According
to Tony Dumb Dumb, B-1
bombers are NOT headed for Australia
US official misspoke on B-1 bombers being based in Australia: Tony Abbott
US
official ‘misspoke’ about sending B-1 bombers to Australia amid
S. China Sea dispute
RT,
15
May, 2015
Amid
rising tensions with Beijing in the South China Sea, the US plans to
station “B-1 bombers and surveillance aircraft” in Australia, a
Pentagon official told Senate committee. However, the DoD assured
Australia that their representative “misspoke.”
In
addition to moving Marine and Army units around the region,
Washington will be “placing additional Air Force assets in
Australia as well, including B-1 bombers and surveillance aircraft,”
the US Defense Department's Assistant Secretary for Asian and Pacific
Security Affairs, David Shear, said during testimony before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) on Wednesday, as quoted by
Foreign Policy.
Australian
Defense ministry however denied the claim, announcing that their US
colleagues assured them Shear “misspoke” during his testimony.
"We
are aware of the comments made by a US official in Congressional
testimony overnight. The US government has contacted us to advise
that the official misspoke," the Australian defence spokesman
said as cited by Reuters.
The
notion of sending bombers to Australia is not an entirely new idea;
it was floated in 2013 by the then-commander of the Pacific Air
Forces, Gen. Herbert 'Hawk' Carlisle, though it never transpired.
Shear
stated that US military movements will also be taking place in other
countries in the region, including the “deployment of Global Hawks
and F-35s in Japan.” He also said that Washington will be adding to
the stock of V-22s in the country.
In
addition, he stated that the US will have four Littoral Combat Ships
in Singapore by 2020.
“We're
deploying high-speed vessels to Singapore and Guam. We're putting a
new Virginia class submarine in Guam as well, so we'll have no
shortage of capabilities and assets throughout the region to back our
diplomacy...”
The
US Department of Defence (DoD) is thus “ensuring that US interests
in the South China Sea are adequately protected,” Shear said
according to DoD press release.
The
US is increasing military presence in the region, amid what it
perceives as Beijing's highly assertive presence there. It follows
China's recent island and airstrip construction in the disputed
waters.
“We
claim the right of innocent passage in such areas, and we exercise
that right regularly, both in the South China Sea and globally,”
Shear said, accusing China of aggression.
China
began reclaiming territory in the South China in 2014. The waters are
also claimed by other countries in the region – Vietnam, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Brunei, and the Philippines – which are trying to bolster
their position there.
Shear
stressed that all of the claimants except Brunei have developed
outposts in the South China Sea's Spratley Islands. Of those
countries, Vietnam leads the pack with 48 outposts. The Philippines
and China are tied with eight outposts, while Malaysia has five and
Taiwan has one.
According
to him, China's reclamation of 2,000 acres since 2014 “dwarfs the
efforts of all other claimants.”
“China’s
actions could pose a range of military implications… such as
developing long-range radars and intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance aircraft to berthing deeper-draft ships and developing
a diversion airfield for carrier-based aircraft,” says a DoD press
release, citing Shear’s words.
China's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday it was "deeply
concerned" by reports about the US sending ships to the South
China Sea and demanded a clarification.
"Freedom
of navigation certainly does not mean that foreign military ships and
aircraft can enter another country's territorial waters or airspace
at will," ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said.
China's
Foreign Ministry argues that the country is entitled to national
defense building, which is for the “sole purpose of safeguarding
national independence, sovereignty, and national integrity.”
Beijing has called on Washington to “abandon its Cold War mentality” and stop “doing or saying anything that jeopardizes bilateral relations and military-to-military mutual trust.”
US bombers not Australia-bound, says PM
The
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott says he has been assured United
States B-1 bombers are not bound for Australia.
15
May, 2015
The
American Assistant defence secretary David Shear told a Congressional
hearing that the long-range bombers and surveillance aircraft would
soon be based in Australia as a deterrent to what America described
as China's "destabilising effect" in the region.
The
Pentagon has since said the assistant secretary misspoke.
Before
the clarification, China's foreign ministry expressed serious concern
with a spokesperson, saying the country would "resolutely uphold
its territorial sovereignty".
Mr
Shear also told the congressional hearing on the South China Sea the
deployment of air assets to Australia was in addition to the doubling
of US marines bound for Darwin, leaving their current base in Japan
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