Command (STC), said in a statement on Monday that the Chinese navy conducted a routine patrol in the South China Sea over the ‌same four days the drills were held.

"In an attempt ​to stir up troubles in ⁠the region, the Philippines co-opted countries outside the region to organize ‌so-called joint patrols, disrupting peace and stability ⁠in the South China Sea," Zhai said.

"Forces of the STC will resolutely safeguard China’s territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, and firmly uphold regional peace and ​stability."

Beijing has routinely opposed Manila's ‌joint military activities with its allied partners in the South China Sea, saying ⁠such drills heighten tensions in the region.  

(Reporting ​by Nestor Corrales, additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Jessie Pang in ​Hong Kong; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

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