Jun. 3, 2012 - 10:33AM |
By MARCUS WEISGERBER
CAM RANH BAY , Vietnam — The U.S.
Defense Department hopes to gain greater access for Navy ships into a key port
here as the Pentagon looks to broaden its military partnership with Vietnam .
U.S. naval ship access into Cam Ranh Bay “is a key component of this
relationship and we see a tremendous potential here for the future,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said during a June 3 visit to the dry
cargo ship Richard Byrd, which is making a port call here.
Panetta is the
highest-ranking U.S.
government official to visit Cam Ranh Bay since the Vietnam War. President
Lyndon Johnson visited Cam Ranh Bay in 1966.
Many considered Cam Ranh Bay
“the jewel of deep, warm-water ports in Southeast Asia ,”
a defense official said. Protected by
mountains, the bay served as a hub for U.S. military operations during the
Vietnam War.
Now, Vietnam is
trying to develop the bay into a prosperous international commercial port.
The Navy has been
sending ships to Vietnam
for port visits since 2003, the defense official said. Since then, more than 20
vessels have made visits to the country.
Access to Vietnamese
ports is just one component of an expanding military relationship between Washington and Hanoi .
“We’ve come a long way,
particularly with regards to our defense relationship,” Panetta said. “We had a
complicated relationship, but we’re not bound by that history.”
Last year, the two
countries signed a memorandum of understanding, and the United States
is looking to “expand that relationship” in a number of key areas, Panetta
said.
The pact focuses on
high-level exchanges, maritime activities, search and rescue, peacekeeping
operations and humanitarian aid and disaster relief.
“[W]e want to work with
Vietnam on critical maritime issues, including code of conduct, focusing on the
South China Sea and also working to improve freedom of navigation in our
oceans,” Panetta said.
A senior defense
official called Panetta’s visit to the country “significant” and said Vietnam has “expressed a desire to engage more
with the United States .”
“This visit is an effort
to take additional steps in that direction to solidify what has become an
important relationship for the U.S. ,”
the official said.
Panetta announced June 2
that the Navy would position 60 percent of its ships in the Pacific over the
next decade as part of a new military strategy that calls for greater emphasis
on the region. The vessels are now split evenly between the Atlantic
and Pacific.
“For that reason, it will
be particularly important to be able to work with partners like Vietnam to be
able to use harbors like this as we move our ships out from our ports on the
West Coast toward our stations here in the Pacific,” he said.
The Pentagon is looking
to build capabilities of partner nations in the Asia-Pacific region.
“For that to happen, it
is very important that we be able to protect key maritime rights for all
nations in the South China Sea and elsewhere,”
Panetta said.
The U.S. and Vietnam “normalized” relations 17
years ago.
“The visit is to take
stock of where we’ve come, consolidate gains and look for new opportunities,” a
second senior defense official said June 2.
Panetta has meetings
scheduled with top Vietnamese officials in Hanoi
on June 3 and also plans to visit a U.S. detachment that identifies the
remains of Vietnam War casualties.
“This sacred mission
will continue until all of our troops are accounted for,” Panetta said. “We
stand by our pledge that we leave no one behind.”
Panetta served in the
Army during the Vietnam War, but never saw combat in the region. His visit is
the first time he has traveled to the country.
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