By Nick Simeone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Mar. 5, 2014 – The top U.S. military commander
for the Asia-Pacific region told Congress today that growing challenges posed
by China’s rising military power, an increasingly dangerous and unpredictable
North Korea, escalating territorial disputes and humanitarian aid efforts after
natural disasters are putting the U.S. military in Asia at greater risk.
Navy Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III, commander of U.S. Pacific
Command, told the House Armed Services Committee the challenges all are part of
Pacom’s efforts to defend U.S. interests in a region that spans more than half
the globe.
“And we have done all this against the backdrop of continued
fiscal and resource uncertainty, and the resultant diminishing readiness and
availability of our joint force,” he said.
A day after North Korea tested a long-range rocket and China
reported plans to increase military spending by 12 percent, Locklear testified
that “those things all make a security environment that’s more complex,” and he
called North Korea “very unpredictable and increasingly dangerous.”
A tighter fiscal environment, he said, has led to readiness
levels that he considers unacceptable should the United States or its allies be
threatened. Forces either are not ready or have been deployed elsewhere in the
world, he explained.
“From my assessment, the global demand on maritime forces in
general, which include our aircraft carrier force, far exceed what the Navy is
able to resource,” Locklear said. U.S. naval assets are now tasked with
patrolling a much greater portion of the globe, he added, and that will only
increase.
“When I was a young officer, I never considered that we
would be contemplating operations in the Antarctic, but that will come,
probably in the very near future,” the admiral said. “I couldn’t have found the
Horn of Africa on a chart, or wasn’t familiar with it. But now we operate
routinely there.”
The added responsibilities come at a time when Asian nations
are building “ever more aggressive” and high-end military capabilities, while
regional disputes are on the rise, Locklear told the panel. At the same time,
he said, the United States has no plans to build new bases overseas, but will
instead look to partner with allies such as the Philippines to reach base
access agreements.
“I would have never anticipated that there would be the kind
of tensions in the vast South China Sea over territorial rights and fishing
rights, or in the East China Sea,” Locklear told the panel -- issues he said
the United States is watching very carefully, but ultimately have to be settled
through arbitration, rather than coercion.
Locklear said China’s expanding military budget should not
come as a surprise, but a lack of transparency regarding what the increased
spending is being used for concerns him. He also wonders whether the world will
see China as a net provider of security or whether Beijing will use its muscle
to pursue regional claims, he added.
“We have a military-to-military relationship, which is slow
but steady,” Locklear said, “and we are making progress in breaking down the
barriers.”
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