US to move majority of warships to Asia-Pacific
The US is set to reposition its
Navy fleet with the majority of its warships to be assigned to the Asia-Pacific
by 2020. But this military strategy has nothing to do with US-Chinese rivalry
in the region, the Defense Secretary assures.
The US would reposition its Navy
so that 60 percent of its warships would be assigned to the Asia-Pacific region
by 2020, compared to about 50 percent now, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta
told senior civilian and military leaders from about 30 Asia-Pacific nations at
an annual security forum in Singapore.
"Some view the increased
emphasis by the United States on the Asia-Pacific region as some kind of
challenge to China. I reject that view entirely," he said. "Our
effort to renew and intensify our involvement in Asia is fully compatible...
with the development and growth of China. Indeed, increased US involvement in
this region will benefit China as it advances our shared security and
prosperity for the future."
But in laying out core US
principles in the region, Panetta made clear Washington opposed any attempt by
Beijing to make unilateral moves in its push for territorial rights in the
oil-rich South China Sea.
Panetta's comments came at the
start of a seven-day visit to the region to prove to its Asian allies that it intends
to remain a crucial military and economic power in the region to counterbalance
China's growing influence. The trip includes stops in Vietnam and India, and
comes at a time of renewed tensions over competing sovereignty claims in the
South China Sea, with the Philippines, a major US ally, and China in a standoff
over the Scarborough Shoal near the Filipino coast.
The US aims to reassure its
allies that Washington would act to counterbalance China's growing influence on
the South China Sea as part of its foreign policy known as the "pivot to
Asia".
Panetta said the US will be
committed to alliances instead of new permanent bases and mentioned treaties
with Japan, South Korea, Thailand, the Philippines and Australia as well as
partnerships with India, Singapore, Indonesia and others. Panetta said
Washington also would work to increase the number and size of bilateral and
multilateral military training exercises it conducts in Asia-Pacific. Officials
said last year the US carried out 172 such joint drills in the region.
Panetta reiterated he was
committed to a "healthy, stable, reliable and continuous"
military-to-military relationship with China, but underscored the need for
Beijing to support a system to clarify rights in the region and help to resolve
disputes.
"China has a critical role
to play in advancing security and prosperity by respecting the rules-based
order that has served the region for six decades," he said.
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