US, Philippines form military task force for areas including South China Sea, Pentagon says

(Reuters) -The United States and the Philippines have formed a new joint task force to strengthen cooperation and increase military readiness in areas including the South China Sea, the Pentagon said on Friday.

The announcement followed a meeting between Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth and Philippine Secretary of National Defense Gilberto Teodoro at a gathering of ASEAN defence ministers in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur.

Task Force-Philippines “will increase operational cooperation, improve combined planning, and enhance interoperability, particularly in the South China Sea,” according to a statement from Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell.

In a meeting with his Chinese counterpart on Friday, Hegseth said he raised concern about China’s actions towards Washington’s regional allies and partners, in apparent references to repeated clashes with the Philippines in the South China Sea and tension with Australia over surveillance flights. Hegseth also said the U.S. was concerned about China’s activities in the disputed South China Sea and around Taiwan.

The U.S. and Philippines defense secretaries “shared their determination to re-establish deterrence in the region” in their fourth meeting, the Pentagon said. The U.S. and Philippines have a mutual defense treaty.

They also announced the completion of a plan to modernize the defense partnership and speed up progress on major priorities over the next two years, the statement said.

(Reporting by Doina Chiacu. Editing by Mark Potter)

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