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The Target is China
When Pentagon officials
first sat down last year to update the core planning document of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, they listed China as a potential future
adversary, a momentous change from the last decade of the Cold War.
But when the final version of the document, titled "Joint Vision
2020," is released next week, it will be far more discreet.
Rather than explicitly pointing at China, it simply will warn of
the possible rise of an unidentified "peer competitor."
The Joint Chiefs' wrestling with how to think about China -- and
how open to be about that effort--captures in a nutshell the U.S.
military's quiet shift away from its traditional focus on Europe.
Cautiously but steadily, the Pentagon is looking at Asia as the
most likely arena for future military conflict, or at least competition.
This new orientation is reflected in many small but significant
changes: more attack submarines assigned to the Pacific, more war
games and strategic studies centered on Asia, more diplomacy aimed
at reconfiguring the U.S. military presence in the area.
It is a trend that carries huge implications for the shape of the
armed services. It also carries huge stakes for U.S. foreign policy.
Some specialists warn that as the United States thinks about a rising
China, it ought to remember the mistakes Britain made in dealing
with Germany in the years before World War I.
The new U.S. military interest in Asia also reverses a Cold War
trend under which the Pentagon once planned by the year 2000 to
have just "a minimal military presence" in Japan, recalls
retired Army Gen. Robert W. RisCassi, a former U.S. commander in
South Korea.
Two possibilities are driving this new focus. The first is a chance
of peace in Korea; the second is the risk of a hostile relationship
with China.
Although much of the current discussion in Washington is about a
possible military threat from North Korea, for military planners
the real question lies further ahead: What to do after a Korean
rapprochement? In this view, South Korea already has won its economic
and ideological struggle with North Korea, and all that really remains
is to negotiate terms for peace.
According to one Defense Department official, William S. Cohen's
first question to policy officials when he became defense secretary
in 1997 was: How can we change the assumption that U.S. troops will
be withdrawn after peace comes to the Korean peninsula? Next month's
first-ever summit between the leaders of North and South Korea puts
a sharper edge on this issue.
In the longer run, many American policymakers expect China to emerge
sooner or later as a great power with significant influence over
the rest of Asia. That, along with a spate of belligerent statements
about Taiwan from Chinese officials this spring, has helped focus
the attention of top policymakers on China's possible military ambitions.
The Buzzword Is China
Between tensions over Taiwan and this week's House vote to normalize
trade relations with China, "China is the new Beltway buzzword,"
observed Dov S. Zakheim, a former Pentagon official who is an adviser
on defense policy to Republican presidential candidate George W.
Bush.
To be sure, large parts of the U.S. military remain "Eurocentric,"
especially much of the Army. The shift is being felt most among
policymakers and military planners--that is, officials charged with
thinking about the future--and least among front-line units. Nor
is it a change that the Pentagon is proclaiming from the rooftops.
Defense Department officials see little value in being explicit
about the shift in U.S. attention, which could worry old allies
in Europe and antagonize China.
Even so, military experts point to changes on a variety of fronts.
For example, over the last several years, there has been an unannounced
shift in the Navy's deployment of attack submarines, which in the
post-Cold War world have been used as intelligence assets--to intercept
communications, monitor ship movements and clandestinely insert
commandos--and also as front-line platforms for launching Tomahawk
cruise missiles against Iraq, Serbia and other targets. Just a few
years ago, the Navy kept 60 percent of its attack boats in the Atlantic.
Now, says a senior Navy submariner, it has shifted to a 50-50 split
between the Atlantic and Pacific fleets, and before long the Pacific
may get the majority.
But so far the focus on Asia is mostly conceptual, not physical.
It is now a common assumption among national security thinkers that
the area from Baghdad to Tokyo will be the main location of U.S.
military competition for the next several decades. "The focus
of great power competition is likely to shift from Europe to Asia,"
said Andrew Krepinevich, director of the Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments, a small but influential Washington think
tank. James Bodner, the principal deputy undersecretary of defense
for policy, added that, "The center of gravity of the world
economy has shifted to Asia, and U.S. interests flow with that."
War Gaming
The U.S. military's favorite way of testing its assumptions and
ideas is to run a war game. Increasingly, the major games played
by the Pentagon - except for the Army -- take place in Asia, on
an arc from Tehran to Tokyo. The games are used to ask how the U.S.
military might respond to some of the biggest questions it faces:
Will Iran go nuclear -- or become more aggressive with an array
of hard-to-stop cruise missiles? Will Pakistan and India engage
in nuclear war--or, perhaps even worse, will Pakistan break up,
with its nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Afghan mujaheddin?
Will Indonesia fall apart? Will North Korea collapse peacefully?
And what may be the biggest question of all: Will the United States
and China avoid military confrontation? All in all, estimates one
Pentagon official, about two-thirds of the forward-looking games
staged by the Pentagon over the last eight years have taken place
partly or wholly in Asia.
Last year, the Air Force's biggest annual war game looked at the
Mideast and Korea. This summer's game, "Global Engagement 5,"
to be played over more than a week at Maxwell Air Force Base in
Alabama, will posit "a rising large East Asian nation"
that is attempting to wrest control of Siberia, with all its oil
and other natural resources, from a weak Russia. At one point, the
United States winds up basing warplanes in Siberia to defend Russian
interests.
