U.S. rejects Manila's bid for custody of U.S. Marine accused of murder
If every ASEAN countries do their part to reject US military. It will be a yes.
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China may desire such an outcome, but as long as the US has defense treaties with Japan and the Philippines (and Taiwan), a strong relationship with Singapore, and growing ties to the ASEAN members, it seems a bit out of place to contemplate the ejection of the US from Asia. Let alone the fact that we're on the verge of signing the TPP, and the inconvenient detail that because the US has Asian land possessions (Guam, Saipan, etc.), we are an Asian power in our own right.
Is this a reference to the US military only @Black Flag ? If so, then the answer is most probably, but not without being subject to change, no. So long as regional nations want our presence as a hedge against China and North Korea or to combat regional strife and terrorism, the US will be present. Currently we are reproaching Vietnam and increasing our military-to-military ties, we are beefing up our presence in Japan, re-positioning forces in Guam, being asked to re-enter the Philippines, selling assets to Taiwan... nations want the US and even if China doesn't that won't matter so long as North Korea and China try to threaten the stability of the region.
But the US will never truly be gone. Japan, China, South Korea(?), and all others in the region are good businessmen. To truly be rid of the US in East Asia they would have to remove the US business links in the region and no one, not even China, will say goodbye to US business.
China can limit our military hedge against it by making good ties with regional nations, or building up its own forces, but North Korea practically ensures the US will have a military presence in the region. Like it or not, we are deeply entrenched in East Asia and we aren't going anywhere, no matter how baffling our pivot might be.
The silver-lining in all of this talk about removing the US from East Asia is that the US and China are actually increasing their cooperation and decreasing their competition, though problems will remain, but they remain in any friendship. Even between the US and its closest friends Japan and the UK do we see differences, but the US and China are making an effort to lead the world into prosperity and not conflict.
The irony is that we were being asked to stand down our presence in the region by these very neighbours surrounding China, only to have them now requesting a more strong U.S presence because of China's misadventures in the SCS.
Yes, most of them.Is there a single country in ASEAN like US?
Wider integration will impact the US's influence in Asia. This is what we want, not to oust the US physically out but to make them irrelevant and has less influence in regional politics.
I didn't respond to your other thread, for other reasons, but I'll respond here.
I'm glad you brought up North Korea, to me us taking the North is far more likely than any other scenario. We have cause, we are cooling our relationship and let's face it, it's existence has served its purpose and is a stain on East Asia in general.
You are looking at this in a very near term, remember China still isn't equal to the US' GDP despite being 4 times the population. A often missed fact about the current situation, and the apparent helplessness of China against the US.
That will change within the next 10 years.
Also, while US is pivoting to Asia, China is pivoting to South Asia and Africa, as well as making inroads into South America and Europe, you are not boxing us in.
We go at our pace, and won't follow yours, since you have the obvious advantage in East and ASEAN right now, we will simply avoid you here and move our influence in every other sphere.
The foolish thing would be to duel you in East Asia when we cannot win yet, so we expand our influence outward and then work our way back.
In purely military terms, the second carrier will finish within a few years, 10,000+ ton DDG will also launch in large numbers, joint heavy helicopter development with Russia, and our own medium lift helicopter already in test flight, the difference will soon be a great US variant with a very good Chinese variant, not a great US variant with no Chinese counter part, and that will reduce the US advantage to one of exiting, but not deciding.
This is true, the US will never be gone, but not for your reasons, China exist though in small amounts in North America, Mexican deal may have gone south, but it was still there, and Canadian business is a big part.
Our South American ventures have potential to eclipse America in the next 10-20 years.
Even at this point China can get its foot into the door, so I doubt the US will ever be ejected completely, but at some point the dominate decision maker will be China and that's the point, not the disappearing act of the US, we are not Houdini and Americans are not skinny sexy girls.
Let's get back to the point at the beginning, with increasing involvement in South Asia and Africa, we will be increasingly seen as a force for change, as our interest there can co-exist with theirs, simply because we are not there. It helps there's a India that wants the same as us in South Asia and Africa being what it is.
Whether this changes the mind of ASEAN and East Asia isn't as relevant as it will change the ability of others to diminish and tarnish our role in the world.
US can continue to station in Asia, but at some point 100,000 men and 60% of your fleet may not seem enough for even a pyrrhic victory.
With the increasing multi polar nature of the world each continent will rise a new power, Russia in Europe, Middle East being what it is, Africa being what it is, and Brazil in South America, America will soon find itself over extended by being in so many places at once.
What was once an advantage due to the weakness of others will soon be a weakness due to the power of the new elites.
Like the Romans, it's empire was a vast one, it's military everywhere gave it an overwhelming advantage, but one day, the Germans, Muslims, and others became more powerful than they had ever been and the vast network of bases became it's overwhelming weakness, it's forces spread far too thin, that not only can it not defend against one, but it made Rome not being able to defend all.
Syria, Iraq, Ukraine and China Seas, Ebola, and more are perfectly manageable if in isolation, but they are not.
Business that were US dominated will have a Chinese presence and thus cutting revenue or at least make you work harder invest more and cutting profits that were easy to make just 10 years ago.
Thus less money for military, we are already seeing this in a small way.
Same thing happened many times to Ancient China.
Lastly, ejecting the US, what does it mean? If anyone thinks it means Shamzam and no US, then they need to stop reading comics and proceed directly to @Nihonjin1051 for some counselling.
China and US won't be in a complete zero sum game, even a US Soviet world saw cooperation in many fields, more will happen in a far less hard line US and China. We won't be friends, but that doesn't mean we can't be Shaq and Kobe and win 3 rings together.
Yes, most of them.