U.S. Security Policy in Asia and the Pacific: Restructuring America's Forward Deployment : Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific of the Committee on International Relations, House of Representatives, One Hundred Eighth Congress, First Session, June 26, 2003 |
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Page 1
... Japan , South Korea and , until 1992 , the Philippines , as well as by active defense cooperation with allied and friendly states in Southeast Asia and Oceania , primarily Thai- land , Singapore and Australia . With the end of the cold ...
... Japan , South Korea and , until 1992 , the Philippines , as well as by active defense cooperation with allied and friendly states in Southeast Asia and Oceania , primarily Thai- land , Singapore and Australia . With the end of the cold ...
Page 2
... Japan , South Korea , and until 1992 the Philippines , as well as by active defense cooperation with allied and friendly states in Southeast Asia and Oceana , primarily Thailand , Singapore , and Australia . With the end of the Cold War ...
... Japan , South Korea , and until 1992 the Philippines , as well as by active defense cooperation with allied and friendly states in Southeast Asia and Oceana , primarily Thailand , Singapore , and Australia . With the end of the Cold War ...
Page 4
... Japan alone is second only to our Nation as far as an economic power . Unless that has changed , Mr. Chairman , it is my understanding that Japan is the second most powerful economy in the world . It is also my understanding that 60 ...
... Japan alone is second only to our Nation as far as an economic power . Unless that has changed , Mr. Chairman , it is my understanding that Japan is the second most powerful economy in the world . It is also my understanding that 60 ...
Page 6
... Japan and the Republic of Korea looking at their defense needs in new ways . North Korea , of course , is still a problem . We see the rise of Islam . You can extremism in Southeast Asia . So that just reempha- sizes the importance of ...
... Japan and the Republic of Korea looking at their defense needs in new ways . North Korea , of course , is still a problem . We see the rise of Islam . You can extremism in Southeast Asia . So that just reempha- sizes the importance of ...
Page 8
... Japan is taking important new steps in the security field . • The Republic of Korea is assessing its security and diplomatic requirements in new ways . • The North Korean threat has grown . • The end of the Cold War has freed India and ...
... Japan is taking important new steps in the security field . • The Republic of Korea is assessing its security and diplomatic requirements in new ways . • The North Korean threat has grown . • The end of the Cold War has freed India and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aceh ACTD Admiral Fargo aircraft al-Qaida alliance allies areas Armed Forces Asia-Pacific region assess BORDALLO capabilities Chairman coalition combat commitment CONG CONGRE CONGRESS THE LIBRARY continue counterterrorism countries deployed deter develop efforts enhance ensure exercise facilities FALEOMAVAEGA force protection forward funding global Government Guam GWOT IMET improve increased Indonesia Indonesian military infrastructure initiatives interoperability Iraq Japan Jemaah Islamiyah Joint Korean Peninsula LAFLEUR LEACH LIBRA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS logistics Marine ment Missile Defense mission North Korea nuclear Okinawa operations Pacific Command partners personnel Philippines posture Proliferation Security Initiative regional security relationship Republic of Korea requirements response RESS role Secretary Rodman security assistance security cooperation Singapore South Southeast Asia strategy Taiwan Taiwan Strait terrorism terrorist Thailand Thank theater threat tion U.S. forces U.S. military U.S. Pacific Command USPACOM war on terrorism warfighting
Popular passages
Page 1 - HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, SUBCOMMITTEE ON ASIA AND THE PACIFIC, COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, Washington, DC. The Subcommittee met, pursuant to call, at 1:35 pm, in Room 2172, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon.
Page 33 - C2 for Coalitions. The Multinational Planning Augmentation Team (MPAT) Program involves a group of military planners from the US and many nations in USPACOM's Area of Interest. The purpose of MPAT is to increase operational interoperability among participating countries' interoperable planners who can rapidly augment a multinational force headquarters in response to a regional crisis. Using multinational, but standardized skills and procedures, MPAT planners would plan and execute coalition operations...
Page 23 - CBRNE is a critical operating condition and potentially the greatest theater threat I face, affecting everyone, everywhere, including our allies and the homeland. Aircraft exposure on the Korean Peninsula or an attack on a few strategic choke points, including Guam and key Japanese air and seaports, could stop US force flows and other critical support operations. Significant differences exist between what we would like to achieve against CBRNE threats and our actual capabilities. Specific shortages...
Page 15 - JIACG-CT. We have established a Joint Interagency Coordination Group for Counter Terrorism (JIACG/CT) to coordinate DOD and other Government agency (OGA) activities in USPACOM AOR, develop targets for future military or OGA operations, plan USPACOM regional and country counterterrorism (CT) campaigns, and enhance US and partner nation CT capabilities in support of national objectives in the GWOT. It is an all-encompassing and focused effort, where we are now integrating our Theater Country Teams...
Page 1 - Subcommittee met, pursuant to call, at 1:35 pm, in Room 2172, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. James A. Leach (Chairman of the Subcommittee) Presiding. Mr. LEACH. The Committee will come to order.
Page 18 - Assuring allies and friends; • Dissuading future military competition; • Deterring threats and coercion against US interests; and • If deterrence fails, decisively defeating any adversary.
Page 17 - ... both shore-based and waterside, in response to enhanced FPCONs; non-US controlled port and airfield assessment teams; 24/7 coverage for JRACs and Crisis Action Teams; and the already expanding Homeland Defense, Civil Support and CT missions are a few examples of manpower generating tasks. Additional AT/FP billets are needed to address the full range of force protection, antiterrorism, and CT missions throughout USPACOM. As we continue to develop the Homeland Defense and Civil Support plan, we...
Page 27 - Jong-Il regime and the threat our ROK-US combined team faces on the peninsula. The conventional threat from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) remains unabated, illustrated by the unprovoked naval attack in July on an ROK Navy vessel that resulted in the loss of four young ROK sailors. The DPRK maintains more than 60 percent of its forces within 100 kilometers of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), and the Kim regime persists in its "military first...
Page 38 - States will: • champion aspirations for human dignity; • strengthen alliances to defeat global terrorism and work to prevent attacks against us and our friends; • work with others to defuse regional conflicts; • prevent our enemies from threatening us, our allies, and our friends, with weapons of mass destruction...
Page 26 - Japan provides over $4.5 billion in host-nation support, the most generous of any US ally. Without these forward-stationed and forward-deployed forces, it would be much more difficult for the US to meet commitments and defend American interests throughout the Asia-Pacific region. The US-Japan alliance is fundamental to security and peaceful development in the region. Since becoming Prime Minister (PM) nearly...