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Eyeing China, U.S. Expands Military Ties to Australia

IndoCarib

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CANBERRA, Australia — President Obama and Prime Minister Julia Gillard of Australia announced plans on Wednesday for the first sustained American military presence in Australia, a relatively small deployment that is still a major symbol of American intentions to use regional alliances to counterbalance a rising China.

“With my visit to the region I am making it clear that the United States is stepping up its commitment to the entire Asia-Pacific region,” Mr. Obama said at a joint news conference with Ms. Gillard soon after his arrival here in Australia’s capital.

Mr. Obama said the basing agreement “allows us to meet the demands of a lot of partners in the region that want to feel that they’re getting the training, they’re getting the exercises, and that we have the presence that’s necessary to maintain the security architecture in the region.”

“But the second message I’m trying to send is that we are here to stay,” Mr. Obama said. “This is a region of huge strategic importance to us.” He added: “Even as we make a whole host of important fiscal decisions back home, this is right up there at the top of my priority list. And we’re going to make sure that we are able to fulfill our leadership role in the Asia Pacific region.”

On his two-day visit, the president will fly north across the continent to Darwin, a frontier town and military outpost across the waters from Indonesia that will be the center of operations for the coming deployment. The first 200 to 250 Marines will arrive next year, with forces rotating in and out and eventually building to 2,500-strong, the two leaders said.

The United States will not build new bases on the continent but instead will use Australian facilities. Mr. Obama said Marines will rotate through for joint training and exercises with Australians and the American Air Force will have increased access to airfields in the nation’s Northern Territory.

“We’re going to be in a position to more effectively strengthen the security of both of our nations and this region,” he said.

Since World War II, the United States has had military bases and much larger forces in Japan and South Korea, in the north Pacific, but the arrangement with Australia will put an American footprint closer to the southern reaches of the South China Sea. The sea, a major commercial route — including for American exports — has been roiled by China’s aggressive claims of control.

Like Australia, China’s neighbors in Southeast Asia have looked to the United States to increase its military presence as a counterweight to Beijing. Mr. Obama has sought to provide that assurance, but the Asia-Pacific allies are well aware of the intense pressure for budget-cutting in Washington, and fear that squeezed military spending and other factors may inhibit Mr. Obama’s ability to follow through.


The United States and other Pacific Rim nations are also negotiating for a free-trade bloc that does not include China, the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The tentative trade agreement was a topic over the weekend in Honolulu, where Mr. Obama hosted the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, and it will be discussed again later this week when he becomes the first American president to participate in the East Asia Summit, on Indonesia’s island of Bali.

For China, the week’s developments could suggest both an economic and military encirclement. For the United States and its Pacific Rim allies, they suggest a growing concern over China’s muscle.

But Mr. Obama said, “The notion that we fear China is mistaken. The notion that we are looking to exclude China is mistaken.”

The president said China would be welcomed into the tentative Trans-Pacific Partnership — nine nations, including the United States, agreed in Honolulu to finalize a framework in 2012 — if it is willing to meet the free-trade standards for membership. Such standards would require China to let its currency rise in value, better protect foreign producers’ intellectual property rights and limit or end subsidies to state-owned companies.

Mr. Obama arrived in Australia for his first visit as president after twice cancelling trips due to domestic demands; he recalled at a state dinner that he had visited twice as a boy, when his mother was working in Indonesia on development programs.

This time, as president, Mr. Obama arrived at Parliament House to a 21-gun salute and, once inside, to the enthusiastic greeting of Australians crowding the galleries of the massive marble entrance hall.

The two countries have long been allies and another purpose of Mr. Obama’s visit is to celebrate their alliance’s 60th anniversary. “The United States has no stronger ally,” Mr. Obama said.

Australians fought with the United States in every war of the 20th century, and more recently have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. The war in Afghanistan has become increasingly unpopular with most Australians want their troops to come home immediately.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/17/w...illard-expand-us-australia-military-ties.html
 
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U.S is a old player in this field. it has started encircling china now. i think this decade will decide where U.S - china relations would go.
 
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U.S is a old player in this field. it has started encircling china now. i think this decade will decide where U.S - china relations would go.
It's going nowhere. For China, the US would be bettered filled with native Indians. For Americans, those "goons and thugs" better not even exist on this planet. They just can't afford to overlook the existence of each other, that's all. Until one day, US has reach the fusion state of major demographic change. Yo all know what I am saying?
They think and act differently, not in the same league, and their elites don't have the capability to perceive the world from the eyes of the other side. Dead end. Time is the only cure. Change you can always believe in, because you don't have choice, changes happen unless you can freeze time. You know what I am saying?
 
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It's going nowhere. For China, the US would be bettered filled with native Indians. For Americans, those "goons and thugs" better not even exist on this planet. They just can't afford to overlook the existence of each other, that's all. Until one day, US has reach the fusion state of major demographic change. Yo all know what I am saying?
They think and act differently, not in the same league, and their elites don't have the capability to perceive the world from the eyes of the other side. Dead end. Time is the only cure. Change you can always believe in, because you don't have choice, changes happen unless you can freeze time. You know what I am saying?


Sorry, but we dont know what you are saying.
 
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How many times does an Indian have to post and re-post the same old article?

"Like Australia, China’s neighbors in Southeast Asia have looked to the United States to increase its military presence as a counterweight to Beijing. Mr. Obama has sought to provide that assurance, but the Asia-Pacific allies are well aware of the intense pressure for budget-cutting in Washington, and fear that squeezed military spending and other factors may inhibit Mr. Obama’s ability to follow through."

This statement is entirely false in itself, USA might want to extend it's military presence in Australia, as the article mentioned 2500 men is pointless, and Australia is not a realistic staging base to contain China militarily, in fact if played wrong, this whole issue could be interpreted as USA trying to threaten Australia's neighbors and take control of the security and military structure of ASEAN quietly while pretending it is targeted at China, it's called a smokescreen and it is probably nothing but political posturing for Obama to look tough on foreign policy, and potentially posing a huge military and economic threat to ASEAN nation's sovereignty and trade route, should Australia accept and expanded USA presence.

USA using China as the bogeyman to make them look like they are taking China face on, in fact they are playing the same old game, they are playing up China as a threat to certain countries because of a territorial dispute with namely two, yet Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan is somehow included in the list. They are trying to get their footprint in those areas large enough to make it impossible to remove them in the future, if anything, the current events have shown that ASEAN is now under threat of being under USA military thumb, USA has sneakily tried to reposition itself and have countries let their guard down, but it's highly unlikely to work in the end, with the exception of Vietnam who sneakily went behind China's back to try to internationalize the issue coached by America, and the Philippines no one else shares their agenda, playing up their so called success in being tough on foreign policy can also be good for Obama 2012, but what we really see on the surface of it is a bunch of short term pointless move that doesn't benefit economic development of security in a region where USA does the vast majority of it's trades.
 
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