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Manila expressed interest in acquiring the Type 88 around the same time as Japanese forces were demonstrating the missile’s firepower at joint drills with American and Philippine troops, according to Tokyo-based public broadcaster NHK.
It comes less than a month after Japan eased long-standing restrictions on arms exports, opening a door to lethal weapons sale that Manila – locked in a years-long stand-off with Beijing over the South China Sea – was quick to step through.
Japanese forces fired the Type 88 twice from Philippine territory during this year’s annual US-Philippine Balikatan military drills, marking the system’s first live deployment in the country.
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China slams Japan’s first overseas missile launch in 80 years
Analysts are careful to put any potential Type 88 acquisition in the context of Manila’s existing defences.
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