Who
in their right mind would ever believe that this is not directed
against China?
US
flexes Pacific muscle
AUSTRALIA
has thrown its support behind a ''rebalancing'' of American military
might in the Pacific region, which promises to deepen strategic
rivalries with China.
SMH,
3
June, 2012
Defence
Minister Stephen Smith yesterday spoke of the ''positive impact'' of
the United States on regional security, just hours before the US
presented its most detailed plan of how it will bulk up military
might into the Pacific region while making budget cuts elsewhere.
Chinese
analysts said the US and Australian comments would provide more
ammunition to those in China who argued that the US was using its
allies to ''contain'' China's rise.
But,
they said, the civilian Chinese leadership was unlikely to be drawn
into a new verbal spat with the US or Australia as it continues to
play down diplomatic incidents - including the arrest of an alleged
American spy - in an attempt to smooth the road to a once-a-decade
leadership transition later this year.
''By
2020, the navy will reposture its forces from today's roughly 50-50
split between the Pacific and the Atlantic to about a 60-40 split
between those oceans,'' US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta told Asian
officials at a conference in Singapore yesterday.
''That
will include six aircraft carriers in this region, a majority of our
cruisers, destroyers, combat ships and submarines,'' he said.
''Make
no mistake - in a steady, deliberate and sustainable way - the United
States military is rebalancing and brings enhanced capabilities to
this vital region.''
Mr
Smith spoke at the same Shangri-La conference in Singapore, en route
to Beijing, making his first visit as Defence Minister.
A
new book - The Kingdom and the Quarry: China, Australia, Fear and
Greed, by David Uren - has revealed the existence of a secret chapter
in Australia's 2009 Defence White Paper that contemplated war with
China.
Mr
Smith yesterday dismissed the possibility that American military and
economic power would ''somehow be rapidly eclipsed overnight as a
result of the new distribution of power to Asia''.
''In
Australia's view, the United States has underwritten stability in the
Asia-Pacific for the past half-century and will continue to be the
single most important strategic factor in our region for the
foreseeable future,'' he said.
But
the US announcement is one more step towards a militaristic rivalry
between the world's two largest powers.
''The
strategic rivalry between Beijing and Washington is becoming more
profound,'' said Shi Yinhong, professor of international relations at
the People's University of China.
''At
least into the next generation we will continue to see strategic
rivalry becoming more profound and more widespread.''
Andrew
Davies, director of military operations and capabilities at the
Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said there was too much
economic integration between China and the US to allow a Soviet-style
cold war to develop between the two powers.
But,
he said, the strategic rivalry was becoming more militaristic.
Beijing
and Washington have managed to smooth over a series of diplomatic
incidents in recent months.
In
recent days it has emerged that the personal assistant to a
vice-minister at China's Ministry of State Security has been detained
in China on charges of spying for the US.
Last
month the US gave political refuge to the Chinese human rights
activist Chen Guangcheng.
In
February China's most famous policeman, Wang Lijun, sought refuge in
another US diplomatic mission, precipitating the purge of a Politburo
member, Bo Xilai.
‘This
is not about China’: US to move majority of warships to
Asia-Pacific
The
US is set to reposition its Navy fleet with the majority of its
warships to be assigned to the Asia-Pacific by 2020. But this
military strategy has nothing to do with US-Chinese rivalry in the
region, the defense secretary assures
RT,
2
June, 2012
The
US would reposition its Navy so that 60 per cent of its warships
would be assigned to the Asia-Pacific region by 2020, compared to
about 50 per cent now, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told senior
civilian and military leaders from about 30 Asia-Pacific nations at
an annual security forum in Singapore.
"Some
view the increased emphasis by the United States on the Asia-Pacific
region as some kind of challenge to China. I reject that view
entirely," he said. "Our effort to renew and intensify our
involvement in Asia is fully compatible… with the development and
growth of China. Indeed, increased US involvement in this region will
benefit China as it advances our shared security and prosperity for
the future."
But
in laying out core US principles in the region, Panetta made clear
Washington opposed any attempt by Beijing to make unilateral moves in
its push for territorial rights in the oil-rich South China Sea.
Panetta's
comments came at the start of a seven-day visit to the region to
prove to its Asian allies that it intends to remain a crucial
military and economic power in the region to counterbalance China's
growing influence.
The
trip includes stops in Vietnam and India, and comes at a time of
renewed tensions over competing sovereignty claims in the South China
Sea, with the Philippines, a major US ally, and China in a standoff
over the Scarborough Shoal near the Filipino coast.
The
US aims to reassure its allies that Washington would act to
counterbalance China's growing influence on the South China Sea as
part of its foreign policy known as the "pivot to Asia".
Panetta said the US will be committed to alliances instead of new
permanent bases and mentioned treaties with Japan, South Korea,
Thailand, the Philippines and Australia as well as partnerships with
India, Singapore, Indonesia and others.
Panetta
also said Washington also would work to increase the number and size
of bilateral and multilateral military training exercises it conducts
in Asia-Pacific. Officials said last year the US carried out 172 such
joint drills in the region.
Panetta
reiterated he was committed to a "healthy, stable, reliable and
continuous" military-to-military relationship with China, but
underscored the need for Beijing to support a system to clarify
rights in the region and help to resolve disputes.
"China
has a critical role to play in advancing security and prosperity by
respecting the rules-based order that has served the region for six
decades," he said.
President
Obama unveiled the new US defense strategy at the start of the year.
The US leader stressed that the shift in focus to Asia comes amid
increasing concern at the Pentagon over China's strategic goals.
Beijing begins to field a new generation of weapons that American
officials fear are designed to prevent US naval and air forces from
projecting power into the Far East.
In
response, Beijing warned the US to be "careful in its words and
actions and do more that is beneficial to the development of
relations between the two countries and their militaries."
The
Chinese Foreign Ministry stated the expanded US military presence in
Asia was based on a miscalculation of Beijing's intent to modernize
its military defenses.
"The
accusation targeting China in the document has no basis, and is
fundamentally unrealistic," the Foreign Ministry proclaimed back
in January, shortly after the release of Washington’s new strategy.
"China adheres to the path of peaceful development, an
independent and peaceful foreign policy and a defensive national
defense policy.”
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