Hundreds of Moro guerrillas have undergone combat training and sought more weapons in the southern Philippines to bolster their military muscle in case planned peace talks with the government falter, a military report said Wednesday. A Moro rebel negotiator acknowledged Wednesday that the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) continued to train fighters and seek weapons, but these are routine activities and not a preparation for war. New President Benigno Aquino III and the 11,000-strong MILF have expressed readiness to resume Malaysian-brokered peace negotiations as early as September after the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. The talks collapsed in 2008, sparking massive fighting, and resumed in the final months of Aquino's predecessor without reaching any major accord. Aquino, who succeeded Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on June 30, has said efforts to turn around his impoverished Southeast Asian nation will be futile if it continues to be wracked by violent insurgencies. He has begun forming negotiation teams to resume talks with the Moro rebels and communist guerrillas. While fresh talks loomed, the military has monitored at least nine separate combat training by hundreds of Moro fighters and recruits in their strongholds in southern Mindanao region in the first half of the year, according to a military report that assessed national security threats. Moro guerrillas have been holding combat training and “acquisition of logistics to ensure readiness if the peace talks will not prosper,” according to the report, adding the rebels plan to intensify kidnappings and extortion to gain funds. About 230 rebels underwent training on combat tactics for three days last March in a hinterland camp called Palestine near Butig township in Lanao del Sur province. Several guerrillas joined a monthlong training on intelligence-gathering in the same camp that month while 247 regular fighters were trained on “rigid jungle warfare” for 15 days in the southernmost province of Tawi Tawi, the report said. About a hundred recruits were given basic military training for three months in Lanao del Sur starting in March. Other training involving an undetermined number of rebels focused on first aid and leadership, it said. Moro rebel negotiator Mohagher Iqbal acknowledged his group has continued to train fighters and seek weapons, which, he said, were obtained in the past from local and foreign sources, mostly gunrunning syndicates. “That's normal in a revolutionary group,” Iqbal told the AP. “It's not a sign of bad faith because there have always been two options while the problem remains unresolved: the peace process or war.” Iqbal, however, said that his group has primarily focused on the “peaceful track” and will reconstitute its peace panel once the government negotiating team has been set up. He denied that the rebels plan to resort to kidnappings for funds, saying they have relied mostly on civilian financial contributions. A shaky truce between government troops and the rebels has held for a year since their last major fighting in Mindanao's marshy heartland that killed hundreds and displaced as many as 750,000 people.