[R-G] Oceania's new Airstrip One
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Fri Jun 13 21:11:16 MDT 2008
Oceania's new Airstrip One
National security editor Patrick Walters | June 14, 2008
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23858974-31477,00.html
THE US is building a new permanent aircraft carrier and its name is
Guam.
The US island territory is destined to become the key hub for American
maritime power in the western Pacific with the start of a long,
$15billion construction boom.
The strategic importance of Guam to Washington's long-term presence in
East Asia was a point hammered home by US Defence Secretary Robert
Gates in Singapore a fortnight ago.
Gates's speech to the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual gathering of
Asian defence ministers and military chiefs, was his most complete
exposition of future US defence strategy in the region since he took
over from Donald Rumsfeld at the Pentagon 18 months ago. Gates's key
theme to his East Asian interlocutors was that, contrary to the
conventional wisdom, the US was not about to begin a long, slow,
historic withdrawal from the region. Instead he outlined the concept
of the US as a "resident power" in addition to its longstanding roles
as an ally, partner, friend and routine offshore presence.
Critical to its long-term focus as a resident power will be Guam, the
site of the largest US military build-up in the Mariana Islands since
World War II. As the Pentagon chief pointed out, sovereign US
territory in the western Pacific stretches all the way from the
Aleutian Islands to Guam.
For US defence planners aiming for a nimbler, more flexible US global
military posture across the globe, Guam is an ideal staging post. And
for close allies of the US in the western Pacific, led by Japan and
Australia, the island promises to become a vital facility as it hosts
exercises and training with allied air and naval forces.
Earlier this month en route to Singapore, Gates made a flying visit to
the island, 6000km west of Hawaii and 2000km southeast of Japan, to
look at planned defence infrastructure. Acquired from Spain in 1898
following the Spanish-American War, Guam became a refuelling station
for the US Navy. In December 1941, Japan overran the island, but it
was recaptured by US forces after bitter fighting in 1944. Since then
it has been an important logistics base.
During the next six years the Pentagon will spend billions on a new
port capable of berthing a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, air
bases, schools, hospitals and houses for US military and their families.
Guam's Anderson air base will soon be home to a detachment of
unmanned, long-range Global Hawk surveillance aircraft able to track
Chinese warships and submarines emerging from their home ports into
the Pacific Ocean or the South China Sea. The US Air Force's newest
fighter, the F-22 Raptor, will also be periodically flying on
exercises from the island.
By 2014 Guam will receive about 8000 US marines who will transfer from
their present base in Okinawa, the Japanese Government helping pay the
$10 billion-plus relocation costs. With a population of about 170,000,
Guam is already home to 12,000 US military personnel and the heavy
build-up promises to put further strain on local communities. Its
naval base hosts three attack submarines and the air force rotates its
strategic bombers through Guam.
"Our Asian friends, whether or not they are formally allied to us,
welcome our growing presence on Guam. As the island's new facilities
take shape in coming years, they will be increasingly multilateral in
orientation, with training opportunities and possible pre-positioning
of assets," Gates said in Singapore. Gates's Shangri-La Dialogue
speech was designed to convey a message of reassurance to the US's
close allies in East Asia that talk of the gradual diminution of the
US's military posture in the face of a renascent China was misplaced.
Questioned how the US could guarantee that it would not lose interest
in Asia, Gates was blunt: "We will not lose interest because we are an
Asian power," he said. "People would have been surprised, perhaps, in
1945 to see the US, 60 years later, still engaged in a larger way and
a broader front in Asia than we were even at the end of the war ...
nobody should have any worries on that score."
The Defence Secretary argues forcefully Washington's presence has been
an essential element in assisting Asia's economic revival, "opening
doors, protecting and preserving common spaces on the high seas, in
space and more and more in the cyber world".
"This presence has offered other nations the crucial element of choice
and enabled their entry into a globalised international society," he
said. "As someone who has served seven US presidents, I want to convey
to you with confidence that any future US administration's Asia
security policy is going to be grounded in the fact that the United
States remains a nation with strong and enduring interests in the
region, interests that will endure no matter which political party
occupies the White House next year."
Gates went on to say that any speculation in the region about the US
losing interest in Asia struck him as "preposterous or disingenuous,
or both".
"America's status in Asia rests on longstanding interests and deeply
held notions about the basic character of the United States. However,
we understand that our friends, partners and allies need reassurance
at times. We will offer that consistently."
He stressed US military ties with East Asia, even with its operations
in Iraq and Afghanistan, were more constructive than at any time in US
history.
Recently Gates inaugurated a direct defence phone hotline with his
Chinese counterpart, Liang Guanglie, and the two sides have also begun
regular dialogues on strategic issues to improve bilateral co-
operation. Last week Liang thanked the US for its relief aid sent to
China's Sichuan province and said there had been "stable progress" on
defence ties between the Beijing and Washington.
In Singapore, Gates - in an implicit reference to China - stressed the
US wanted to work with every Asian country and "deepen our
understanding of their military and defence finances and larger
national security decisions".
"We do so in a sincere and open effort to avoid misreading intentions
and so that we can continue our work as strategic partners," he said
to an audience that included Ma Xiaotian, deputy chief of the general
staff of China's People's Liberation Army.
Gates did not give any hint that he had been briefed in advance on
Kevin Rudd's novel concept of an Asia-Pacific community by 2020. He
said Washington welcomed the search for a new security architecture
and frameworks that could moderate interstate competition. But the
Pentagon did have some benchmarks. East Asia should avoid an approach
that treated the quest for a new security body as some kind of zero-
sum game. According to Gates it can only succeed if the region is
treated as a single entity with no room for a separate East Asian
order. That means the US must be part of any new security framework.
Washington would be willing to work with friends and partners to
assist the evolution of "security arrangements suitable to common
needs", he said. The clear message was that the US would be there to
help shape any new longer-term Asian-Pacific security forum.
"We certainly share an interest in institutionalising various forums
to deal with region-specific problems and we intend to participate in
their evolution," was Gates's parting message.
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