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Training the Big Guns on China
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Egypt
Headed for an Explosion
US Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta says the major portion of US naval power
will shift to the Pacific by 2020 as part of the Pentagon’s new
"pivot to Asia" strategy. Though not totally unexpected,
this news has caused quite a stir across Asia and raised tempers
in China.
However, there’s
rather less to this redeployment of naval forces than meets the
eye. The US Navy has long kept half of its warships, aircraft, and
logistics vessels in the Pacific. The new plan will see a modest
increase in US naval forces in Asian waters; the ratio of Pacific
to Atlantic naval units will increase to 60/40 or slightly more.
More of America’s
11 attack carriers will sail the Pacific. The Marine Corps, with
its own air wings ("the Navy’s army" as wags call it),
will increase its presence in the Pacific theater.
A 2,500-man
US Marine expeditionary force is being stationed in remote northern
Australia. It is far enough from China to be of little military
use, but close enough to raise tensions with Beijing and Jakarta.
Its mission, besides bracing Aussie spirits, is uncertain.
But US grand
strategy is clear. Just as the US sought to contain the Soviet Union
during the Cold War by surrounding it with American allies and bases,
so Washington plans to do with China.
America is
creating a sweeping arc of allies and bases that begins in Singapore,
and moves northeast to the Philippines, then Taiwan, Okinawa, Japan,
and South Korea, neatly bottling up China’s expanding naval forces.
India is being encouraged to build powerful naval forces that can
threaten China’s oil routes to the Mideast and keep its navy out
of the Indian Ocean.
Other US navel
forces – the Bahrain-based Fifth Fleet, and units patrolling the
Indian Ocean - will support the US 7th Fleet that has
ruled the western Pacific since 1944 after the US Navy won its most
glorious victories and swept the Imperial Japanese Navy from the
seas.
Shifting naval
units from the Atlantic to Pacific is not a major undertaking for
the US. After the severe decline of Russia’s once mighty Red Banner
Northern and Baltic fleets, there is no longer any major naval threat
in the Atlantic. The days when packs of Soviet submarines were poised
near Iceland to break into the North Atlantic to cut North America’s
links with Europe are long gone.
The Mediterranean
is an American lake.
But even with
the new Pacific redeployment, the US Navy will be hard-pressed to
maintain its former domination of the region.
America’s navy
has shrunken to around 310 warships and 3,700 aircraft from the
600 ships planned during the 1980’s. Even so, the mighty US Navy
remains larger than the next eleven navies combined. As a French
admiral told me, the US Navy’s budget exceeds France’s total defense
budget.
China’s rapid
development of anti-ship missiles, submarines, space-based sensors,
and a new anti-carrier ballistic missile, the DF21-D, increasingly
alarms the US Navy and may force its attack carriers to operate
far from Asia’s coasts. In fact, huge aircraft carriers are ever
more vulnerable to attack and will eventually be made obsolete by
drones and missiles.
However, naval
forces are no longer the primary expression of America’s power.
The US Air Force has dominated much of the non-communist globe since
the 1950’s and serves America’s strategic interests in the same
way the Royal Navy imposed the British Empire’s military and commercial
power. Air power has played the decisive role in all of America’s
military victories since World War I.
The
Pentagon plans to strengthen its Pacific air power. This likely
includes re-establishing US air bases in the Philippines and Australia,
and expanding air bases in Guam, Okinawa, and South Korea.
America has
been at war for decades. Its aircraft and warships are aging rapidly.
Equally threatening, Congress may force deep military spending cuts
as deficits worsen – at a time when the US military is being ordered
to keep China bottled up on the Asian mainland.
China need
only build its military power close to home. The United States must
project and maintain its naval and air power 10,000 km across the
Pacific Ocean, a hugely expensive, complex undertaking that gives
cash-rich China an important, even decisive advantage.
June
9, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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