By Jim Garamone, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- The United States can help Pacific island
nations with security needs, Navy Undersecretary Thomas B. Modly told the
Defense Writers Group here today.
Modly just finished a trip through the island nations of
Oceania. The trip involved stops in Kiribati and its capital on the island of
Tarawa. He also visited Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Fiji, the Federated States
of Micronesia and the U.S. island of Guam.
The area is vast, he said, and there was hardly an island
that was not a battlefield during World War II. The undersecretary said he was
sobered by the scale of sacrifice and the scale of distance.
“The vastness of the region is matched by the vastness of
the issues and the challenges we have in trying to keep it secure,” he said.
Modly met with civilian and military officials in each
nation, as well as U.S. representatives. “The overarching theme I got from the
government officials I met with there were the paramount value of freedom of
navigation and the protection of their economic zones,” he said.
The land area in Oceania is small, but the economic zones
are huge, and they are 80 percent water, he said. “They are very far flung,” he
added.
The officials are also very clear about their desires to
maintain a strong relationship with the United States, Modly said. The United
States developed relations with the nations – many of them colonial possessions
at the time – during World War II. Those continued through the Cold War to
today.
But things have changed, he told the defense writers, and
the United States is no longer the only major power operating in the area now.
Expanded Chinese Influence
China is exerting influence into Oceania, he noted. “There
is no question China is becoming much more assertive in the region,” he said.
“They are looking for a variety of different ways to expand their influence.
The Chinese government is making investments tied to loans, as well as grants.”
These projects are largely around infrastructure – extension
of runways and construction of buildings and a conference center. “It is
apparent they are there and plan to stay there for the long term,” he said.
The United States, Australia and New Zealand have a strong
partnership in the region, and the moves in the area are complementary. “From
my perspective,” Modly said, “it is critical to reinforce these partnerships
and look for opportunities to help these nations.”
One opportunity, he said, is to invest in developing capabilities
to use, patrol and police their vast watery economic zones. The countries do
not have navies, and their coast guards are limited as well. Modly suggested
that the United States could work with these nations to develop fusion centers
that channel all sorts of information where it is needed and when it is needed.
This information could be as simple as weather reports and fishing information
or could be warnings about incursions by illegal fishing ships.
The nations don’t have large populations. Intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance assets could give them an unmanned way to
search their territory and only have patrol boats go out when they are needed,
the Navy undersecretary said.
“It’s a pretty modest investment, and the technology is so
good right now that it would be helpful,” he told the writers.
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