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Why the largest-ever US-Philippine drill, and Japan's role in it, is making China uneasy | Collector
Why the largest-ever US-Philippine drill, and Japan's role in it, is making China uneasy
The Korea Times

Why the largest-ever US-Philippine drill, and Japan's role in it, is making China uneasy

A U.S. and Philippine-led military drill seen as targeting China grew this year into the largest yet, prompting Chinese experts to warn that the annual event will exacerbate regional instability amid heightened tensions in the Indo-Pacific. The decades-old drill called Balikatan, which means shoulder to shoulder, reached record highs in terms of scale, scope of participation and training complexity this year, according to a report published by the South China Sea Strategic Situation Probing Initiative (SCSPI) this week. From April 20 to May 8, seven countries — the Philippines, the U.S., Canada, France, Japan, Australia and New Zealand — sent 17,000 personnel to train along the Philippines' western sealine, stretching from the South China Sea to the northern Philippine island of Itbayat, just 155km (96 miles) from Taiwan's main island. Tensions have run high in the Indo-Pacific in recent years, with increasing incidents occurring between China and the Philippines in the South China Sea. And relations between Beijing and another participant, Japan, have been further tested, particular

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