U.S. Navy decides to loiter in the Pacific

President Obama has been touting his recent action to remove most of the U.S. military from the Middle East in an attempt to garner support from the American public. This doesn’t mean however that the U.S. military won’t be active. In fact, Obama is simply reallocating the military from the Middle East to the Asian Pacific where there is a hive of economic activity and competitor China is showing growing military power. CNN explains the shift in strategy:

“The United States is ‘not in step with the times’ in seeking to bolster its military presence in the Pacific region, a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry said Monday.

Spokesman Liu Weimin’s statement comes on the heels of the weekend announcement by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta that 60% of the U.S. naval fleet will sail the Pacific by 2020.

The change is part of President Barack Obama’s decision to reorient the United States’ strategic attention to the economically vital Pacific after a decade of war in the Middle East.

The fleet is currently divided evenly between the Pacific and the Atlantic oceans, Panetta said.”

“’Deliberate emphasis on military and security agendas, and strengthening military deployment and alliances are not in step with the times,’ he said.

Obama announced the shift to a Pacific focus during a tour of Asian countries in November.

The announcement came against a backdrop of reduced defense spending as the United States was dealing with economic issues at home, preparing to pull out of Iraq and contemplating the end of warfare in Afghanistan.

Panetta visits former U.S. base in Vietnam

‘As we end today’s wars, I have directed my national security team to make our presence and missions in the Asia Pacific a top priority,’ Obama said in a November 17 speech in Australia. ‘As a result, reductions in U.S. defense spending will not — I repeat, will not — come at the expense of the Asia Pacific.’

At the time, Obama announced plans for the United States to station up to 2,500 Marines in Australia in the coming years.

Panetta is on an eight-day trip through the region explaining the U.S. policy, and seeking to increase military ties with regional allies. He said the shift is not a threat to China and its growing military power.”

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