With Marcos watching, US Army HIMARS fires 6 times
but misses target in South China Sea
By
SETH ROBSON
STARS AND STRIPES • April
26, 2023
Philippines President Ferdinand
Marcos Jr. waves to reporters after touring a M142 High Mobility Artillery
Rocket System, or HIMARS, while attending a Balikatan live-fire drill at
Naval Station Leovigildo Gantioqui in San Antonio, Philippines, Wednesday,
April 26, 2023. (Jonathan Snyder/Stars and Stripes)
SAN ANTONIO,
Philippines — The Philippines’ president was on hand Wednesday as one of the
U.S. Army’s best-known weapons missed its target — a decommissioned warship
floating miles away in the South China Sea — during a live-fire exercise.
President
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. observed from a tower as the High Mobility Artillery
Rocket System, or HIMARS, fired six times at the Philippine navy corvette,
invisible over the horizon, and a narrator over a public address system
described the action down range. U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines MaryKay
Carlson sat beside Marcos.
The two HIMARS
launchers — designed to strike targets on land — missed each time, but a
barrage of ordnance from U.S. and Philippine artillery and aircraft eventually
sank the vessel.
“Shore-based fire
against a ship is exceptionally hard,” Lt. Col. Nick Mannweiler, a spokesman
for Marine Corps Forces Pacific, said during the drill at Naval Station
Leovigildo Gantioqui.
The training was
part of Balikatan, an annual joint exercise involving more than 17,000 U.S. and
Filipino troops that wraps up Friday.
Balikatan, the
largest ever in terms of troop numbers, demonstrates further evidence of a
decided shift by Marcos toward the Philippines’ longtime ally the United
States. His predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte, employed a friendlier approach toward
regional rival China, which nonetheless continued to assert control over
maritime territory the Philippines claims in the South China Sea.
The HIMARS’
failure to hit a vessel at sea wasn’t a big deal, according to Mannweiler. The
training tested troops’ ability to sense a ship and pass targeting information
to weapons operated by the U.S. and Philippines, he said.
The training “sets
the condition for more fruitful work like this in future,” Mannweiler said.
Once the HIMARS
was fired, artillerymen from the 25th Infantry Division and their Philippine
counterparts pounded the boat with 105 mm and 155 mm rounds fired from
howitzers. Those rounds were on target, said U.S. Army Maj. Jeff Tolbert, a
spokesman for the 25th Infantry Division.
Finally, U.S. and
Philippine aircraft took turns attacking the target boat with guns and bombs.
An Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone soared overhead, feeding images of the target to
commanders calling in the attacks.
A Marine Corps
F-35B Lightning II stealth fighter delivered the final blow, and the vessel
sank around 2:50 p.m., Tolbert said.
The HIMARS
launchers belong to 5th Battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, based at Joint
Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., said battalion commander Lt. Col. Tim Lynch.
Marcos inspected
one of the launchers before the live-fire exercise. That launcher, dubbed Wild
Bill, is part of Outlaw Platoon, said Alpha Battery commander Capt. Cody
Dobiyanski, who showed Marcos around.
The U.S. provided
HIMARS batteries, designed to strike targets on land, to Ukraine last year.
It’s been credited with evening the odds for the Ukrainians, who are battling
Russian invaders.
In combat, U.S.
forces would likely use a torpedo or Harpoon missiles against a warship,
Mannweiler said.
Philippine army
Col. Mike Logico, director of the Joint Command Training Center, told reporters
that Marcos understands the challenges of a large-scale bilateral exercise.
“What we
demonstrated was the capabilities of the HIMARS and probably also its
limitations,” he said.
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