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US power not in decline across Asia-Pacific: Dunford
By Thomas WATKINS
Darwin, Australia (AFP) Feb 6, 2018

Trump eyes military parade to showcase US might
Washington (AFP) Feb 7, 2018 - US President Donald Trump has asked for a large-scale military parade, the White House said Tuesday, an unconventional move that would showcase American muscle and underscore his role as commander-in-chief.

Trump -- who has toyed with the idea of a parade in Washington since before being sworn in -- has made the request to top officers, who are looking for a date.

"President Trump is incredibly supportive of America's great service members who risk their lives every day to keep our country safe," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

"He has asked the Department of Defense to explore a celebration at which all Americans can show their appreciation."

The Pentagon confirmed it was "in the process of determining specific details."

Trump's new request, first reported by The Washington Post, immediately fueled comparisons to similar events in more autocratic countries.

"What an absurd waste of money! Trump acts more like dictator than president. Americans deserve better," said Democratic Congressman Jim McGovern.

The idea has had a long gestation period. When Trump visited Paris last July for Bastille Day, he made no secret of his awe for the pomp and ceremony of the occasion.

Sitting on the Champs-Elysees, the American president marveled at the Republican Guard on horseback and jets flying overhead, and greeted President Emmanuel Macron, who arrived in an open-topped camouflaged military jeep.

Months after that meeting, Trump publicly remarked: "So we're actually thinking about Fourth of July, Pennsylvania Avenue, having a really great parade to show our military strength."

But even before becoming president, aides reported that Trump had considered a military parade to mark his inauguration. The idea was eventually scrapped.

- 'Hail to the chief' -

Trump has already prompted fears about his respect for democratic freedoms once this week by suggesting Democrats were "un-American" and "treasonous" for not applauding his State of the Union address.

The White House claimed Trump was joking.

"The president was clearly joking with his comments, but what isn't a joke is that Democrats refuse to celebrate the accomplishments of last year that have helped all Americans," Sanders said.

But the quip did not go down well with lawmakers, both Republicans and Democrats.

"I have seen the president's most ardent defenders use the now-weary argument that the president's comments were meant as a joke, just sarcasm, only tongue in cheek," said Republican Senator Jeff Flake.

"But treason is not a punchline, Mr President."

Military veteran and Democratic Senator Tammy Duckworth also fired back at Trump, while lampooning his deferments from medical military service during the Vietnam War.

"We don't live in a dictatorship or a monarchy," she said.

"I swore an oath -- in the military and in the Senate -- to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, not to mindlessly cater to the whims of Cadet Bone Spurs and clap when he demands I clap."

US commitment to the Asia-Pacific remains unwavering even though rivals falsely depict its influence as waning, the country's top general said Tuesday.

General Joe Dunford's remarks came weeks after the Pentagon unveiled a new national defence strategy labelling China as a "strategic competitor" that bullies its neighbours, and as America seeks to counter a narrative that President Donald Trump's administration is uninterested in Asia unless seen through the prism of North Korea.

"There's absolutely, in some corners, a concerted effort to portray the United States as a declining power, and obviously I reject that," Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said without naming China directly.

"If you look at the health of our alliances in the region... The evidence reflects anything other than a decline in Pacific power. We have enduring interests here, we have enduring commitment and an enduring presence in the Pacific."

Dunford is on a week-long visit to parts of the US military's enormous Pacific Command, which spans almost half the globe.

It follows trips by other senior Trump officials, including Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and the president himself.

They want to show that as China rises, America is not reducing its presence in the Asia-Pacific, where to a major extent it has underwritten regional security since the end of World War II.

When Trump as a candidate suggested South Korea and Japan should get their own nuclear weapons and berated allies for not pulling their weight, Asia-watchers feared for American engagement under the new president.

Trump's withdrawal from the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal made matters worse, though he has recently made noises about America possibly rejoining.

Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said observers are encouraged by recent US moves, including publication of a new national defence strategy calling Russia and China "Great Power" rivals.

Trump "seems to have returned a focus to the Asia-Pacific region and is making clear that he's not about to pull out on Asia-Pacific allies," Davis told AFP.

"He might talk in terms of America first... but he is making the case that America is not about to turn its back."

Under Barack Obama, the United States pursued a much-vaunted "pivot" that saw Washington try to shift its focus from the Middle East to the Asia-Pacific.

The national defence strategy spells out that "inter-state strategic competition, not terrorism, is now the primary concern in US national security," and makes clear America will focus on Asia in the context of China's growing military might.

"As China continues its economic and military ascendance, asserting power through an all-of-nation long-term strategy, it will continue to pursue a military modernization programme," Defence Secretary Jim Mattis wrote in the strategy.

China "seeks Indo-Pacific regional hegemony in the near term and displacement of the United States to achieve global preeminence in the future."

But Abe Denmark, a former Pentagon official under Obama who now directs the Asia Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said Asian partners still see America as disengaged.

"Even though they see us as in retreat or decline, they still want to work with us and keep us in the region. There's no realignment (with China), but a tremendous amount of uncertainty," he told AFP.

- Hedging bets -

Dunford's Australia visit comes as a debate rumbles about the extent to which Canberra should align itself with its longstanding ally America, or pay more heed to the desires of China, its biggest trade partner.

"There is little danger to that (US-Australia) alliance rupturing or being significantly damaged in the immediate term," said Mike Fuchs, a former State Department official specialising in Asia who now works at the Washington-based Center for American Progress.

But there is a "belief by some in Australia that they need to hedge political bets and bolster their relationship with Beijing".

In Sydney, Dunford met defence officials including his Australian counterpart and discussed several issues including regional security and the threat of terrorism.

Some in Washington wish their Australian counterparts would do more to stand up to China, including by conducting "freedom of navigation" operations in which naval vessels sail close to Chinese-claimed militarised islets in the South China Sea.

For the moment at least, there is little Australian appetite to conduct such operations.

"They would needlessly escalate the situation," Davis said. "At this point in time we feel it's more useful to engage in quiet diplomacy."


Related Links
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com


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China activity on reclaimed reef has eroded trust: ASEAN
Singapore (AFP) Feb 6, 2018
China's continued reclamation in the South China Sea has eroded trust among rival claimants and could raise regional tensions, Southeast Asian foreign ministers said Tuesday. The ministers from the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) did not mention China by name in their statement after a one-day meeting in Singapore, current chair of the grouping. Beijing claims nearly all of the waterway and has been turning reefs and islets into islands and installing military faciliti ... read more

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