B-1B (Image: Wiki Commons) |
Benjamin Schreer
We woke up to media news these morning that US B-1 strategic bombers would be ‘coming to Australia to deter Beijing’s South China Sea ambitions’. This referred to a statement made by US Defence Department Assistant Secretary for Asian and Pacific Security, David Shear, during a testimony before the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday. As part of his answer as to what the government was doing in response to China’s assertive behaviour in the South China Sea, Shear also stated that the US ‘will be placing additional Air Force assets in Australia as well, including B-1 bombers and surveillance aircraft. However, a statement by a spokesperson for Defence Minister Kevin Andrews said that the ‘US Government has contacted us to advise that the official misspoke.’ Thus, the US Embassy in Canberra is very likely to correct Shear’s statement.
There is indeed no reason to doubt that Shear simply confused the B1 bomber with the B-52 bombers which have already rotated (as opposed to being ‘based’ there) through our air bases in the North, as part of the US ‘strategic rebalance’ and the US-Australia force posture initiatives agreed upon in 2011 to make US forward military presence in Asia more flexible and sustainable. His full answer to question merely lists US force posture activities in the broader region that the US has already announced or implemented. This includes for instance the rotational deployment of up to four Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs) by 2018 through Singapore. It also would have been counterproductive for the US government to make a unilateral announcement without first having cleared the deployment with the Australian side. Finally, it’s difficult to see what the rotational deployment of a strategic bomber would do to deter China’s current maritime activities in the South China Sea, particular its land reclamation projects in disputed areas.
For all these reasons, the big news is ‘much addo about nothing’, triggered by Shear’s confusion between the two types of strategic bombers in the US arsenal. The real news is that the issue over China’s behaviour in the South China Sea is heating up. US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter reportedly is considering sending US warships and aircraft to operate within 12 miles or less of the new islands China is building in the South China Sea. Early this week, the PLA frigate Yancheng also closely trailed the USS Forth Worth (LCS) operating in the Spratly Islands. China’s uncompromising behaviour to change the territorial status quo in the South China Sea, increasingly puts pressure on its neighbours and other regional countries, including Australia, to formulate a response that practically demonstrates shared interests in unfettered access to the high seas.
Benjamin Schreer is a senior analyst at ASPI.
This article first appeared on the ASPI "The Strategist" Blog and is reposted here under a Creative Commons license.