Philippine Air Force to Modernize to Counter China
The Philippines will modernize its air force by 2016 President President Benigno S. Aquino III said on Monday, local media reported.
“Be assured that before I step down from office [in 2016], our skies will teem with new and modern equipment such as lead-in fighters, long-range patrol aircraft, close air support aircraft, light lift fixed-wing aircraft, medium lift aircraft, attack helicopters, combat utility helicopters, air defense radar and flight simulators,” Aquino said in a speech marking the 66th anniversary of the founding of the Philippines Air Force.
Noting that since taking office he has allocated US$648.44 million to modernize the armed forces, Aquino said that the passage of the New Armed Forces of the Philippines Modernization Act last year allocated around US$1.73 billion for that purpose over the next five years. Its prior modernization of the armed forces had been passed in 1995.
The PAF will be a top priority Aquino indicated on Monday, vowing that before he leaves office in 2016 the air force will be able to “to defend our territory and make Filipinos feel more secure against foreign intruders, or those who try to shock and pressure them.”
In January the Philippines announced it would purchase 12 FA-50 fighter jets from South Korea, ending an eight year gap in which Manila did not possess any fighter jets. The Philippines retired its US-designed F-5 fighters in 2005. At the time of the announcement, the Philippine government said it had budgeted $464 million for the new jets.
Last month there were also reports that the Philippines would seek to purchase missile defense systems from Israel.
Aquino’s announcement on Monday came amid the backdrop of rising tensions between the Philippines and China over the South China Sea. Back in May, Manila accused China of sending three ships within 5 nautical miles of the Second Thomas Shoal, a disputed reef in the South China Sea where the Philippines maintains a small Marine contingent.
Read More
“Be assured that before I step down from office [in 2016], our skies will teem with new and modern equipment such as lead-in fighters, long-range patrol aircraft, close air support aircraft, light lift fixed-wing aircraft, medium lift aircraft, attack helicopters, combat utility helicopters, air defense radar and flight simulators,” Aquino said in a speech marking the 66th anniversary of the founding of the Philippines Air Force.
Noting that since taking office he has allocated US$648.44 million to modernize the armed forces, Aquino said that the passage of the New Armed Forces of the Philippines Modernization Act last year allocated around US$1.73 billion for that purpose over the next five years. Its prior modernization of the armed forces had been passed in 1995.
The PAF will be a top priority Aquino indicated on Monday, vowing that before he leaves office in 2016 the air force will be able to “to defend our territory and make Filipinos feel more secure against foreign intruders, or those who try to shock and pressure them.”
In January the Philippines announced it would purchase 12 FA-50 fighter jets from South Korea, ending an eight year gap in which Manila did not possess any fighter jets. The Philippines retired its US-designed F-5 fighters in 2005. At the time of the announcement, the Philippine government said it had budgeted $464 million for the new jets.
Last month there were also reports that the Philippines would seek to purchase missile defense systems from Israel.
Aquino’s announcement on Monday came amid the backdrop of rising tensions between the Philippines and China over the South China Sea. Back in May, Manila accused China of sending three ships within 5 nautical miles of the Second Thomas Shoal, a disputed reef in the South China Sea where the Philippines maintains a small Marine contingent.
Read More
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(Atom)
Search
Articles :
Popular Posts
-
U.S. Navy warships in 2014 there will be a large number of retired, sold, of which the Philippines could become 7 Used Perry class frigates...
-
The third US warship to visit the Philippines in three weeks is arriving Tuesday in Subic, Zambales province, a sign of unchanged relations ...
-
MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines has increased the number of troops deployed on five islets, two sand bars and two reefs that it claim...
-
Some 40 students and teachers from Taiwan will go on a camping trip to the disputed Spratly Islands, Taiwan's Central News Agency report...
-
MANILA, Philippines — Amid long-running tension between Manila and Beijing over the hotly-contested West Philippine Sea (South China Sea), D...
-
Everyone looks extra sharp in our whites because today marks the first official activity of BRP Ramon Alcaraz (PF16) in the Philippine terri...
-
Less than 30 percent of air assets of the Philippine Air Force are currently operational, a senior PAF official said even as he underscored ...
-
In Tom Clancy’s world of fiction, it’s a US nuclear submarine that fights China over the disputed Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Se...
-
MANILA, Philippines - Salvaging operations for the USS Guardian began yesterday after the Tubbataha Protected Area Management Board (TPAMB) ...
-
Taiwan, one of the six claimants to the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea) has launched a mobile telecommunication...
0 comments:
Post a Comment