I am, as I understand it, the third United States secretary of defense
to appear at this forum, across administrations from both political
parties in the United States. That is, I believe, a testament to the
importance that the United States places in this dynamic and critical
region of the world.
It is in that spirit that I have come to Singapore, at the beginning of
an eight-day journey across Asia that will take me to Vietnam and to
India as well.
The purpose of this trip, and of my remarks today, is to explain a new
defense strategy that the United States has put in place and why the
United States will play a deeper and more enduring partnership role in
advancing the security and prosperity of the Asia-Pacific region, and
how the United States military supports that goal by rebalancing towards
this region.
Since the United States grew westward in the 19th century, we have been
a Pacific nation. I was born and raised in a coastal town in
California called Monterey, and have spent a lifetime looking out across
the Pacific Ocean. As a fishing community, as a port, the ocean was
the lifeblood of our economy. And some of my earliest memories as a
child during World War II are of watching American troops pass through
my community, trained at the military reservation called Fort Ord, and
were on their way to face battle in the Pacific.
I remember the fear that gripped our community during World War II, and
later when war again broke out on the Korean Peninsula. Despite the
geographic distance that separates us, I've always understood that
America's fate is inexorably linked with this region.
This reality has guided more than six decades of U.S. military presence
and partnership in this region -- a defense posture which, along with
our trading relations, along with our diplomatic ties, along with our
foreign assistance, helped usher in an unprecedented era of security and
prosperity in the latter half of the 20th century.
In this century, the 21st century, the United States recognizes that
our prosperity and our security depends even more on the Asia-Pacific
region. After all, this region is home to some of the world's fastest
growing economies: China, India, and Indonesia to mention a few. At the
same time, Asia-Pacific contains the world's largest populations, and
the world's largest militaries. Defense spending in Asia is projected
by this institute, the IISS, to surpass that of Europe this year, and
there is no doubt that it will continue to increase in the future.
Given these trends, President Obama has stated the United States will
play a larger role in this region over the decades to come. This effort
will draw on the strengths of the entire United States government. We
take on this role not as a distant power, but as part of the Pacific
family of nations. Our goal is to work closely with all of the nations
of this region to confront common challenges and to promote peace,
prosperity, and security for all nations in the Asia-Pacific region.
My colleague and my good friend Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has
also outlined our refocus on the Asia-Pacific, emphasizing the crucial
part that diplomacy, trade, and development will play in our
engagement.
The same is true for defense policy. We will play an essential role in
promoting strong partnerships that strengthen the capabilities of the
Pacific nations to defend and secure themselves. All of the U.S.
military services are focused on implementing the president's guidance
to make the Asia-Pacific a top priority. Before I detail these specific
efforts, let me provide some context for our broader defense strategy
in the 21st century.
The United States is at a strategic turning point after a decade of
war. We have significantly weakened al-Qaida's leadership and ability
to attack other nations. We have sent a very clear message that nobody
attacks the United States and gets away with it. Our military mission
in Iraq has ended and established -- established an Iraq that can secure
and govern itself.
In Afghanistan, where a number of Asia-Pacific nations are playing a
critical role in the international coalition, we have begun our
transition to the Afghan security lead and to an Afghanistan that can
secure and govern itself. Recent meeting in Chicago, NATO and its
partners -- over 50 nations -- came together to support General Allen's
plan to accomplish this goal. In addition to that, we joined in a
successful NATO effort to return Libya to the Libyan people.
But even as we have been able to draw these wars to a hopeful end, we
are confronted today by a wide range of complex global challenges. From
terrorism -- terrorism still remains a threat to the world -- from
terrorism to the destabilizing behavior of Iran and North Korea, from
nuclear proliferation to the new threat of cyberattack, from continuing
turmoil in the Middle East to territorial disputes in this region.
At the same time, the United States, like many other nations, is
dealing with large debt and large deficits, which has required the
Department of Defense to reduce the planning budget by nearly half a
trillion dollars or specifically $487 billion that were directed to be
reduced by the Congress in the Budget Control Act over the next
decade.
But this new fiscal reality, challenge that many nations confront these
days, has given us an opportunity to design a new defense strategy for
the 21st century that both confronts the threats that we face and
maintains the strongest military in the world.
This strategy makes clear the United States military, yes, it will be
smaller, it will be leaner, but it will be agile and flexible, quickly
deployable, and will employ cutting-edge technology in the future. It
makes equally clear that while the U.S. military will remain a global
force for security and stability, we will of necessity rebalance towards
the Asia-Pacific region. We will also maintain our presence throughout
the world. We will do it with innovative rotational deployments that
emphasize creation of new partnerships and new alliances. We will also
invest, invest in cyber, invest in space, invest in unnamed systems,
invest in special forces operations. We will invest in the newest
technology and we will invest in the ability to mobilize quickly if
necessary.
We have made choices and we have set priorities, and we have rightly
chosen to make this region a priority.
