THAAD Missile Defense System |
By SYDNEY J. FREEDBERG JR.
WASHINGTON: The US Army must play a larger role in the Pacific to deter China, one of DC’s leading defense experts is telling Congress today. That larger role requires politically and fiscally difficult decisions to build new kinds of units and base them in new places, Andrew Krepinevich told me in advance of his Capitol Hill briefing.
The core of Krepinevich’s vision: Army missile batteries — for anti-air, anti-ship, missile defense, and long-range strike — regularly deploying to, or even permanently based in, West Pacific nations. Those allies could contribute crucial ground forces themselves, each according to their capabilities. Japan has its nascent coastal anti-ship batteries. The Philippines could build a state-sponsored irregular defense force, one that takes tactical and technological lessons (but not ethical ones) from Lebanon’s Hezbollah.
Together, US and local ground forces along the First Island Chain — running from Japan to Indonesia — would provide the strong backbone of a Western Pacific defense. Dug in on islands, they would be the immovable anvil to the mobile hammer of the Air Force, Navy and Marines.
Read the full story at Breaking Defense