America's Imperial Reach
Michael Klare
The White House has updated America's interests and our global military
presence but not because of terrorism.
http://www.tompaine.com/
=============================
Imperial Reach
by Michael T. Klare
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050425&s=klare
As the Defense Department begins to look beyond the war in Iraq, a major
priority will be to commence a systematic realignment of US forces and bases
abroad. This massive undertaking will result in a substantial reduction of
American forces in Germany and South Korea, and the establishment of new
facilities in Eastern Europe, the Caspian Sea basin, Southeast Asia and
Africa. Tens of thousands of troops (and their dependents) now stationed
abroad will be redeployed to the United States, while fresh contingents will
be sent to areas that have never before housed a permanent US military
presence. These steps are largely justified in terms of military
effectiveness--to eliminate obsolete cold war facilities and ease the
transport of American troops to likely scenes of conflict. Underlying the
planning, however, is a new approach to combat and a fresh calculus of the
nation's geopolitical interests.
The first big steps in the Pentagon's basing realignment were announced last
summer by President Bush during a speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars in
Cincinnati. Up to 70,000 American combat troops will be redeployed from bases
in Germany, Japan and South Korea to bases in the United States or to US
territories abroad, including Guam. Most of these forces--approximately 40,000
troops from the First Armored Division and the First Infantry Division--will
be withdrawn from Germany. At the same time, however, the Army will station
one of its Stryker Brigades, built around the Stryker light armored vehicle,
at the Grafenwöhr training area in what used to be East Germany. Bush also
indicated that new basing facilities will be acquired in other countries, in
order to facilitate the rapid movement of American troops to likely areas of
combat. "We'll move some of our troops and capabilities to new locations,"
Bush explained, "so they can surge quickly to deal with unexpected threats."
In conjunction with this announcement, the Defense Department disclosed that
it is looking at two new types of basing facilities in areas that at present
do not house permanent US military installations. The first type, designated
"forward operating sites" or "forward operating locations," will consist of
logistical facilities (an airstrip or port complex) plus weapons stockpiles;
these installations will house a small permanent crew of US military
technicians but no large combat units. The second type, termed "cooperative
security locations," will be "bare bones" facilities utilized at times of
crisis only; such sites will have no permanent US presence but will be
maintained by military contractors and host-country personnel.
In discussing these new facilities, the Defense Department has gone out of its
way to avoid using the term "military base." A base, in the Pentagon's
lexicon, is a major facility with permanent barracks, armories, recreation
facilities, housing for dependents and so on. Such installations typically
have been in place for many years and are sanctioned by a formal security
partnership with the host country involved. The new types of facilities, on
the other hand, will contain no amenities, house no dependents and not be tied
to a formal security arrangement. This distinction is necessary, the Pentagon
explains, to avoid giving the impression that the United States is seeking a
permanent, colonial-like presence in the countries it views as possible hosts
for such installations.
"We have no plans [for military bases] on a permanent basis in those areas,"
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld averred when speaking of Eastern Europe and
the Caspian Sea region. "We're trying to find the right phraseology. We know
the word 'base' is not right for what we do.... We have bases in Germany and
we will continue to. But we also have had things that we call 'Forward
Operating Locations' or sites that are not permanent bases: they're not places
where you have families; they are not places where you have large numbers of
US military on a permanent basis.... [They are places] where you'd locate
people in and out or where you use it for refueling--these types of things."
The Defense Department has not publicly stated where it will establish these
new, no-frills installations, but Pentagon officials have inspected possible
locations in Eastern Europe, the Caspian Sea basin and Africa. Additional
sites have been mentioned in Congressional reports and news media. It is
possible, then, to identify many of the most likely sites [see sidebar, page
16].
The decommissioning of older bases in Germany, Japan and South Korea and the
acquisition of new facilities in other areas has been described by the White
House as "the most comprehensive restructuring of US military forces overseas
since the end of the Korean War." In explaining these moves, the Bush
Administration emphasizes the issue of utility: Many older installations eat
up vast resources but contribute little to overall combat effectiveness, and
so should be closed; at the same time, new facilities are needed in areas
where few American bases currently exist. But while it is certainly arguable
that the closing of obsolete bases in Europe and East Asia will free resources
that might be better employed somewhere else, it is also clear that a lot more
is going on than mere military utility. Indeed, a close look at Pentagon
statements and policy reports suggests that three other factors are at work: a
new calculus of America's geopolitical interests; a shift in US strategic
orientation from defensive to offensive operations; and concerns about the
future reliability of long-term allies, especially those in "Old Europe."