Our approach to achieving the long-term goal in the Asia-Pacific is to
stay firmly committed to a basic set of shared principles -- principles
that promote international rules and order to advance peace and security
in the region, deepening and broadening our bilateral and multilateral
partnerships, enhancing and adapting the U.S. military's enduring
presence in this region, and to make new investments in the capabilities
needed to project power and operate in Asia-Pacific. Let me discuss
each of these shared principles. The first is the shared principle that
we abide by international rules and order.
Let me underscore that this is not a new principle, our solid
commitment to establish a set of rules that all play by is one that we
believe will help support peace and prosperity in this region.
What are we talking about? These rules include the principle of open
and free commerce, a just international order that emphasizes rights and
responsibilities of all nations and a fidelity to the rule of law; open
access by all to their shared domains of sea, air, space, and
cyberspace; and resolving disputes without coercion or the use of
force.
Backing this vision involves resolving disputes as quickly as possible
with diplomatic efforts. Backing these principles has been the
essential mission of the United States military in the Asia-Pacific for
more than 60 years and it will be even a more important mission in the
future. My hope is that in line with these rules and international
order that is necessary that the United States will join over 160 other
nations in ratifying the Law of Seas Convention this year.
The second principle is one of partnerships. Key to this approach is
our effort to modernize and strengthen our alliances and partnerships in
this region. The United States has key treaty alliances with Japan,
South Korea, Australia, Philippines and Thailand. We have key partners
in India, Singapore, Indonesia, and other nations. And we are working
hard to develop and build stronger relations with China.
As we expand our partnerships, as we strengthen our alliances, the
United States-Japan alliance will remain one of the cornerstones for
regional security and prosperity in the 21st century. For that reason,
our two militaries are enhancing their ability to train and operate
together, and cooperating closely in areas such as maritime security and
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. We are also jointly
developing high-tech capabilities, including the next generation missile
defense interceptor, and exploring new areas of cooperation in space
and in cyberspace.
In the past several months we have strengthened the alliance and our
broader strategic objectives in the region with a revised plan to
relocate Marines from Okinawa to Guam. This plan will make the U.S.
presence in Okinawa more politically sustainable, and it will help
further develop Guam as a strategic hub for the United States military
in the Western Pacific, improving our ability to respond to a wide range
of contingencies in the Asia-Pacific region.
Another linchpin of our Asia-Pacific security is the U.S. alliance with
the Republic of Korea. During a year of transition and provocation on
the Korean Peninsula, this alliance has been indispensable, and I have
made it a priority to strengthen it for the future. To that end, even
as the United States reduces the overall size of its ground forces in
the coming years in a transitional way over a five-year period, we will
maintain the United States Army's significant presence in Korea.
We are also boosting our intelligence and information sharing with the
Republic of Korea, standing firm against hostile provocations from North
Korea while transforming the alliance with new capabilities to meet
global challenges.
The third shared principle is presence. While strengthening our
traditional alliances in Northeast Asia and maintaining our presence
there, as part of this rebalancing effort we are also enhancing our
presence in Southeast Asia and in the Indian Ocean region.
A critical component of that effort is the agreement announced last
fall for a rotational Marine Corps presence and aircraft deployments in
northern Australia.
The first detachment of Marines arrived in April, and this Marine
Air-Ground Task Force will be capable of rapidly deploying across the
Asia-Pacific region, thereby enabling us to work more effectively with
partners in Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean and tackle common
challenges such as natural disasters and maritime security.
These Marines will conduct training and exercises throughout the region
and with Australia, strengthening one of our most important alliances
and building on a decade of operational experience together in
Afghanistan. Speaking of that, I welcome and applaud Australia's
announcement that later this year it will assume leadership of Combined
Team Uruzgan, and will lead our security efforts there through 2014.
We're also continuing close operational cooperation with our longtime
ally, Thailand. The Thais annually host COBRA GOLD, a world-class
multilateral military exercise, and this year we will deepen our
strategic cooperation to meet shared regional challenges.
We are energizing our alliance with the Philippines. Last month in
Washington I joined Secretary Clinton in the first-ever "2+2" meeting
with our Filipino counterparts. Working together, our forces are
successfully countering terrorist groups. We are also pursuing mutually
beneficial capability enhancements, and working to improve the
Philippine's maritime presence. Chairman Dempsey will be traveling from
here to the Philippines to further our military engagement.
Another tangible manifestation of our commitment to rebalancing is our
growing defense relationship with Singapore. Our ability to operate
with Singaporean forces and others in the region will grow substantially
in the coming years when we implement the forward deployment of the
Littoral Combat Ships to Singapore.
As we take existing alliances and partnerships in new directions, this
rebalancing effort also places a premium on enhancing partnerships with
Indonesia, Malaysia, India, and Vietnam, and New Zealand.
In the coming days I will travel to Vietnam to advance bilateral
defense cooperation, building off of the comprehensive memorandum of
understanding that our two nations signed last year.
From Vietnam, I will travel to India to affirm our interest in building
a strong security relationship with a country I believe will play a
decisive role in shaping the security and prosperity of the 21st
century.
As the United States strengthens these regional partnerships, we will
also seek to strengthen a very important relationship with China. We
believe China is a key to being able to develop a peaceful, prosperous,
and secure Asia-Pacific in the 21st century. And I am looking forward
to traveling there soon at the invitation of the Chinese government.
