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Randy DeSoto


NextImg:Trump Is Putting Beijing Into Checkmate: China’s Biggest Targets Now in Range

A U.S. missile system positioned in the Philippines places key Chinese military and commercial sites in striking range, sending a message that the U.S. will stand by its allies in the region.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported, “Last year, the U.S. Army moved the Typhon Missile System, which can fire missiles as far as 1,200 miles, to a base on Luzon Island in the northern Philippines. It is the first time since the Cold War that the U.S. military has deployed a land-based launching system with such a long range outside its borders.

“The Chinese government has responded to the Typhon’s deployment with alarm, rebuking the U.S. and the Philippines for fueling what it called an arms race,” the Journal added.

Typhon launchers can fire two types of missiles. One is the Tomahawk cruise missile, which carries a conventional warhead and has a range of about 1,200 miles. It could be used to knock out key air defense and military command and control centers along the Chinese coast if Beijing chose to launch an invasion of Taiwan.

The other type of missile is the shorter range Standard Missile 6, or SM-6, which could be used to take out enemy ships or aircraft.

According to the Associated Press, the Typhons were first deployed to the Philippines under the Biden administration in April 2024.

Maj. Gen. Marcus Evans, commander of the Hawaii-based 25th Infantry Division, told the AP last fall that in addition to the Typhon deployment, the U.S. had sent the long-range High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, known as HIMARS, for joint exercises in the Philippines in 2023.

“Those are just incredibly important operations because you get to work in the environment, but most importantly, you’re working alongside our partners here in the Philippines to understand how those will be integrated into their operations,” Evans said.

Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll visited the U.S. troops manning the Typhons in Luzon last month.

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The AP noted that the Typhon launchers were supposed to be flown back out of the Philippines last September, but according to three of the nation’s security officials, the U.S. agreed to keep them there indefinitely to deter Chinese aggression.

Last week, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth traveled to the region and met with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.


“Deterrence is necessary around the world but specifically in this region, in your country, considering the threats from the communist Chinese,” Hegseth told Marcos, Fox News reported. “Friends need to stand shoulder to shoulder to deter conflict, to ensure that there is free navigation, whether you call it the South China Sea or the West Philippine Sea.”

“Peace through strength is a very real thing,” Hegseth said and praised the Philippines for its “very firm” stand against China.

Marcos stated that Hegseth’s decision to visit the Philippines first in Asia “sends a very strong message of the commitment of both our countries to continue to work together to maintain peace in the Indo-Pacific region, within the South China Sea.”

Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela pointed to Beijing’s establishment of military bases on barrier islands in the West Philippine Sea as proof that it is the aggressor nation.

Through the continued deployment of Typhons in the Philippines, the U.S. is sending a clear message to Beijing to back off from threatening the security of American allies.

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