Most significant, overall, is the revised calculation of America's
geopolitical interests. During the cold war, when "containment" was the
overarching strategic principle, the United States surrounded the Soviet bloc
with major bases. With the end of the cold war, however, this template no
longer made sense, and many of these bases lost their strategic rationale.
Meanwhile, other concerns--terrorism, the pursuit of foreign oil and the rise
of China--have come to preoccupy American strategists. It is these concerns
that are largely driving the realignment of US bases and forces.
There is a remarkable degree of convergence among these concerns, both in
practical and geographic terms. Oil and terrorism are linked because many of
the most potent terrorist groups, including Al Qaeda, arose in part as a
reaction to the West's oil-inspired embrace of entrenched Arab governments,
and because the terrorists often attack oil facilities in order to weaken the
regimes they abhor. Similarly, oil and China are linked because both
Washington and Beijing seek influence in the major oil-producing regions. And
the major terrorist groups, the most promising sites of new oil and the focal
points of Sino-American energy competition are all located in the same general
neighborhoods: Central Asia and the Caspian region, the greater Gulf area and
the far reaches of the Sahara. And the United States is establishing new
basing facilities precisely in these areas.
In combating the threat posed by terrorist forces, the United States naturally
seeks an enhanced military presence where these groups first arose. Moreover,
as the older oilfields of the North are gradually exhausted, more and more of
the world's oil will have to come from producers in the Global
South--especially the Persian Gulf countries plus Africa and Latin America. In
1990, according to the Energy Department, these countries produced 32 million
barrels of oil per day, or 46 percent of total world output. By 2025, however,
they are expected to deliver 77 million barrels, or 61 percent of global
output. Over this same thirty-five-year period, the combined production of the
United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia and Europe will drop from 29 percent
to 19 percent of total world output. With America's domestic production in
decline, an ever-increasing share of its oil requirements will have to be
satisfied by imports, meaning greater US dependence on oil supplied by
countries in the Middle East, Africa and other non-Western areas.
These countries show a high degree of instability, much of it induced by the
legacies of colonialism and a preponderance of unrepresentative political
institutions. Nigeria, for example, has experienced periodic outbreaks of
ethnic disorder in the Niger Delta region, the source of most of its
petroleum; both Angola and Azerbaijan harbor ethnic separatist movements; and
Saudi Arabia and Iraq have been the repeated targets of attacks on oil
facilities and related infrastructure. In none of these countries can the
uninterrupted extraction and export of oil be taken for granted, and so the
American economy is becoming increasingly exposed to supply disruptions in
overseas producing areas.
In the face of this peril, American leaders have placed ever-increasing
reliance on the use of military force to protect the global production and
transport of oil. This trend began in 1980, when President Jimmy Carter vowed
that the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf would be assured "by any means
necessary, including military force." The same basic premise was subsequently
applied to the Caspian Sea basin by President Clinton, and is now being
extended by President Bush to other producing areas, including Africa. All of
this entails the increased involvement of US military forces in these
areas--and it is to facilitate such involvement that the Defense Department
seeks new bases and "operating locations."
Normally, Pentagon officials are reluctant to ascribe US strategic moves to
concern over the safe delivery of energy supplies. Nevertheless, in their
explanations of the need for new facilities, the oil factor has begun to crop
up. "In the Caspian Sea you have large mineral [i.e., petroleum] reserves,"
observed General Charles Wald, deputy commander of the US European Command (Eucom),
in June 2003. "We want to be able to assure the long-term viability of those
resources." Wald has also spoken of the need for bases to help protect oil
reserves in Africa (which falls under the purview of the EUCOM). "The estimate
is [that] in the next ten years, we will get 25 percent of our oil from
there," he declared in Air Force magazine. "I can see the United States
potentially having a forward operating location in São Tomé," or other sites
in Africa.
