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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Carter: U.S., Philippines Enjoy ‘Longstanding’ Alliance

 

Deputy Defense Secretary Ash Carter, right center, meets with Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, left center, at the Ministry of Defense in Manila, the Philippines, March 19, 2013. DOD photo by Glenn Fawcett 

On the third stop of his weeklong trip to Asia, Deputy Defense Secretary Ash Carter met with top officials in the Philippines and carried greetings from President Barack Obama and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to be delivered to President Benigno Aquino III.

During meetings with the president's executive secretary, Paquito Ochoa, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario, Carter discussed a range of regional range of regional security issues important to the U.S.-Philippines alliance.

Carter began his visit in Manila by meeting with Gazmin at Camp Aguinaldo, the military headquarters of the Philippine Army and the Armed Forces of the Philippines, or AFP. The men discussed the importance of the U.S.-Philippines alliance, including the continued U.S. commitment to work together on maritime domain awareness, capacity building of the AFP, defense modernization and continued assistance in counterterrorism. Carter emphasized the importance of working together to resolve incidents.

Later in the day, Carter met with del Rosario and senior Foreign Affairs Department officials, followed by a lunch that del Rosario hosted. The two discussed a range of issues including U.S.-Philippine efforts to enhance cooperation across security, diplomatic and economic sectors, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and a code of conduct for resolving disputes in the South China Sea, as well as other bilateral and regional topics.

Carter wrapped up his Manila visit by meeting with Ochoa at the Malacanang Palace complex. The deputy defense secretary addressed issues involving the U.S. rebalance to Asia and concerns about the possible impact to that effort because of defense budget cuts. Discussions ranged from ASEAN and the regional security architecture to Philippine defense modernization efforts.

During a media interview, Carter said he came here "because this region of the world is so important to America's future in many ways -- political and economic, but also in the security sphere."

And because of his position as deputy defense secretary, he said, "obviously, I'm focused on the security area. In that context, the United States has deep and abiding security roots here."

As he met with officials, Carter took time to share a more personal reason for his appreciation of the Philippines. A physicist by training, the deputy defense secretary received part of that training in at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In the coffee room there, he got to know a senior fellow from the MIT Center for International Studies.

"He was such a great advisor and mentor to students," Carter said of the man who turned out to be Benigno Aquino Jr., father of the current president of the Philippines. Aquino was assassinated in 1983.

"He and his wife would come to social events at MIT, … and I got to know them and had great affection for them, … so I've always had a little place in my heart for the Aquino family," he said. "And that's another good reason to be here in the Philippines."

The United States and the Philippines "have lots of human connections together, all of us," Carter said, "as well as having important global responsibilities and regional responsibilities that we exercise together."

U.S. engagement is part of what has helped to maintain the region's security structure since World War II, he added. Such engagement has allowed Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and the rest of Southeast Asia "to rise and prosper because they've had peace and security, and now China and India are rising and prospering."

The Philippines, Carter observed, "is a longstanding friend and ally and partner with us in providing that kind of security."

The United States recognized the Philippines as an independent state and established diplomatic relations in 1946. Except for the 1942-to-1945 Japanese occupation during World War II, the Philippines had been under U.S. sovereignty since the end of the Spanish-American War in 1898, according to a State Department fact sheet.

The U.S.-Philippine Bilateral Strategic Dialogue -- the third held last December in Manila -- advances discussion and cooperation on bilateral, regional and global issues. The United States has designated the Philippines a major non-NATO ally, and the nations have close security ties.

The Manila Declaration, signed in 2011, reaffirmed the 1951 U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty as the foundation for a robust, balanced and responsive security partnership. Such a treaty, Carter said, "opens the door to the U.S.-Filipino relationship, which exists along with other key treaty relationships in the region."

During this week's Asia trip, the deputy defense secretary has visited South Korea and Japan, which are also key treaty partners. And the United States has important treaty relationships with Australia and Thailand.

