Tuesday, May 19, 2026
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PH Navy, Japan join US carrier group in WPS maritime exercise

The Philippine Navy takes part, for the first time, in military drills with a US Navy carrier strike group (CSG) during a multilateral maritime exercise held in the West Philippine Sea.

According to Rear Adm. Roy Vincent Trinidad, the Navy’s spokesperson for the West Philippine Sea, the exercise provided an unprecedented opportunity for Philippine forces to work alongside a full carrier strike group in conducting complex operations.

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“It is not every day that such a force operates within Philippine waters,” he said, adding that the activity strengthened interoperability and reinforced regional security cooperation.

The two-day 13th Multilateral Maritime Cooperative Activity (MMCA), held on November 14 to 15, also involved the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.

Philippine vessels BRP Osiris-Al (FF150) and BRP Antonio Luna (FF151), supported by an AW159 Wildcat helicopter, participated in combined maritime operations, including anti-submarine warfare drills.

The US Indo-Pacific Command contributed the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group, comprising the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN68) and escort ships USS Wayne Meyer (DDG108), USS Gridley (DDG101) and USS Lenah Sutcliffe Higbee (DDG123).

For its part, Japan deployed the JS Akebono (DD-108) along with an SH-60K Seahawk helicopter.

A CSG is a naval formation centered on an aircraft carrier, designed to project power at sea and over land.

According to US Navy doctrine, a typical CSG includes the carrier itself, a complement of aircraft known as a “carrier air wing,” surface escort ships such as guided-missile cruisers and destroyers, submarines and logistical support vessels.

This configuration allows the group to operate independently, defend itself, and conduct a wide variety of missions, from anti-submarine warfare to power projection and sea control.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) said the MMCA series highlights its focus on protecting the country’s sovereign rights and bolstering cooperation with allied forces.

“These engagements reinforce the Philippines’ resolve to defend its maritime domains, enhance interoperability, and uphold freedom of navigation under a rules-based Indo-Pacific order,” the AFP said in a statement on Sunday.

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