Of the dozen or so locations mentioned in Pentagon or media accounts of new
basing locations, a majority--including Algeria, Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Gabon,
Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Qatar, Romania, São Tomé and Príncipe,
Tunisia--either possess oil themselves or abut major pipelines and supply
routes. At the same time, many of these countries house terrorist groups or
have been used by them as staging areas. And, from the Pentagon's perspective,
the protection of oil and the war against terrorism often amount to one and
the same thing. Thus, when asked whether the United States was prepared to
help defend Nigeria's oilfields against ethnic violence, General Wald replied,
"Wherever there's evil, we want to go there and fight it."
Equally strong geopolitical considerations link the pursuit of foreign oil to
American concern over the rise of China. Like the United States, China needs
to import vast amounts of petroleum in order to satisfy skyrocketing demand at
home. In 2010, the Energy Department predicts, China will have to import 4
million barrels of oil per day; by 2025 it will be importing 9.4 million
barrels. China will also be dependent on major producers in the Middle East
and Africa, and so it has sought to curry favor with these countries using the
same methods long employed by the United States: by forging military ties with
friendly regimes, supplying them with weapons and stationing military advisers
in them. A conspicuous Chinese presence has been established, for example, in
Iran, Sudan and the Central Asian republics. To counter these incursions, the
United States has expanded its own military ties with local powers--and this
in turn has helped spark the drive for new basing facilities in the Gulf and
Caspian regions.
The search for new bases is also being driven by the Pentagon's new strategic
outlook. During the cold war era, most overseas US troop deployments were
defensive--intended to deter Soviet expansionism in Europe and Asia and to
provide the means for effective resistance should deterrence fail. True, some
of these bases were also used to support covert operations against pro-Soviet
regimes in the Third World and to promote other US interests, but for the most
part their role was static and defensive--and it is this passivity that
Rumsfeld and his associates seek to do away with. Instead, the Bush
Administration and its neocon allies seek to fashion a more assertive, usable
combat force. This new outlook is encapsulated in The National Defense
Strategy of the United States of America, a report just released by the
Defense Department: "Our role in the world depends on effectively projecting
and sustaining our forces in distant environments where adversaries may seek
to deny US access," the document says. The military doctrine forged by the
Bush Administration also envisions pre-emptive military action or, more
accurately, preventive strikes intended to cripple an enemy's combat
capability before it can be developed to the point of actually posing a threat
to American interests.
Being able to strike first against all conceivable future adversaries
translates into two types of military capabilities: a capacity to move forces
into combat quickly and seize the battlefield initiative; and an ability to
deliver combat power to any corner of the globe, no matter how distant or
inhospitable. These necessitate a whole new constellation of overseas bases.
Because speed and agility require installations that are geared to logistical
efficiency rather than defensive might, older bastions must be replaced by new
facilities geared to transiting offensive forces; and because new adversaries
could arise in areas far removed from existing US bases, new facilities are
needed in any potential site of conflict. Hence the desire for new logistical
hubs and "bare bones" facilities in every region of the world.
Finally, the Pentagon's search for new basing facilities is being driven by
the altered political landscape of the post-cold war era. The installations
acquired in Germany, Japan and South Korea during the cold war were primarily
intended for the defense of those and neighboring countries, and so were
largely welcomed by the governments involved. In most cases, these bases were
embedded in an alliance relationship and reflected a shared strategic vision.
"The cold war provided an overarching framework," John Hamre of the Center for
Strategic and International Studies told the Congressional Overseas Basing
Commission in November. "The important factor in that strategic framework is
that it incorporated the national interests of host nations, not just the
United States. Our military presence in a given country protected them from
invasion or hostile action by others--the host country and the United States
shared the same risks and the same enemy."
Today, save for South Korea, such facilities are no longer intended to
buttress the common defense but rather for use as steppingstones for the
deployment of American forces to other areas of the world--often in operations
that do not have the support of the host nation, such as the war in Iraq. And
the South Koreans have begun to express strong differences with the United
States over how best to deal with Pyongyang--with many favoring a strategy of
reconciliation instead of confrontation. Even Turkey, a long-term US ally,
refused to allow the Pentagon to use its territory as a launching pad for the
invasion of Iraq. All of this has led to considerable
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