• Business
  • Politics
  • Investing
American Investor Club
World News

US moves to expand missiles in Philippines, putting China within range

by admin February 18, 2026
February 18, 2026

The U.S. is preparing to expand the deployment of advanced missile systems in the northern Philippines, placing additional long-range strike capability within range of key Chinese military assets and reinforcing Washington’s effort to counter Beijing’s growing assertiveness across the Indo-Pacific.

U.S. and Philippine officials announced plans to increase deployments of ‘cutting-edge missile and unmanned systems’ to the treaty ally, as both governments condemned what they described as China’s ‘illegal, coercive, aggressive and deceptive activities’ in the South China Sea.

The move comes as confrontations between Chinese and Philippine vessels have intensified in disputed waters and as Beijing continues to pressure Taiwan, raising the stakes across the region’s most sensitive flashpoints.

It builds on the deployment of the U.S. Army’s Typhon missile system in northern Luzon, Philippines, a ground-based launcher capable of firing Tomahawk cruise missiles that can travel more than 1,000 miles.

Tomahawks can travel more than 1,000 miles — a range that, from northern Luzon, Philippines, places portions of southern China and major People’s Liberation Army (PLA) facilities within reach. The positioning also allows the U.S. and Philippine militaries to cover large swaths of the South China Sea and key maritime corridors connecting it to the broader Pacific.

The U.S. first deployed the Typhon system to Luzon, Philippines, in April 2024. An anti-ship missile launcher known as the Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System was deployed in 2025 to Batan Island in the northernmost Philippine province of Batanes.

That island faces the Bashi Channel, a strategic waterway just south of Taiwan that serves as a critical transit route for commercial shipping and military vessels moving between the South China Sea and the Western Pacific. Control of that channel would be vital in any potential Taiwan contingency.

Beijing has urged Manila to withdraw the U.S. systems from its territory, but officials under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. have rejected those demands.

‘China has consistently stated its firm opposition to the United States’ deployment of advanced weapons systems in the Philippines. The introduction of strategic and offensive weapons that heighten regional tensions, fuel geopolitical confrontation, and risk triggering an arms race is extremely dangerous. Such actions are irresponsible to the people of the Philippines, to Southeast Asian nations, and to regional security as a whole,’ Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told Fox News Digital.  ‘The United States is not a party to disputes in the South China Sea and has no standing to intervene in maritime issues between China and the Philippines.’

‘The Taiwan question lies at the very heart of China’s core interests. China’s determination to defend its national sovereignty, security, and territorial integrity is unwavering. Any provocation that crosses red lines on Taiwan will be met with resolute countermeasures, and any attempt to obstruct China’s reunification is doomed to fail,’ Liu continued. 

Neither side detailed how many additional systems would be sent or whether the deployments would be permanent, but Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose Manuel Romualdez said U.S. and Filipino defense officials discussed deploying upgraded missile launchers that Manila may eventually seek to purchase.

‘It’s a kind of system that’s really very sophisticated and will be deployed here in the hope that, down the road, we will be able to get our own,’ Romualdez told The Associated Press.

Romualdez stressed that the deployments are intended as a deterrent.

‘It’s purely for deterrence,’ he said. ‘Every time the Chinese show any kind of aggression, it only strengthens our resolve to have these types.’

China repeatedly has objected to the missile deployments, warning they threaten regional stability and accusing Washington of trying to contain its rise.

In a joint statement following annual bilateral talks in Manila, the U.S. and the Philippines underscored their support for freedom of navigation and unimpeded commerce in the South China Sea — a vital global trade artery through which trillions of dollars in goods pass each year.

‘Both sides condemned China’s illegal, coercive, aggressive and deceptive activities in the South China Sea, recognizing their adverse effects on regional peace and stability and the economies of the Indo-Pacific and beyond,’ the statement said.

China claims virtually the entire South China Sea despite an international tribunal ruling in 2016 that invalidated many of its sweeping claims. In recent years, Chinese coast guard and maritime militia vessels have clashed repeatedly with Philippine ships near disputed shoals, including Second Thomas Shoal.

The expanded missile deployments also come as the Pentagon balances rising tensions in multiple theaters. In recent weeks, the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group — which had been operating in the Indo-Pacific — was redirected toward the Middle East as the U.S. moved to bolster its posture amid escalating tensions with Iran. 

The deployments also reflect a broader U.S. effort to strengthen its military posture along the so-called ‘first island chain’ — a string of territories stretching from Japan through Taiwan and the Philippines that forms a natural barrier to Chinese naval expansion into the Pacific.

Washington has deepened defense cooperation with Manila under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, expanding U.S. access to Philippine bases, including sites in northern Luzon close to Taiwan.

China in May released a national security white paper criticizing the deployment of an ‘intermediate-range missile system’ in the region — widely viewed as a reference to the U.S. Typhon launcher in the Philippines. The document accused unnamed countries of reviving a ‘Cold War mentality’ and forming military ‘small groups’ that aggravate regional tensions.

For U.S. planners, dispersing mobile, land-based missile systems across allied territory complicates Beijing’s military calculus. Instead of relying solely on ships and aircraft, the U.S. can field ground-based systems that are harder to track and capable of holding Chinese naval and air assets at risk.

For Beijing, however, such deployments reinforce its long-standing claim that the United States is encircling China militarily.

As tensions simmer in both the South China Sea and around Taiwan, the positioning of long-range U.S. missile systems on Philippine soil underscores how the strategic competition between Washington and Beijing is increasingly being defined by geography — and by which side can project credible deterrent power across it.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

previous post
Prismo Metals to Host Webinar on February 26th, 2026
next post
Billionaire Victoria’s Secret mogul Les Wexner to testify in House Jeffrey Epstein probe

You may also like

Schumer, Dems’ goal is to ‘tie people down’...

February 18, 2026

Mark Kelly eyes 2028 White House run while...

February 18, 2026

How did Jeffrey Epstein get rich? Meet Les...

February 18, 2026

Inside world’s top science society’s convention bashing Trump,...

February 18, 2026

Mike Lee calls Schumer’s ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ attack...

February 18, 2026

Vance, Harris, Obama issue tributes to Rev Jesse...

February 18, 2026

Vatican declines to join Trump’s Gaza ‘Board of...

February 18, 2026

Why DOJ is caught up in two dozen...

February 18, 2026

Billionaire Victoria’s Secret mogul Les Wexner to testify...

February 18, 2026

GOP lawmaker joins Democrat-led effort to limit Trump’s...

February 17, 2026

    No fluff, just substance. Sign up for curated updates designed to keep you ahead.

    Curated guidance for living and investing wisely. Subscribe for expert analysis on finance, wealth management, and the life decisions that matter.

    Name Price24H (%)
    bitcoin
    Bitcoin(BTC)
    $67,629.78
    0.15%
    ethereum
    Ethereum(ETH)
    $1,982.66
    0.17%
    tether
    Tether(USDT)
    $1.00
    -0.09%
    ripple
    XRP(XRP)
    $1.48
    0.00%
    binancecoin
    BNB(BNB)
    $618.01
    -0.09%
    usd-coin
    USDC(USDC)
    $1.00
    -0.08%
    solana
    Solana(SOL)
    $83.02
    -1.30%
    tron
    TRON(TRX)
    $0.280166
    -0.38%
    staked-ether
    Lido Staked Ether(STETH)
    $1,981.39
    0.13%
    dogecoin
    Dogecoin(DOGE)
    $0.101075
    -0.99%
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Copyright © 2026 americaninvestorclub.com | All Rights Reserved


    Back To Top
    American Investor Club
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Investing
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.