The China Asian Expansion ? Defense assets must reflect Alaska’s role as frontier outpost against threats
Events over
the past two weeks have been a useful reminder for our fellow Americans that
Alaska holds a far more strategic position on the globe than our typical
depiction in a box at the bottom of a map would indicate.
Most know
that Alaska is huge, at two-and-a-half times the size of Texas. Fewer may know
that we’re not only the farthest north and west state; we are also the farthest
east. We’re so far east that the International Dateline has to jog around the
island of Attu in the Aleutian chain to divide us from Russian territory.
We’re so far
east that we’re closer to Australia than California is.
This isn’t
just some trivia to impress your friends at your next get together, but to
illustrate Alaska’s critical importance to our national defense.
At just a
few miles from Russian territory, just a few hours from China, and within
potential striking distance of North Korean missiles, Alaska is truly a
frontier outpost standing on the front lines in between a rough neighborhood
and North America.
Of the four
objects shot down since Feb. 4, three have transited Alaska, and two were shot
down by F-22 Raptors based at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, or JBER, in
Anchorage on consecutive days Feb.
10 and 11.
There is
much we still don’t know about these incidents, and the Biden Administration
did little to reassure the public on Feb. 16 by announcing that the three
objects shot down after the Chinese spy balloon were
likely harmless private craft conducting some kind of research.
Not only
that, but intelligence officials are now telling the public that the U.S.
tracked the Chinese spy balloon from the moment it took off and still
allowed it to transit the entire nation from Hawaii to Alaska to South
Carolina.
How a
hostile act went unanswered for days while other, apparently benign, objects
were shot down immediately, is a question that remains unanswered.
One fact is
clear, however, based on the two subsequent shootdowns: the Defense assets in
Alaska were capable of stopping this Chinese balloon before it reached the
Lower 48.
Intercepting
Russian reconnaissance craft, fighter jets, and bombers is nothing new here in
Alaska. On Feb. 13, two Russian bombers and two fighter jets were
intercepted in the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone. (This isn’t U.S.
airspace, but rather the boundary that triggers a military response when it’s
approached or entered.)
Last August,
Alaska-based pilots
intercepted Russian reconnaissance planes on three straight days during
Air Force Red Flag training exercises.
These
intercepts have thankfully occurred without incident, as well-trained pilots on
both sides of the border understand the rules and norms of engagement and
conduct themselves accordingly.
In contrast,
high-altitude unmanned balloons or other flying objects with unknown payloads
represent a potentially new challenge that will require a new response.
Alaska –
already home to long-range radar, missile defense interceptors, and more
fifth-generation fighter jets than anywhere in the world – will
naturally be at the forefront of these efforts, and we stand ready to support
our national defense as we always have dating to before statehood.
The
potential threat from unmanned aircraft isn’t the only emerging situation that
the U.S. must be prepared for where Alaska is on the front lines.
More
traditional displays of naval power have been increasing in recent years from
both Russia and China.
Last
September, the Coast Guard cutter Kimball on routine patrol in the Bering
Sea encountered
three Chinese and four Russian ships moving in a single formation,
including a Chinese guided missile cruiser and a Russian destroyer, about 86
miles north of Kiska.
A little
more than a year earlier, the Kimball encountered four
Chinese ships sailing within 46 miles of the Aleutians.
As China and
Russia strengthen their ties amid the Ukraine conflict, they’ve pledged to
increase their cooperation in the Arctic. We need to take this seriously, and
prepare accordingly.
Again,
Alaska stands ready. In fact, we are already home to a former Naval base on the
island of Adak that was constructed in 1942 in preparation for the battle to
eject Japanese invaders from U.S. territory after they bombed Dutch Harbor and
occupied Attu and Kiska.
Once home to
as many as 6,000 Naval personnel, Adak
was decommissioned in 1997 during post-Cold War base closures. It
would take time and expense to reopen this base, but the possibility should be
considered so long as China and Russia increase their cooperation and Naval
activity in U.S. waters off the coast of Alaska.
One asset
where the U.S. desperately needs to catch up is our inadequate number of
icebreakers.
The U.S. is
an Arctic nation because of Alaska, yet we are woefully behind with just two
aging vessels compared to Russia’s fleet of more
than 50. China, which has declared itself a “near Arctic nation”, has the
same number of icebreakers that we do, and is building
more as we speak.
Gen. Billy
Mitchell, credited as the father of the Air Force, told Congress in 1935 that
“whoever holds Alaska will hold the world.”
The events
of the past two weeks have proven this declaration of Alaska’s strategic
importance is as true now as it was then.
Our Defense
policies and priorities must reflect this role for Alaska, and we must deploy
the assets necessary to ensure the Last Frontier remains the bulwark for our
fellow Americans and allies against anyone who would threaten us.
https://gov.alaska.gov/defense-assets-must-reflect-alaskas-role-as-frontier-outpost-against-threats/
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