Updates on China’s Security and Militancy in Asia: Communist Guerillas in the Philippines, Islamic State vs Taliban in Afghanistan, Chinese Base in Tajikistan, Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria
Updates on China’s Security and Militancy in Asia: Communist Guerillas in the Philippines, Islamic State vs Taliban in Afghanistan, Chinese Base in Tajikistan, Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria
www.sinosecurity.org
Philippines The outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines-New People's Army (CPP-NPA) has become quite critical of Chinese foreign policy and has persistently voiced concern over the perceived threat posed to national sovereignty and territorial security by the intensifying US-China great power competition. The CPP’s chief information officer condemned the recent Australia–UK–US (AUKUS) agreement as part of the “rising aggressive policy of the United States in the Asia-Pacific region.” He argues that “AUKUS is certain to turn the region into a playground of imperialist bullies” and iterates that the “Philippines must continue to assert its national sovereignty against both Chinese and US imperialist military intervention.” He also asserts that the “Filipino people must firmly resist the build-up of Chinese military presence in the West Philippine Sea” and “expose and reject plans to expand the construction of US military facilities inside camps under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).”
Updates on China’s Security and Militancy in Asia: Communist Guerillas in the Philippines, Islamic State vs Taliban in Afghanistan, Chinese Base in Tajikistan, Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria
Updates on China’s Security and Militancy in…
Updates on China’s Security and Militancy in Asia: Communist Guerillas in the Philippines, Islamic State vs Taliban in Afghanistan, Chinese Base in Tajikistan, Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria
Philippines The outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines-New People's Army (CPP-NPA) has become quite critical of Chinese foreign policy and has persistently voiced concern over the perceived threat posed to national sovereignty and territorial security by the intensifying US-China great power competition. The CPP’s chief information officer condemned the recent Australia–UK–US (AUKUS) agreement as part of the “rising aggressive policy of the United States in the Asia-Pacific region.” He argues that “AUKUS is certain to turn the region into a playground of imperialist bullies” and iterates that the “Philippines must continue to assert its national sovereignty against both Chinese and US imperialist military intervention.” He also asserts that the “Filipino people must firmly resist the build-up of Chinese military presence in the West Philippine Sea” and “expose and reject plans to expand the construction of US military facilities inside camps under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).”