Build up to WW3 US and China starting new Cold War
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced plans Thursday to deploy combat
ships to Singapore for joint exercises, which he said showed US
commitment to the strategically vital Asia-Pacific region.
The
announcement came a day after Panetta met Singaporean Defense Minister
Ng Eng Hen at the Pentagon, and while the first of 2,500 US Marines sent
to Australia were starting work -- to the irritation of regional
superpower China.
"The Defense Department's move to
deploy US combat ships to Singapore and raise the level of joint
exercises will deepen the bilateral military relationship," said a joint
statement from the defense chiefs.
"The deployment
signals US commitment to the region and enhances the ability to train
and engage with regional partners," it said.
"Both
leaders underscored the shared belief that a strong US presence in the
Asia-Pacific region enhances regional stability and security."
The
United States signaled last December that it could send the "littoral
combat ships," small, surface vessels intended for operations close to
shore, to Singapore.
The Pentagon statement said the
ships would be deployed on a rotational basis and will not be based in
Singapore, which is a long-standing ally of the United States.
Pentagon
spokeswoman Commander Leslie Hull-Ryde, said "the specific details
related to this unprecedented engagement are still being discussed," but
noted that it marked a "significant movement in terms of our
cooperation."
The US military already operates a small post in Singapore that assists in logistics and exercises for forces in Southeast Asia.
China's
defense ministry, however, has been scornful over increased American
military activity in Asia, saying it is proof of a "Cold War mentality"
from Washington.
Chinese state media has also accused President Barack Obama of using such action to act as a distraction from US economic woes.
The
US views with increasing concern China's growing assertiveness in
territorial disputes in the Asia-Pacific region, such as the South China
Sea.
The deployment of Marines to Australia has
reassured some Asian countries, who see it as a statement that the
United States intends to stand up for its allies and interests.
China maintains it has a policy of "peaceful development" with all countries.
In
an academic article forecasting the shape of the US Navy in 2025,
Admiral Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations, wrote in December
2011 that "we will station several of our newest littoral combat ships"
in Singapore.
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