"These longstanding treaty relationships and other kinds of emerging partnerships are … part of a historical role that we play with countries in this part of the world -- to protect them, to protect us, but also, very importantly, that is what provides the foundation for peace and security in the region," he said.

"That's the climate in which all countries, the Philippines among them, have been able to … develop politically and prosper economically in an environment of peace," Carter said. "That's what everybody deserves, and that's what we're about when we talk about our alliance with the Philippines and our alliance structure in this part of the world."

By Cheryl Pellerin, American Forces Press Service

US Defense Department 

Monday, March 18, 2013

Kaspersky Lab: 3 Filipino students to compete in regional cybersecurity cup

Three Filipino students from two state universities have been chosen to participate in this year's Kaspersky Lab Asia Pacific and Middle East and Africa (APAC and MEA) Cup 2013 which will be held at the National University of Singapore from March 21 to 23.

The three Filipino students who will represent their groups' research papers in the regional cup are Ivan Dominic Baguio and John Ultra, both from the University of the Philippines (UP) and Marvin Rey Garcia from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP). All three are currently Computer Science seniors.

This is the second time the Philippines reached the regional finals for the annual event.

Last year, the research paper authored by Joshua Arvin Lat and groupmates Rod Bondoc and Kevin Atienza from UP-Diliman was shortlisted for the APAC and MEA round. The group later took home the first prize for their paper on a secure online USB login system during the final round of the Kaspersky Lab International Conference in the Netherlands.

Competition is stiff not just for the attractive cash prizes of US$1,000, US$750 and US$500 for the top three places but also for the opportunity to gain exposure at the international level. All teamleaders of the research papers are automatically accorded free travel and accommodation packages plus a guided tour of the host city.

Garcia with his teammates Hannah Roselle Chan, Christopher Celestial, and Arc Ezekiel Mercolesia proposed the "Integration of Virtual Private Network in a Secured Smart Home Electricity Management System". Their paper promises a solution to the secure management and control of household electricity. Through the Internet it can collect on-line data power consumption and manipulate power supply of the connected electrical appliances.

Ultra's solo research paper titled, "A Collaborative Access Control Model for E-voting Systems" proposes a new method for modeling and enforcing separation of duty (SoD) in computer system like the one used in electronic system (e-voting). SoD is a well-known practical approach to minimize fraud and error in high integrity tasks. He proposes an intuitive and easy to use method for enforcing SoD on tasks performed on computer system which can be used to raise the integrity of election administrative tasks performed on an e-voting system.

Meanwhile, Baguio and co-author John Carlo Florencio wrote about an "On-the-fly Encryption for Android Devices", which they said can address the limitations of Android devices in encrypting disks or external memory in real time.

The other top 15 finalists are from Indonesia's Bandung Institute of Technology, City University of Hong Kong, South Africa's Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Australia's University of Technology, Iran's Shiraz University, Japan's Institute of Information Security, India's KIIT University and the Malaysian institutes University of Malaya, Universiti Teknologi MARA, and Multimedia University.

Evaluation of the research papers will be based on scientific and methodological level, social importance and relevance, objectivity of the information and analytical materials, practical and innovation value and presenter's performance.

Harry Cheung, Kaspersky Lab managing director for Asia Pacific, said the brand is constantly on the lookout for fresh and innovation cyber security suggestions from the younger generations to address the complexity and severity of cyber crimes today.

"As cyber threats escalate, the need for a newer pool of talents to contribute new cybersecurity ideas is of pressing concern. This competition allows Kaspersky Lab to discover these young talents who can add significant input. The Filipino winners made our Asian region proud last year and we are excited for this year's representatives to make an impact," Cheung said.

The three best papers from this round will represent the region and compete against other regional qualifiers from North America, South America, Europe, Russia and Commonwealth Independent States at the international and final round. This will be held at the Royal Holloway, University of London in the United Kingdom in June 2013.

philSTAR 

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