Philippines doubles down on US-made Typhon missile system despite China’s warnings
Future drills featuring the Typhon are designed to test the military’s ability to respond to an ‘external threat’, Manila’s army chief said

During a press conference on Monday, Galido said the drills, the second iteration of the Combined Arms Training Exercise (Catex), are designed to test the military’s ability to respond to a national crisis caused by an “external threat”.

This year’s exercise will involve around 6,000 troops and, for the first time, will take place not only on the island of Luzon in the northern Philippines but also in the central Visayas and southern Mindanao.
Galido said the areas were chosen because large-scale mobilisations involving ground forces, tanks and artillery can occur there without disrupting local communities. He said such coordinated movements were needed due to the archipelagic concept’s focus on territorial defence.
While the Catex will include some live-fire exercises, Galido noted that the Typhon would not be included among them as the army was still in the process of “appreciating the system and being able to understand how to utilise it in our defence concept”.
“You have to understand how to sustain it … how to use it in a complicated situation,” he added.