Because of the sensitivity of talking about fighting China, "What
everybody's trying to do is come up with games that are kind of
China, but not China by name," said an Air Force strategist.
"I think that, however reluctantly, we are beginning to face
up to the fact that we are likely over the next few years to be
engaged in an ongoing military competition with China," noted
Princeton political scientist Aaron L. Friedberg. "Indeed,
in certain respects, we already are."
Twin Efforts
The new attention to Asia also is reflected in two long-running,
military-diplomatic efforts.
The first is a drive to renegotiate the U.S. military presence in
northeast Asia. This is aimed mainly at ensuring that American forces
still will be welcome in South Korea and Japan if the North Korean
threat disappears. To that end, the U.S. military will be instructed
to act less like post-World War II occupation forces and more like
guests or partners.
Pentagon experts on Japan and Korea say they expect that "status
of forces agreements" gradually will be diluted, so that local
authorities will gain more jurisdiction over U.S. military personnel
in criminal cases. In addition, they predict that U.S. bases in
Japan and South Korea will be jointly operated in the future by
American and local forces, perhaps even with a local officer in
command.
At Kadena Air Force Base on the southern Japanese island of Okinawa,
for example, the U.S. military has started a program, called "Base
Without Fences," under which the governor has been invited
to speak on the post, local residents are taken on bus tours of
the base that include a stop at a memorial to Japan's World War
II military, and local reporters have been given far more access
to U.S. military officials.
Behind all this lies a quiet recognition that Japan may no longer
unquestioningly follow the U.S. lead in the region. A recent classified
national intelligence estimate concluded that Japan has several
strategic options available, among them seeking a separate accommodation
with China, Pentagon officials disclosed.
In the long term, this official added, a key goal of U.S. politico-military
policy is to ensure that when Japan reemerges as a great power,
it behaves itself in Asia, unlike the last time around, in the 1930s,
when it launched a campaign of vicious military conquest.
Southeast Asia Redux
The second major diplomatic move is the negotiation of the U.S.
military's reentry in Southeast Asia, 25 years after the end of
the Vietnam War and almost 10 years after the United States withdrew
from its bases in the Philippines. After settling on a Visiting
Forces Agreement last year, the United States and the Philippines
recently staged their first joint military exercise in years, "Balikatan
2000."
The revamped U.S. military relationship with the Philippines, argues
one general, may be a model for the region. Instead of building
"Little America" bases with bowling alleys and Burger
Kings that are off-limits to the locals, U.S. forces will conduct
frequent joint exercises to train Americans and Filipinos to operate
together in everything from disaster relief to full-scale combat.
The key, he said, isn't permanent bases but occasional access to
facilities and the ability to work with local troops.
Likewise, the United States has broadened its military contacts
with Australia, putting 10,000 troops into the Queensland region
a year ago for joint exercises. And this year, for the first time,
Singapore's military is participating in "Cobra Gold,"
the annual U.S.-Thai exercise. Singapore also is building a new
pier specifically to meet the docking requirements of a nuclear-powered
U.S. aircraft carrier. The U.S. military even has dipped a cautious
toe back into Vietnam, with Cohen this spring becoming the first
defense secretary since Melvin R. Laird to visit that nation.
Where the Generals Are
If the U.S. military firmly concludes that its major missions are
likely to take place in Asia, it may have to overhaul the way it
is organized, equipped and even led. "Most U.S. military assets
are in Europe, where there are no foreseeable conflicts threatening
vital U.S. interests," said "Asia 2025," a Pentagon
study conducted last summer. "The threats are in Asia,"
it warned.
This study, recently read by Cohen, pointedly noted that U.S. military
planning remains "heavily focused on Europe," that there
are four times as many generals and admirals assigned to Europe
as to Asia, and that about 85 percent of military officers studying
foreign languages are still learning European tongues.
"Since I've been here, we've tried to put more emphasis on
our position in the Pacific," Cohen said in an interview as
he flew home from his most recent trip to Asia. This isn't, he added,
"a zero-sum game, to ignore Europe, but recognizing that the
[economic] potential in Asia is enormous"--especially, he said,
if the United States is willing to help maintain stability in the
region.
In a few years, Pentagon insiders predict, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff will be from the Navy or Air Force, following 12
years in which Army officers have been the top officers in the military.
Perhaps even more significantly, they foresee the Air Force taking
away from the Navy at least temporarily the position of "CINCPAC,"
the commander in chief of U.S. forces in the Pacific. There already
is talk within the Air Force of basing parts of an "Air Expeditionary
Force" in Guam, where B-2 stealth bombers have been sent in
the past in response to tensions with North Korea.
Some analysts believe that the hidden agenda of the U.S. military
is to use the rise of Asia as a way to shore up the Pentagon budget,
which now consumes about 3 percent of the gross domestic product,
compared to 5.6 percent at the end of the Cold War in 1989.
Indeed, Cohen is already making the point that operating in Asia
is expensive. He said it is clear that America will have to maintain
"forward" forces in Asia. And that, he argued, will require
a bigger defense budget.
"There's a price to pay for what we're doing," Cohen concluded.
"The question we're going to have to face in the coming years
is, are we willing to pay up?"
From:
For Pentagon, Asia Moving to Forefront
by Thomas E. Ricks
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