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THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES (CAAB) |
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Pentagon
denies Los Angeles Times report that U.S. troops moving to Vietnam
and Malaysia
ARLINGTON, Va. — While the Pentagon is moving forward with
plans to rejigger the force structure in the Pacific, specifics are
far from decided, Pentagon officials said Thursday. An article in Thursday’s Los Angeles Times quoted unnamed
senior officials as saying that an Asian reorganization “may
include moving Marines out of Japan and establishing a network of
small bases in countries such as Australia, Singapore and
Malaysia.” But while a broad reorganization is under way, the specifics
regarding numbers and places for potential moves are “largely
incorrect and inaccurate,” according to Pentagon spokeswoman Navy
Chief Petty Officer Diane Perry. “We think about a lot of things,” Perry said Thursday. But
while “there are lots of ideas out there, there are no plans as of
yet,” she said. Negotiating new permanent bases in Asia will be an enormously
complex and time-consuming task. Americans will negotiate a
landscape plagued by anti-U.S. sentiments and difficult governments. According to the L.A. Times article, “under plans on the table,
all but about 5,000 of the Marines [on Okinawa] would move, possibly
to Australia. “The 24,000 or so U.S. troops based with their families
elsewhere in Japan would remain where they were,” the article
said. But “the statement about moving Marines to Australia is
inaccurate,” Perry said. While Australia may be under consideration as a possible location
for U.S. troops, “no one is talking about numbers, at all,” she
said. In fact, only last week, Australia’s prime minister, John
Howard, denied reports that the Pentagon had asked to base troops
and aircraft in that nation, according to the Australian Associated
Press. The newspaper The Australian reported Thursday that U.S. military
officials had informally asked to base up to 5,000 troops and F-16
fighters there. However, Prime Minister John Howard labeled the report
speculation and said, “There has been absolutely no approach made
to me or the defense minister about that matter.” A U.S. embassy spokesman in Canberra also denied knowledge of
such plans. “There is no plan to base U.S. forces in Australia, nor have
U.S. officials made any request to the government of Australia on
the subject” he told AAP. The Australian reported the move was part of a plan to combat
terrorism in Southeast Asia, especially Islamic extremists in
Indonesia. The Times article also reported that the Pentagon is talking to
Philippine officials about a permanent presence for ground troops in
the Philippines, an assertion Perry flatly denied. “There are no plans to place permanent ground troops in the
Philippines,” she said. Since 1990, when Manila declined to renew the Military Bases
Agreement of 1947 and the U.S. lost access to Subic Naval Base,
national security analysts have kicked around the advantages of
regaining the site. But there is a significant anti-U.S. sentiment in the
Philippines, including a vocal and effective block in its Congress
that has made it difficult for the Pentagon even to bring in troops
on a temporary basis to train Philippine forces to fight terrorism. “We’re still agreeing to agree to discuss” the next wave of
trainers coming into the Philippines, Perry said. “To think that
we’re at the point of talking about [basing] permanent U.S. troops
[in the Philippines] is absurd.” Perry expressed concern that articles raising the idea could
prompt an outcry in the Philippines. U.S. troops on Philippine soil, in any numbers and for any
reason, “is a very, very sensitive point” with the people of
that nation, she said. The Times reported that officials are “seeking agreements to
base Navy ships in Vietnamese waters,” a concept that has been
floated ever since the United States normalized relations with
Vietnam in 1995. The U.S. interest lies with a former Soviet naval base at Cam
Ranh Bay, a port in the southern province of Khanh Hoa that offers
strategic access to sea lanes in the South China Sea. Russia had a rent-free agreement for the base that ran from 1979
to 2002, when Moscow pulled out. In the mid-1990s, the Clinton
administration suggested an open port arrangement that would allow
warships of all nations to make calls at Cam Ranh, to no avail. Although the Times mentions Vietnam as among the countries that
are “openly seeking a U.S. military presence and the security and
economic benefits that American bases could bring,” in April 2002
Radio Australia News reported that Hanoi officials said the
government has no intention of allowing another country to use Cam
Ranh Bay. Even if the Vietnamese government has changed its mind and is now
courting the United States military, any agreement between
Washington and Hanoi — one of the last Communist governments in
the world — would be difficult to negotiate. In a Jan. 21 speech to the Asia society in Washington, U.S.
Ambassador to Vietnam Raymond F. Burghardt noted that the two
one-time foes “don’t have much of a military-to-military
relationship, for obvious historical reasons.” Malaysia is another country mentioned in the article as a place
where Pentagon officials are considering “increasing the presence
of U.S. troops.” U.S. military ties with Malaysia are fairly strong, especially
since the beginning of the war on terror. But behind the recent cooperation is a history of tension between
Washington and Malaysia regarding human rights issues. |