Oyster Bay and Ulugan Bay, Palawan, Philippines - A 100 Miles distance from the Spratly Islands which is now claimed by Mainland China as their own.
As  Obama plans Asia tour, postcard Philippines isle symbolizes U.S. pivot
Its mangrove-fringed coral reefs support an  abundant fish population. Its deep, blue waters are unmuddied by the monsoons  that batter the western Philippines coastline.
But a planned visit by U.S. President Barack  Obama to Asia starting this weekend could herald the start of dramatic changes  to Oyster Bay, a postcard-perfect cove on Palawan Island that the Philippines  expects to transform into a port for its naval frigates and eventually for  American warships - all overlooking the disputed South China Sea.
Developing this remote island paradise into a  military facility could exacerbate tensions with China, whose sovereignty  claims over the vast, mineral-rich South China Sea, one of the world's most  important waterways, set it directly against U.S. allies Vietnam and the  Philippines. Brunei, Taiwan and Malaysia also claim parts of the sea.
Obama is scheduled to leave on Saturday on a  four-nation, week-long tour to Asia. But the uncertainty caused by a government  shutdown that began on Tuesday could force him to postpone his plans. "You  know, we'll see obviously what happens as the week unfolds," White House  spokesman Jay Carney said on Monday.
At the moment, however, Obama is scheduled to  round off his tour with a stopover in Manila, which is seen as a strong signal  of U.S. support for the Philippines despite Washington's professed neutrality  in the South China Sea dispute.
Rebuilding ties with the Philippines, including  helping to upgrade its ill-equipped military, has been an important part of a  U.S. rebalancing of its strategic focus towards Asia that is seen as a bid to  check China's growing power.
President Benigno Aquino has launched a $1.8  billion modernization program and revived plans to build new air and naval  bases at Subic Bay, the largest U.S. military installation in Southeast Asia  before it was shuttered in 1992.
Also on the cards is the development of Oyster  Bay, which lies about 550 km (340 miles) southwest of Manila.
"It will be a mini-Subic," Commodore  Joseph Rostum O. Peña, commander of the Philippines' western navy, said in the  first public comments about converting Oyster Bay into a major naval base.
A future port here would extend the reach of  the navy's two frigates, both former U.S. Coast Guard cutters, over the  disputed Spratly Islands, in the southern part of the South China Sea, he said  in an interview from his office overlooking the mouth of the bay.
Long-held plans to develop the port were  resurrected by President Aquino after for purchasing each $15.15 million (x 2) US  Dollars, now the Philippine Navy's largest ships, in 2011 and 2012.
Oyster Bay is about 160 km (100 miles) from the  Spratlys.
"In Manila, the leaders must move behind  rhetorical blandishments about a new spirit of partnership and start to detail  specific actions that will strengthen Philippine defense capabilities,"  said Patrick Cronin, an Asia-Pacific security expert at the Center for a New  American Security in Washington.
That includes building a permanent home for the  Philippines' two big warships. It also means finding strategic areas where the  United States could rotate troops, ships and naval aircraft — all within easy  reach of territory claimed by Beijing.
"Oyster Bay may be the best choice,"  said Cronin.
INCREASINGLY  ASSERTIVE
China has grown increasingly assertive in the West  Philippines Sea's 200 Nautical miles exclusive economic Zone and other ASEAN seas  reaching the coast not just the Philippines but also Vietnam, Brunei, Indonesia  and Malaysia, one of Asia's biggest security headaches. On Sept 3 the  Philippines accused China of preparing to build a new structure on the Panatag  shoal (Scarborough Shoal) in the sea in violation of the Declaration of  Conduct, a non-binding confidence-building agreement on maritime conduct signed  in 2002 by China and the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations  (ASEAN).
These maritime tensions provide an uneasy  backdrop to Obama's Asian tour that includes a regional summit where he is  expected to urge China and Southeast Asian nations to resolve differences over  the South China Sea.
Efforts to ease the tensions by agreeing a  binding Code of Conduct (CoC) between ASEAN nations and China have advanced at  a painfully slow pace, with no major breakthrough expected at the East Asia  Summit in Brunei that Obama will attend.
China has repeatedly warned the United States  to stay out of the South China Sea dispute. Washington has not publicly taken  sides, but in July Secretary of State John Kerry reiterated his country's  strategic interest in freedom of navigation through the busy sea and its  eagerness to see a CoC signed.
The proposed code would not touch on countries'  territorial claims, but would set rules governing the behavior of ships to  reduce the risk of misunderstandings that could cause conflict.
China is in "no rush" to sign the  CoC, said its Foreign Minister Wang Yi in August. Talks between Chinese and  ASEAN officials in Beijing in late September went nowhere. Chinese state media  warned in June that a "counter-strike" against the Philippines was  inevitable if it continued to provoke Beijing.
China's foot-dragging on the CoC has firmed  Manila's resolve to strengthen its military, said a senior Philippine diplomat.
"Of course, we are for peaceful means to  resolve dispute," he said, also requesting anonymity. "However, we  want a capability that would make other states think twice before they do  something foolish in the disputed areas."
In Manila, U.S. and Philippine officials are  thrashing out a framework agreement which would improve the Asian nation's  ability to protect its maritime borders and increase the number of American  ships, planes and troops temporarily stationed there. A fourth round of talks  began on Tuesday.
The two sides hope to conclude the deal by  Obama's arrival, but a senior Philippine military officer familiar with the  negotiations said this was looking unlikely. "There are some legal issues  they have to untangle," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
A former U.S. colony, the Philippines is  ambivalent about the presence of American military personnel, as the populist  Aquino is acutely aware.
His late mother Corazon was president when the  Philippine Senate voted in 1991 to terminate the Military Bases Agreement,  which forced American military personnel to leave the giant Subic Bay facility  the following year.
Aquino has vowed to radically boost the  Philippines' ability to defend itself by the time he leaves office in 2016.  This requires U.S. help, and analysts say the U.S. "pivot" toward  Asia could allow him to seek it on more equal terms.
NO  FISHING HERE
Oyster Bay's initial upgrade will cost an  estimated ₱500 million pesos ($11.5  million) and is due to be finished by 2016, the year Aquino leaves office, said  Commodore Peña.
Transforming Oyster Bay into a major naval base  will cost much more, said some officials.
Current budget constraints prevent the United  States from building ports, said Cronin, although some money for Oyster Bay  could be sourced from a contingency budget aimed at supporting exercises and  defense cooperation.
Last year, U.S. and Philippine commandos staged  a mock amphibious assault near Oyster Bay as part of annual military exercises.  Local people, who subsist from fishing, are resigned to further disturbances.
"We not allowed to fish in the bay  anymore," said Jesus Agpao, 48, head of a local fishermen's cooperative,  pointing to where four small Philippine Navy vessels were already moored. He  fears bigger ships will pollute the bay and scare away their catch.
Local resident Lorenzo Layacan, 67, said four  of the area's five village chiefs opposed the new naval base, fearing the bars  and brothels that sprang up around Subic Bay to serve U.S. sailors on shore  leave would come up in Oyster Bay as well.
"They are afraid the young women will  become prostitutes," said Layacan.
With report from Reuters

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