US backs Philippines after China's ballistic missile launch into Pacific Ocean
China's latest missile launch raises fresh concerns over regional security, nuclear proliferation, and stability in the Indo-Pacific
At A Glance
- The United States said it monitored China's test launch of an unarmed intercontinental-range ballistic missile from a submarine, which landed in the southern Pacific Ocean.
- Ambassador Lee Lipton said Washington shares the Philippines' concerns and reaffirmed the US commitment to its longtime treaty ally.
- The United States urged China to join meaningful arms control discussions and adopt regular notification arrangements for intercontinental-range ballistic missile and space launches.
The United States has reaffirmed its commitment to the Philippines after China test-launched an unarmed intercontinental-range ballistic missile from a submarine into the southern Pacific Ocean.
In a statement on Tuesday, July 7, US Ambassador to the Philippines Lee Lipton said the launch underscored concerns over Beijing’s nuclear weapons buildup and its implications for regional peace and stability.
US Ambassador to the Philippines Lee Lipton says Washington stands with the Philippines following China’s test launch of an intercontinental-range ballistic missile into the southern Pacific Ocean. (Photo from U.S. Embassy in the Philippines / Facebook)
“The ironclad US-Philippine Alliance has been a tremendous and transparent source of regional peace and stability for over seven decades,” Lipton said.
“Beijing’s provocative missile launch yesterday is further evidence of its rapid and secretive nuclear weapons development program, which runs counter to regional stability and is inconsistent with the pursuit of meaningful arms control discussions,” he added.
Lipton said the United States shares the Philippines’ concerns over the missile launch and remains committed to its “oldest security ally in the region.”
The statement followed a July 6 statement by US State Department spokesperson Thomas “Tommy” Pigott, who said the United States had monitored China’s test launch of an unarmed intercontinental-range ballistic missile from a submarine.
According to Pigott, the missile landed in the southern Pacific Ocean.
“At a time when the United States is working harder than ever to prevent nuclear proliferation, China is doing the opposite,” Pigott said.
He said China’s “rapid and opaque nuclear weapons buildup” remains a major concern for countries in the region and the international community.
The United States also urged China to participate in meaningful arms control talks and establish a regular notification arrangement for all intercontinental-range ballistic missile and space launches.
Such an arrangement, Pigott said, would be consistent with commitments made by the other members of the P5, or the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.
“The United States remains steadfast in our defense commitments to our allies and partners,” Pigott said.
The latest US statements come amid continuing concerns over China’s expanding military capabilities and increasingly assertive activities in the Indo-Pacific, including in the West Philippine Sea.
Earlier, the Department of National Defense and the Armed Forces of the Philippines condemned China’s recent submarine-launched strategic missile test in the Pacific, describing it as a destabilizing move that highlighted Beijing’s military coercion.
Coming just days before the 10th anniversary of Manila’s 2016 arbitral victory against China’s South China Sea claims, the launch prompted the Philippines to call for restraint and compliance with international law while vowing to firmly defend its sovereignty in the West Philippine Sea.
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