The following piece, written by Jim Morris, first appeared on Warrior Maven, a Military Content Group member website.

 

China is making it clear it’s unhappy about as report that the Philippines intends to buy US-made intermediate-range ballistic missile launchers.

In a report in the Financial Times, Philippine defense secretary Gilberto Teodoro said that Manila plans to acquire the Typhon missile system that the US brought to the country last spring for military exercises. That move marked the first time the US had stationed intermediate-range missiles overseas since the breakdown of as treaty between Washington and Moscow aimed at preventing the development or deployment of missiles with a range between 500 to 5,500 kilometers.

The US had kept the Typhon systems in the Philippines since the end of the bilateral drills. Beijing had called that “provocative” and “destabilizing.”

“It gravely threatens regional countries’ security, incites geopolitical confrontation, and has aroused high vigilance and concerns of countries in the region,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said in September.

On November 11, the Chinese Community Party’s English-language newspaper, the Global Times, published an article critical of the reported sale. It quoted the director of a Chinese think tank as saying the Philippines is on track to become a “real troublemaker” in the South China Sea.

The director of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Xu Liping, told the newspaper that Manila should recognize that the purchase of any weapons will neither be helpful nor carry any significance.