Does the U.S.
military have the resources for an Asian century?
A March 26, Washington Post article discussed a new expansion of the military relationship between theUnited States and Australia . According to the piece,
the U.S. Navy is seeking to expand its ability to operate in the Indian Ocean
from Western Australia, which would require a major expansion to a naval base
in Perth. The Pentagon also hopes to establish a long-range air
reconnaissance base on the Cocos Islands, a remote Australian atoll midway
between Perth and Sri Lanka.
This expansion of U.S.
military capability into the northeast Indian Ocean quickly follows last year's agreement
to permanently station a small force of U.S. Marines near Darwin
on the north coast and to expand U.S. access to Australian bases and
training ranges.
BY ROBERT HADDICK | MARCH 30, 2012
A March 26, Washington Post article discussed a new expansion of the military relationship between the
At the time, I noted
that U.S. military power in the western Pacific is concentrated in Japan and
South Korea (a legacy of the Cold War) while the emerging area of great power
contention -- the South China Sea -- lies 2,000 miles to the south. The U.S.
agreements with Australia, combined with a major expansion of military
facilities on Guam, are an attempt to bolster the Pentagon's capacity to
sustain a larger ongoing presence in the South China Sea and Southeast Asia.
The U.S. interest in the South
China Sea is in maintaining free navigation through what is
arguably the most important commercial shipping passage in the world. The
agreements with Australia
and the buildup on Guam are helpful in this
regard but insufficient. Ultimately, the Navy will need to provide a
sufficiently reassuring presence to the countries bordering the South China Sea in order to prevent various disputes over
the sea from threatening routine commerce through it. It remains to be seen
whether the Navy will have the capacity and realistic plans to accomplish this
mission over the long run.
This week, the Navy sent Congress an update of its 30-year shipbuilding plan, which would continue the trend
of an ever-shrinking maritime force. The new plan foresees an average of 298
ships operating over the next 30 years, down from last year's forecast of a
306-ship average. And the plan foresees the Navy buying fewer new ships per
year, reinforcing another unfavorable trend. The Congressional Budget Office's
evaluation of Navy shipbuilding found those plans underfunded
and over-optimistic. A few years ago, the Navy had plans for a 313-ship fleet.
The bipartisan Quadrennial Defense Review Independent Panel called for
a fleet of 346 ships. There are no plans to reach either of these targets.
Under Secretary of the Navy Robert Work, in a January 2012
speech to the Surface Navy Association, dismissed concerns about the Navy's shrinking ship count.
Work asserted that the Navy's robust plans for long-range air reconnaissance,
conducted by new aircraft such as the P-8A Poseidon and a Navy version of the Global Hawk drone, will do much of the
routine maritime patrolling previously done by ships. Bases in Australia , the Cocos Islands, and elsewhere in
the southwest Pacific would support surveillance of the South
China Sea . If ships were required to respond to problems, admirals
could send them in as always. But under Work's assumption, fewer ships will be
needed for routine patrolling. And with less routine steaming, the Navy will
save money and keep its ships better maintained.
The question is whether more aerial maritime
reconnaissance and fewer ships making fewer port visits around the South China Sea and elsewhere will provide the reassuring
and stabilizing presence that the visible presence of Navy ships has heretofore
provided. Work's air reconnaissance doctrine and the Navy's slumping fleet size
combine to form a new theory for providing a stabilizing presence in global
commons such as the South China Sea . We will
know that this theory is not working if the leaders of U.S. allies
increase their diplomatic hedging behavior. Regional arms races, another
response to a perceived decline in U.S. military power, would be
another indication of failure. China 's
ongoing annual double-digit increases in defense spending and a looming submarine arms race in the region are not good signs.
The Navy's task of providing a stabilizing presence in
the South China Sea and elsewhere is further
complicated the growing anti-ship and anti-aircraft missile threats.
These threats are forcing the Navy and the Air Force to develop new ways of
operating against adversaries from longer ranges, where ships and aircraft will
be less vulnerable to adversary missiles. The missile threat is also
encouraging the Navy and Air Force to rely more on out-of-sight platforms, such
as submarines, and long-range stealthy aircraft, which purposely stay as hidden
as possible. All of these trends work against the concept of a visible forward
presence, which the Navy has used to deter threats to the global commons but
which may increasingly become untenable due to adversary missiles.
Ships assigned to "presence duty," for example
patrolling the South China Sea and making port
visits in the region, will be most at risk from missile attack at the start of
a conflict. This fact will increasingly encourage the Navy to hold the most
capable and prestigious surface ships, such as its aircraft carriers, out of
sight of allies located within adversary missile range. As the missile threat
matures, the Navy's new and modestly capable Littoral Combat Ships (LCS), a few of which will be
stationed in Singapore, may perform the forward presence mission, showing the
flag during peacetime and serving as expendable "trip wires" if
shooting breaks out. Meanwhile, the main fleet and other long-range striking
power will wait over the horizon and out of sight.
In this case,
policymakers in Washington will be counting on
the small, fragile, and lightly armed LCSs to inspire awe in U.S. military power. With the new
expansion in its relationship with Australia ,
the Pentagon is groping toward a way to bolster its presence in the South China Sea . As it does so, it will have to figure
out how to continue to provide a reassuring naval presence -- something the
Navy has done for decades -- while the missile threat to that presence grows.
Compounding the problem is a Navy shipbuilding budget under pressure and
inadequate for even the now-reduced plans. The Navy's leaders are attempting to
devise new tactics and new structures to adapt to a deteriorating situation.
But will those measures be sufficient to reassure allies and deter potential
adversaries?
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