The Philippines today hailed a new accord giving the US military access to five of its bases, saying this would strengthen its defensive capabilities and maritime security.
The agreement between the two close allies comes as the Philippines and other countries are embroiled in a tense dispute with China over conflicting territorial claims in the South China Sea.
Under the agreement, US forces would be able to rotate through five Philippine bases including those close to the South China Sea.
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Defence Department spokesman Peter Galvez said separately the agreement "would greatly enhance our capabilities" in maritime security and disaster relief.
Philippine and US officials meeting in Washington on Friday announced that they had agreed to the rotation of US military personnel under the Enhanced Defense Co-operation Agreement (EDCA), which went into effect in January.
One of the installations is the Antonio Bautista Air Base in the western Philippine island of Palawan, directly facing the South China Sea.
Another is Basa Air Base north of Manila, home of the Philippines' main fighter wing, which is also close to disputed waters.
China claims virtually all the South China Sea despite conflicting partial claims by Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines.
It has been asserting its claim by occupying more reefs and outcrops in these waters, and building artificial islands including airstrips on some of them.
Bautista Air Base is just 300 kilometres east of Mischief Reef, an outcrop occupied by China in the 1990s despite angry protests by the Philippines.
Basa Air Base is about 330 kilometres from Scarborough Shoal, occupied by Chinese vessels after a tense confrontation with Philippine ships in 2012.
The other bases through which US forces can rotate through are a major army training camp with its own airstrip in the north, and two air bases in the central and southern islands of the archipelago.
US State Department spokesman John Kirby said the two sides at their Friday meeting discussed next steps for implementation of the EDCA "and how it will support the United States efforts to help modernize the armed forces of the Philippines, develop capacity and capability for maritime security and domain awareness, and provide rapid humanitarian assistance to the people of the Philippines.