By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates, May 28, 2014 – This rich
emirate looks like the very model of stability and prosperity, but it is in a
dangerous neighborhood and the U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is
visiting to improve the partnership between the two countries.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey took part in the Joint Strategic
Military Dialogue today with his Emirati counterpart, Army Lt. Gen. Hamad Thani
al-Rumaithi. He also met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed bin Sultan Al
Nahyan, the deputy supreme commander of the UAE’s armed forces.
The dialogue is an effort to better integrate American
capabilities with the United Arab Emirates, the chairman said during an
interview following the meeting.
The two countries work together on security cooperation,
integrated air and missile defense and command and control. The dialogue helps
both countries improve capabilities, “so that the sum is greater than the
parts, [and] also so we can make it clear to other actors in the region that
our partnership is intended to produce greater stability,” Dempsey said.
The better the United States and the United Arab Emirates
are able to cooperate, he added, the more secure this volatile region can be.
Iran is across the Persian Gulf from the UAE. At the
narrowest point of the Strait of Hormuz, the distance is only a couple of
miles. Through that strait flows much of the world’s oil supply.
The UAE is a member of the Gulf Cooperation Council -- along
with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Oman -- and cooperation with the
UAE benefits that organization as well, the chairman said. “It’s not about the
U.S. helping the GCC or the GCC helping the United States of America,” Dempsey
said. “It’s building a better partnership.”
The United States has a long partnership with the United
Arab Emirates and with the rest of the nations of the GCC. “To the extent that
we can refresh our partnership, refresh our understanding of threats, refresh
our capabilities, [and] to not take each other for granted,” the chairman said,
“I think we will stronger bilaterally and cooperatively.”
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