5. U.S. Uses Tsunami to Military Advantage in Southeast
Asia
Sources: Jane's Foreign Report (Jane's Defence),
February 15, 2005, Title: "U.S. Turns Tsunami into Military Strategy,"
The Irish Times, February 8, 2005, Title: "U.S. Has Used Tsunami to Boost
Aims in Stricken Area," Author: Rahul Bedi; Inter Press Service, January,
18 2005, Title: "Bush Uses Tsunami Aid to Regain Foothold in Indonesia,"
Author: Jim Lobe
Faculty Evaluator: Tony White, Ph. D., Craig Winston,
Ph. D.
Student Researcher: Ned Patterson
The tragic and devastating
power of 2004's post holiday tsunami was plastered across the cover of practically
every newspaper around the world for the better part of a month. As the death
toll rose by the thousands every day, countries struggled to keep pace with the
rapidly increasing need for aid across the Indian Ocean Basin.
At the same
time that U.S. aid was widely publicized domestically, our coinciding military
motives were virtually ignored by the press. While supplying our aid (which when
compared proportionately to that of other, less wealthy countries, was an insulting
pittance), we simultaneously bolstered military alliances with regional powers
in, and began expanding our bases throughout, the Indian Ocean region.
Long
viewed as a highly strategic location for U.S. interests, our desire to curtail
China's burgeoning economic and military might is contingent upon our control
of this area. In the months following the tsunami, writes Rahul Bedi in The Irish
Times, the U.S. revived the Utapao military base in Thailand it had used during
the Vietnam War. Task force 536 is to be moved there to establish a forward positioning
site for the U.S. Air Force.
During subsequent tsunami relief operations,
the U.S. reactivated its military co-operation agreements with Thailand and the
Visiting Forces Agreement with the Philippines. U.S. Navy also vessels utilized
facilities in Singapore, keeping with previous treaties. Further, the U.S. marines
and the navy arrived in Sri Lanka to bolster relief measures despite the tsunami-hit
island's initial reluctance to permit their entry.
The U.S. also stepped
up their survey of the Malacca Straits, over which China exercises considerable
influence, and through which 90 percent of Japan's oil supplies pass. The United
States has had trouble expanding its military influence in the region largely
due to suspicions by Indonesia and Malaysia that the U.S. is disguising imperial
aims under the goal of waging war against terror. The two countries have opposed
an American plan to tighten security in the vital Malacca Straits shipping lanes,
which might have involved U.S. troops stationed nearby.
Former Secretary
of State Colin Powell declared that U.S. relief to the tsunami-affected region
would assist the war against terror and introduce "American values to the
region." The Bush Administration is also reviving its hopes of normalizing
military ties with Indonesia, writes Jim Lobe for InterPress Service. The world's
most populous Muslim nation, its strategically located archipelago, critical sea
lanes, and historic distrust of China have made it an ideal partner for containing
Beijing.
During a January 2005 visit to Jakarta, Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz told reporters, "I think if we're interested in military reform
here, and certainly this Indonesian government is and our government is, I think
we need to possibly reconsider a bit where we are at this point in history moving
forward."
According to an article in the Asheville Global Report,
the following month the U.S. State Department made a decision to renew the International
Education and Military Training (IMET) program for Indonesia, despite considerable
human rights issues.
According to Bedi, Washington has long wanted a navel
presence in Trincomalee, eastern Sri Lanka, or alternatively in Galle, further
south, to shorten the supply chain from its major regional military base in distant
Diego Garcia, which the British Ocean Territory leased to the U.S. in 1966 for
the length of fifty years. The use of these bases would ring China, giving the
U.S. added control over that country's activities.
Diego Garcia's geostrategic
location in the Indian Ocean and its full range of naval, military and communications
facilities gives it a critical role supporting the U.S. Navy's forward presence
in the North Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean Region. However, because of the
bases' remoteness and the fact that its lease from Britain expires in 2016, the
U.S. seeks an alternative location in the region. "Clearly these new bases
will strengthen Washington's military logistical support in the region,"
says Professor Anuradha Chenoy at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University. She went
on to emphasize that an alternative to the Diego Garcia base must be found soon,
as the lease from Britain will soon expire.
Long before the tsunami struck,
an article dated April 21, 2003, by Josy Joseph on Rediff.com explained that a
classified report commissioned by the United States Department of Defense expresses
a desire for access to Indian bases and military infrastructures. The United States
Air Force specifically wants to establish bases in India. The report, entitled
"Indo-U.S. Military Relations: Expectations and Perceptions," was distributed
amongst high-ranking U.S. officials and a handful of senior members within the
Indian government. It continues on about the Defense Department's desire to have
"access closer to areas of instability."1
The report says, "American
military officers are candid in their plans to eventually seek access to Indian
bases and military infrastructure. India's strategic location in the centre of
Asia, astride the frequently traveled Sea Lanes Of Communication (SLOC) linking
the Middle East and East Asia, makes India particularly attractive to the U.S.
military."
The report also quotes U.S. Lieutenant Generals as saying
that the access to Indian bases would enable the U.S. military "to be able
to touch the rest of the world" and to "respond rapidly to regional
crisis." A South Asia Area Officer of the U.S. State Department has been
quoted as saying, "India's strategic importance increases if existing U.S.
relationships with Asia fail."
Post-tsunami U.S. actions in the Indian
Ocean illustrate its intention to move this agenda forward sooner rather than
later.
Note
1. Joseph, Josy; "Target Next: Indian Military Bases";
rediff.com, April 21, 2003; and Lobe, Jim; "Skepticism over renewed military
ties with Indonesia"; Asheville Global Report, March 10-16, 2005.