By Eric S. Edelman & Franklin C. Miller
Friday, May
09, 2025
For much of the 19th century, Americans thought that the
broad expanses of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans protected our homeland from
enemy attack. They believed that the United States was blessed with what
historian C. Vann Woodward dubbed “free security.” As he noted:
Throughout most of its history the
United States has enjoyed a remarkable degree of military security, physical
security from hostile attack and invasion. This security was not only
remarkably effective, but it was relatively free. Free security was based on
nature’s gift of three vast bodies of water interposed between this country and
any other power that might constitute a serious menace to its safety. There was
not only the Atlantic to the east and the Pacific to the west, but a third body
of water, considered so impenetrable as to make us virtually unaware of its
importance, the Arctic Ocean and its great ice cap to the north. The security
thus provided was free in the sense that it was enjoyed as a bounty of nature
in place of the elaborate and costly chains of fortifications and even more
expensive armies and navies that took a heavy toll of the treasuries of less
fortunate countries and placed severe tax burdens upon the backs of their
people.
Many historians took issue with the notion that the
relative security that the U.S. enjoyed was free, noting that for the bulk of
the century after the War of 1812, the U.S. sheltered behind the implicit
protection of the British Royal Navy. That fact notwithstanding, Woodward was
certainly correct about prevailing American views. Most political leaders and
much of the public believed that forward presence was not needed to be safe in
our own hemisphere.
In the first half of the 20th century, we learned that
allowing hostile aggressive powers to dominate Europe and the Pacific Ocean
littoral created significant dangers to our security, even if they seemed far
away. The experience of World War II convinced most members of America’s
national security elite that the future defense of the United States would have
to begin well beyond the nation’s continental frontiers. As historian Michael
Sherry concluded in 1987 in his pioneering
study of American air power, policymakers came to believe that “American
weakness had encouraged Axis ambitions in the 1930s” and that as a result
“powerful military forces could deter or subdue future troublemakers.” Pearl
Harbor and the new weapons developed subsequent to it demonstrated the nation’s
nakedness to sudden attack and its need for unprecedented forces-in-being to
ward off the coming blitzkrieg.” The result was a consensus that America’s
national security in the future would require forward defense, the ability to
project power to Europe, East Asia and the Middle East which, in turn, would
require allies and partners around the world to sustain a globe-girdling system
of bases and facilities.
In the second half of the 20th century the development of
long-range aircraft, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and nuclear weapons
underscored that overseas developments can directly threaten the U.S. homeland.
We finally recognized that to defend the
United States we must engage overseas to prevent future wars—which might
ultimately involve us—from starting. The alliances we have built over the last
70 years offer the best possible means to discourage potential aggressors from
starting local wars that will inevitably become global. They allow us to
maintain the global commons—including freedom of the seas—across which
worldwide commerce flows, creating the unprecedented increase in wealth and
prosperity that has developed since World War II. The ability to provide
defense in depth and rapidly project power forward to regions of concern became
the fundamental basis of America’s unique global role.
Today the United States is facing two highly dangerous,
aggressive, autocratic, and expansionist foreign leaders. Yet despite the traditional emphasis on
forward defense and the importance of U.S. bases as a form of reassurance for
allies there have been persistent
calls from the Trump administration for reductions
of the U.S. overseas presence.
Vladimir Putin, who famously declared that the
breakup of the USSR was the greatest geopolitical tragedy of the 20th century,
has been pursuing the reconstitution of the Soviet empire since he took power.
His forces occupy parts of Georgia and Moldova; he has taken Crimea; three
years ago, he began a bloody and merciless full-scale war to conquer Ukraine.
He has made
clear that Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia are in his sights. And he covets
the recreation of a buffer zone to Russia’s west along the lines of the defunct
Warsaw Pact, a sphere of influence which would allow him to dominate Poland,
Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Romania. In addition, his regime has
declared the NATO alliance to be Russia’s enemy, routinely threatens the use of
Russian nuclear weapons in response to policies he opposes, and has been
carrying out a clandestine
campaign of sabotage against Western communications cables, armaments
factories and warehouses, and transportation grids.
