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Home Front: WoT
US Is on Brink of Major Military Change in Korea and Europe
2004-06-03
The United States is ready to change fundamentally its military presence on the Korean Peninsula and in Europe, where static U.S. defenses have stood guard for decades, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Thursday. "It's time to adjust those locations from static defense to a more agile and a more capable and a more 21st century posture," Rumsfeld told reporters flying with him to this Asian city-state.
It's long overdue, if you ask me.
While declining to discuss specifics, Rumsfeld's remarks were a clear indication that after months of internal Pentagon calculations about how best to array American forces abroad, and after a period of consultations with U.S. European and Asia allies, the first major changes are about to be happen. Rumsfeld did not mention perhaps the most immediate change: the move of a 2nd Infantry division brigade this summer to Iraq from its traditional posts in South Korea. The Pentagon has not said whether that unit would return to South Korea after its Iraq duty, but that appears unlikely.
"Goodbye, so long, and thanks for all the kimshe!"
Responding to concerns expressed by some in Asia that removing 3,600 U.S. troops from Korea for use in Iraq - and possibly several thousand more at a later time - would be seen by communist North Korea as a sign of American weakness, Rumsfeld said such an interpretation would be mistaken. "This country will not weaken the deterrent or the defense capabilities that we have, even though numbers and locations may shift and evolve as technologies evolve and as circumstances change," said Rumsfeld, holding an on-board news conference on his E4-B modified 747 jet which serves as a flying national command post equipped for use in wartime. "We have been for a long time, in effect, where we were when the Cold War ended," he said. There are about 37,000 U.S. troops in South Korea, about 47,000 in Japan and about 100,000 in Europe.
Not for long.
Rumsfeld flew 22 hours nonstop from Washington to Singapore to attend an international security conference called the Shangri-La Dialogue, where he is scheduled to deliver a speech on U.S. security policy on Asia and the Pacific on Saturday. He said he also planned to meet separately with his counterparts from Japan, South Korea, Australia and Singapore, in addition to visiting U.S. sailors and Marines aboard the USS Essex, a helicopter carrier that is in port at Singapore. Rumsfeld said he would fly to Bangladesh later Saturday for talks with government officials about their military's possible interest in peacekeeping operations either in Iraq or Afghanistan. He said he did not intend to formally request that they send troops to either country.
"Err, thanks, but no thanks."
Posted by:Steve

#7  visiting U.S. sailors and Marines aboard the USS Essex, a helicopter carrier that is in port at Singapore

I love it. Formula 3 carrier still scares the hell out of most of the world.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-06-03 7:25:23 PM  

#6  As for Europe, significantly reducing our current basing structure would still provide adequate protection from any would be Napoleons. Airpower based in Iraq, Britain and Italy could shred any attacking armies. The Euros can fight their own ground war against terrorists.
Posted by: RWV   2004-06-03 6:52:56 PM  

#5  Should leave just enough ground troops to guard the air base at Osan. Everyone else out of the pool. Were the Norks to attack, unfettered use of airpower would quickly solve their overpopulation problem. The main axes of attack from the North would very quickly become "highways of death."

On the other hand, Itaewon will never be the same. All the stores will have to pull out their Japanese signs again.
Posted by: RWV   2004-06-03 6:48:49 PM  

#4  I enjoyed my years in Germany, paid for mostly by the US taxpayer, but that was then. This is now, when the threat of the Soviet Union is no more and new threats lie in different places.

Head 'em up and move 'em out.

And that includes Bosnia, etc., too - FIRST. Let the Euros nuance their way through that genocidal mess.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2004-06-03 6:42:45 PM  

#3  Park a carrier in the vicinity of South Korea and Taiwan. See if he moves.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-06-03 4:29:04 PM  

#2  So long, Itaewan... buh-bye, Harry's of K-Town...it's been real, we had a real fine time, but gotta go, other priorities, ya know... y'all stay in touch, you hear?
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2004-06-03 3:07:33 PM  

#1  About time!! I don't have any stars on my collar, but even I can see the most logical move this side of Spock. The South Koreans are ungrateful, and I would bet my bottom dollar, they would fight for they're way of life then letting 'Kimmy' put his footstool in they're doorway. And as for the EU; it's 'Buck Up Time'!
Posted by: smn   2004-06-03 11:56:31 AM  

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