"The U.S. offered us to sell the F-16, but it would be utterly useless to buy it,” Philippine President Duterte says

“The Pentagon offered us to buy the F-16, but the jets would be utterly useless,” Philippine President Duterte says

By Gabriele Barison
Aug 29 2018
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“It would be utterly useless to buy the F-16. But I need attack helicopters and small planes for the counterinsurgency,” Rodrigo Duterte

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte says Washington had offered to sell the F-16 to Manila but he says the jets are “utterly useless.”

According Bloomberg, after he took office in mid-2016, Duterte immediately took steps to revive once-frosty relations with China while often taking an antagonistic stance toward U.S. security policies. He had lashed out at former President Barack Obama, who raised concerns over human rights under Duterte. The Philippine leader, however, has cozied up to President Donald Trump.

During a televised speech in a military ceremony in southern Davao city, Duterte read what he said was the letter to him by the three U.S. Cabinet officials, who cited the long alliance between Washington and Manila and assured American support for Philippine efforts to modernize its military.

“We hope to partner in other significant defense procurement (for) our mutual benefit, including through the Lockheed Martin F-16 multi-role fighter platform and your attack helicopter platform among other U.S. systems,” Duterte quoted the letter as saying.

The Philippines, however, doesn’t need the F-16s “and yet they dangled (them) before us after they humiliated us. It would be utterly useless to buy it. But I need attack helicopters and small planes for the counterinsurgency,” Duterte was quoted as saying.

Duterte repeated his frustrations with the U.S., including the non-delivery of about 23,000 rifles, which the Philippine police sought to buy from an American supplier. The arms purchase got derailed after some U.S. legislators raised concern over Duterte’s police-led crackdown against illegal drugs, he said.

He also renewed his demand for the return of three church bells seized by American forces as war spoils from the Philippines more than a century ago. The two governments have discussed the return of the Balangiga bells, named for the Philippine village from which they were taken in the early 1900s.

“If they won’t return the Balangiga bells, we have nothing to talk about,” Duterte said.

Despite Duterte’s antagonism toward Washington, a Philippine security official said the government was considering to buy combat utility helicopters from the U.S., among other countries, following the president’s order to cancel a multimillion-dollar deal to buy 16 Bell 412EPI helicopters from Canada.

Ohio ANG deploys 12 F-16s to Estonia in support of Operation Atlantic Resolve

Noteworthy Duterte ordered the cancellation of the deal to acquire the Bell 412EPIs after the Canadian government decided to review the 12 billion peso ($235 million) contract due to concerns the Philippine military might use the utility helicopters in counterinsurgency assaults instead of just transporting troops and supplies.

Photo credit: Senior Airman Justin Fuchs / U.S. Air Force and MC3 Cody Hendrix / DoD


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Gabriele Barison

Gabriele Barison

Gabriele Barison is an aviation, defense and military writer. He is the Co-Founder and Editor of “The Aviation Geek Club” one of the world’s most read military aviation blogs. He has flown Super Puma and Cougar helicopters with the Swiss Air Force.

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