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Philippines flags greater US military presence
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) Jan 28, 2012


US will pull two brigades from Europe by end-2014
Washington (AFP) Jan 27, 2012 - The United States plans to complete the withdrawal of two of its four army brigades stationed in Europe in 2014, the Army chief of staff General Ray Odierno said Friday.

"We will decrease our European footprint by two heavy brigade combat teams, with the first one coming out of Europe in 2013" and the second in 2014, Odierno told reporters.

The two units are "heavy brigade combat teams" that will not be restationed in the United States, in line with plans announced this week to streamline the number of active duty forces, he said.

US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on Thursday proposed taking 75,000 Army troops off active duty as the debt-ridden United States winds down a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He proposed reducing the number of active US Army soldiers from 570,000 in 2010 to 490,000 by 2017 and reducing the Marines' strength from 202,000 to 182,000 over the same period.

Each of the heavy brigade combat teams includes 3,800 troops, a spokesman for the army's European command told AFP. In addition to the 7,600 soldiers heading home, nearly 20,000 of their relatives will also be repatriated.

There are some 81,000 US troops in Europe, according to Pentagon data released in September 2011. About half of them are army troops stationed in Germany.

Odierno said the two brigades to be withdrawn would be identified within a few weeks.

Of the four US brigades in Europe, three are in Germany and one is stationed in Italy. Sources speculated that two of the Germany-based units would be dissolved.

"In order to continue our strong engagements with NATO and other European partners, we will deploy rotational forces to conduct training and readiness exercises with our allies and our new partners," Odierno said.

The Philippines announced plans on Friday to allow a greater US military presence on its territory, in a move analysts said was directly aimed at trying to contain a rising China.

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines was looking for more joint military exercises with its former colonial ruler, as well as having a greater number of US troops rotating through the Southeast Asian country.

"It is to our definite advantage to be exploring how to maximise our treaty alliance with the United States in ways that would be mutually acceptable and beneficial," del Rosario said in a statement.

Admiral Robert Willard, head of the US Pacific Command, welcomed the offer, saying the US was looking for ways to bring troops into Southeast Asia without the costs of permanent bases.

"We would welcome discussions with the Philippines along those lines, but there's no aspiration for bases in Southeast Asia," he told a news conference in Washington.

Del Rosario did not specifically name China as driving the Philippines' push for a greater US military presence, but highlighted "territorial disputes".

The most pressing territorial dispute for the Philippines is with China over rival claims to parts of the South China Sea, home to some of the world's most important shipping lanes and believed to hold vast deposits of fossil fuels.

The Philippines and Vietnam, which also claims parts of the South China Sea, complained repeatedly last year of what they said were increasingly aggressive acts by China in the decades-long rift.

The alleged acts, which included a Chinese naval ship reportedly firing warning shots at Filipino fishermen, fuelled fears among some nations in the region about China as its military and political strength grows.

In his statement, del Rosario said a greater US military presence in the Philippines would help bolster regional security.

"Such cooperative efforts would as well result in achieving a balance of influence to ensure peace, stability, and economic development in the region," he said.

Nevertheless, del Rosario and other officials emphasised there were no plans to allow a return of the large-scale US military bases that existed in the Philippines until 1992, when Filipino senators voted to close them down.

Del Rosario said the increased US military presence could include "planning more joint exercises to promote interoperability and a rotating and more frequent presence by them".

Aside from regular military exercises, the most notable US presence in the Philippines in recent times has been a rotating force of about 600 troops that has been stationed in the southern Philippines for the past decade.

The US special forces train local troops in how to combat Islamic militants, but are not allowed to have a fighting role.

Philippine officials said more talks would be held in March to determine specifics of the plans.

Political analysts in Manila said the Philippines' decision to allow a bigger US military presence was a direct reaction to China's perceived increased aggressiveness, particularly regarding the South China Sea.

"The Philippines is now playing the US card to get more leverage against China," said Rommel Banlaoi, head of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research.

Rene de Castro, a lecturer in international studies at De la Salle University said: "We are playing the balance of power game because we have no means to deal with an emergent and very assertive China."

In a strategic shift that has angered China, the United States has been looking to increase its military presence across the Asia Pacific.

US President Barack Obama said in November the United States would deploy up to 2,500 Marines to northern Australia. The next month a US admiral wrote that the US expected to station several combat ships in Singapore.

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