U.S. to Close 35 Percent of Overseas Bases
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Sept. 23, 2004
WASHINGTON Over the next decade, the military will
abandon 35 percent of the Cold War-era bases and buildings it uses
abroad, even as it seeks to expand a network of bare-bones sites in
Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe to help fight
terrorism.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was outlining the plan
Thursday to the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Story Continues Below
In a report to Congress, the Pentagon offered details of the
"global defense posture." The planned changes, once completed,
will result in "the most profound reordering" of U.S. military
forces overseas since the current global arrangements were set 50
years ago, according to the report.
The most widely noted aspect of the plan, which was announced in
broad terms last month by President Bush, is the withdrawal of
70,000 U.S. troops and 100,000 of their family members from bases
in Germany and South Korea. That has gained attention in part
because it means fewer U.S. bases probably will be shuttered in the
2005 round of base closings than if there were no withdrawal.
Less well understood is that even while troops will return to
the United States from Germany and South Korea, the Pentagon will
be building up its network of "forward operating sites,"
sometimes called "lily pad" bases. These are more austere than
the large, fully developed bases, dubbed "Little Americas,"
where U.S. forces stood guard during the Cold War.
"During the Cold War we had a strong sense that we knew where
the major risks and fights were going to be, so we could deploy
people right there," Douglas Feith, the undersecretary of defense
for policy, said in an Associated Press interview Wednesday.
"We're operating now in a completely different concept," said
Feith, chief architect of the global realignment plan.
"We need to be able to do that whole range of military
operations [from combat to peacekeeping] anywhere in the world
pretty quickly."
The Pentagon is seeking maximum flexibility in the decades ahead
in responding to terrorism and other potential threats, including
those to oil supplies. So the military wants a range of basing and
access agreements with as many countries as possible and in as many
regions as it can.
It foresees three types of overseas arrangements:
Main operating bases with permanently stationed forces and
family support structures. Examples including Ramstein Air Base in
Germany, Camp Humphreys in South Korea and Kadena Air Base in
Okinawa, Japan.
Forward operating sites maintained by a limited number of
military personnel and possibly stored equipment. These sites will
support rotational rather than permanently stationed forces.
Examples are Soto Cano Air Base in Honduras and Thumrait and
Masirah Island air bases in Oman.
Even more austere sites, which the Pentagon calls "cooperative
security locations." With little or no permanent U.S. presence,
these may be maintained by contractor or host nation personnel.
They will allow access for U.S. forces in special circumstances and
be a focal point for regional cooperation. An example is the air
base in Dakar, Senegal, and Entebbe airport in Uganda.
Among locations the Pentagon is considering adding:
The tiny island nation of Sao Tome and Principe, off the coast
of West Africa. It is among the places Gen. Charles Wald, deputy
commander of U.S. European Command, has mentioned as a potential
U.S. forward operating site, but not a base.
Sao Tome holds a
strategic position in the Gulf of Guinea from which the U.S.
military could monitor the movement of oil tankers and protect oil
platforms.
In Bulgaria, which joined the U.S.-led NATO alliance this year,
the Sarafovo and Graf Ignatievo air fields could serve as bases for
U.S. troops to deploy on rotational training tours.
In Romania, the Americans have shown interest in the Mihail
Kogalniceanu Air Base, the Babadag training range and the Black Sea
military port of Mangalia.
In Australia, where Pentagon officials have said they have no
plans for permanent bases, U.S. forces likely will conduct joint
training with Australian forces.
Environmentally and Politically Incorrect
The terms under which U.S. forces could use these sites and
facilities will have to be negotiated. Feith said the Pentagon
wanted to avoid the kind of environmental or political constraints
that have limited U.S. military training and deployment options in
Europe in recent years.
"If countries are going to subject us to the kinds of
restrictions that may mean we're not going to be able to fulfill
the purpose of having troops deployed there, then we're going to
have to think whether to have troops deployed there," Feith said.
Senior Bush administration officials already have held talks
with many countries, including Bulgaria, Azerbaijan, the
Philippines, Poland, Romania, Singapore, Thailand, Turkey and
Uzbekistan.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
"Deck of Weasels" exposes Sean Penn, Sen. "KKK" Byrd, Jacques Chirac, Jesse Jackson, more
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
North Korea
War on Terrorism