Half a world away, Xi Jinping, under a similar belief
that China has been denied a leading role in the world by “the West,” seeks to
create a de facto empire that dominates the Asia-Pacific region. His regime has
declared that the South China Sea, a key waterway through which one-third of
global maritime trade flows, should
be declared “an internal Chinese lake,” subject to control by Beijing.
China also seeks to control the two key chokepoints, the Malacca and Lombok
Straits, that offer access to the South China Sea from the west. Xi has made
clear his intention of reunifying China with Taiwan, with force if he cannot
achieve it by coercion. The Beijing regime has, further, claimed parts of the
exclusive economic zones of several of its neighbors and has used armed force
to protect Chinese commercial activity in those areas.
Ominously, both Russia and China are expanding
their intercontinental and particularly their regional nuclear forces. And both
have demonstrated a complete and total disregard for any treaties or
obligations they might have undertaken.
Should either Putin or Xi believe they can take their
neighbors’ territory without suffering significant cost, they might attempt to
do so. The result, an imbalance in global power, a possible denial of U.S.
access to areas of the world vital to us, and an invitation for further
aggression could result in war, including possibly the use of nuclear
weapons—all of which could have catastrophic effects on our own security.
It becomes imperative, therefore, to make clear to both
Putin and Xi that the cost of such attacks would be prohibitive, that they
would significantly exceed any gains they might hope to make. Only the United
States can provide the military capability to make such a threat. And we can
only do so credibly if we are present in those regions. While there are costs
involved in forward presence, they pale in comparison to the costs of the
likely global war that would result if deterrence failed. The recent bipartisan report
of the NDS Commission estimates that a global war that began in the
Indo-Pacific could cost the global economy as much as $10 trillion—and that is
probably an underestimate.
All this said, it is worth raising the question of what
benefits, precisely, the U.S. derives from what some have quantified as a $55 billion to $80 billion
annual expense. Many so-called realists who seek to diminish the U.S. presence
overseas, in order to reduce defense spending and avoid foreign entanglements
that might lead to “endless wars,” never acknowledge that host nations provide
support and some compensation for U.S. bases, but it is still worth reminding
ourselves of the non-monetary compensation the U.S. gets from its overseas
presence.
Base access enables us to deploy forces forward. Repeated
studies
by the RAND Corporation have demonstrated
that the presence of significant U.S. military forces reduces the likelihood of
major interstate conflict or escalation of local conflicts into major war. Our
presence sends the signal that the U.S. is committed to and can prevent a fait
accompli. It also can also provide opportunities for training and improving
interoperability with allies, strengthening deterrence by conveying to
potential adversaries that they will face a powerful counter coalition if they
choose to pursue aggression. Reassurance of allies is a particularly important
and underappreciated element of U.S. base presence overseas. U.S. bases are a
visible sign of U.S. commitment and willingness to extend U.S. military
deterrent power to friends and allies.
The U.S. presence can also block adversaries from seeking
precisely the advantages described above for themselves by arranging for access
or basing themselves. The small U.S. deployment in Syria, for example, has both
helped keep a lid on a resurgence of ISIS terrorism and provided U.S. overwatch
of Iranian efforts to rebuild its proxy network that Israel has done so much to
weaken over the last few years. When the U.S. ignores a region or vacates its
positions there, we can be sure that our adversaries will seek to move in. One can already see the PRC seeking
precisely these kinds of access and advantages in places where the U.S. has
been chronically inattentive like Latin America, Africa, and especially the
South Pacific.
The bottom line is that while U.S. forward deployed
forces, in concert with and assisted by the military forces of our allies,
defend allied territory—the first targets of potential aggression—they also
provide a jumping off point for U.S. forces in case deterrence fails in any
major contingency. The record shows that their very existence helps to prevent
war and the catastrophic consequences that would engulf us too were a global
conflict to break out. In doing so they also protect the American homeland. And
that makes our bases and forward presence a bargain when compared to the
alternative.
No comments:
Post a Comment