Both of our nations recognize that the relationship -- this relationship
between the United States and China is one of the most important in the
world. We in the United States are clear-eyed about the challenges,
make no mistake about it, but we also seek to grasp the opportunities
that can come from closer cooperation and a closer relationship.
I'm personally committed to building a healthy, stable, reliable, and
continuous mil-to-mil relationship with China. I had the opportunity to
host Vice President Xi and later Defense Minister General Liang at the
Pentagon in the effort to pursue that goal. Our aim is to continue to
improve the strategic trust that we must have between our two countries,
and to discuss common approaches to dealing with shared security
challenges.
We are working with China to execute a robust military-to-military
engagement plan for the rest of this year, and we will seek to deepen
our partnership in humanitarian assistance, counter-drug, and
counter-proliferation efforts. We have also agreed on the need to
address responsible behavior in cyberspace and in outer space. We must
establish and reinforce agreed principles of responsible behavior in
these key domains.
I know that many in the region and across the world are closely
watching the United States-China relationship. Some view the increased
emphasis by the United States on the Asia-Pacific region as some kind of
challenge to China. I reject that view entirely. Our effort to renew
and intensify our involvement in Asia is fully compatible -- fully
compatible -- with the development and growth of China. Indeed,
increased U.S. involvement in this region will benefit China as it
advances our shared security and prosperity for the future.
In this context, we strongly support the efforts that both China and
Taiwan, both have made in recent years trying to improve cross-strait
relations. We have an enduring interest in peace and stability across
the Taiwan Strait. The United States remains firm in the adherence to a
one-China policy based on the Three Communiqués and the Taiwan
Relations Act.
China also has a critical role to play in advancing security and
prosperity by respecting the rules-based order that has served the
region for six decades. The United States welcomes the rise of a strong
and prosperous and successful China that plays a greater role in global
affairs.
Another positive step towards furthering this rules-based order is
Asia's deepening regional security architecture, which the United States
strongly supports. Last October, I had the opportunity to be the first
U.S. secretary of defense to meet privately with all ASEAN defense
ministers in Bali. We applaud the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting Plus
for producing real action plans for multilateral military cooperation,
and I strongly support the ASEAN decision to hold more frequent
ADMM-Plus discussions at the ministerial level. We think this is an
important step for stability, real coordination, communication, and
support between these nations.
The United States believes it is critical for regional institutions to
develop mutually agreed rules of the road that protect the rights of all
nations to free and open access to the seas. We support the efforts of
the ASEAN countries and China to develop a binding code of conduct that
would create a rules-based framework for regulating the conduct of
parties in the South China Sea, including the prevention and management
of disputes.
On that note, we are obviously paying close attention to the situation
in Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. The U.S. position is clear
and consistent: we call for restraint and for diplomatic resolution;
we oppose provocation; we oppose coercion; and we oppose the use of
force. We do not take sides when it comes to competing territorial
claims, but we do want this dispute resolved peacefully and in a manner
consistent with international law. We have made our views known and
very clear to our close treaty ally, the Philippines, and we have made
those views clear to China and to other countries in the region.
As a Pacific power, the United States has a national interest in
freedom of navigation, in unimpeded economic development and commerce,
and in a respect for the rule of law. Our alliances, our partnerships,
and our enduring presence in this region all serve to support these
important goals.
For those who are concerned about the ability of the United States to
maintain a strong presence in the Asia-Pacific region in light of the
fiscal pressures we face, let me be very clear. The Department of
Defense has a five-year budget plan and a detailed blueprint for
implementing this strategy I just outlined for realizing our long-term
goals in this region, and for still meeting our fiscal
responsibilities.
The final principle -- shared principle that we all have is force
projection.
This budget is the first in what will be a sustained series of
investments and strategic decisions to strengthen our military
capabilities in the Asia-Pacific region. I would encourage you to look
at the increasing technological capabilities of our forces as much as
their numbers in judging the full measure of our security presence and
our security commitment.
For example, over the next five years we will retire older Navy ships,
but we will replace them with more than 40 far more capable and
technologically advanced ships. Over the next few years we will
increase the number and the size of our exercises in the Pacific. We
will also increase and more widely distribute our port visits, including
in the important Indian Ocean region.
And by 2020 the Navy will reposture its forces from today's roughly
50/50 percent split between the Pacific and the Atlantic to about a
60/40 split between those oceans. That will include six aircraft
carriers in this region, a majority of our cruisers, destroyers,
Littoral Combat Ships, and submarines.
Our forward-deployed forces are the core of our commitment to this
region and we will, as I said, sharpen the technological edge of our
forces. These forces are also backed up by our ability to rapidly
project military power if needed to meet our security commitments.
Therefore, we are investing specifically in those kinds of capabilities
-- such as an advanced fifth-generation fighter, an enhanced
Virginia-class submarine, new electronic warfare and communications
capabilities, and improved precision weapons -- that will provide our
forces with freedom of maneuver in areas in which our access and freedom
of action may be threatened.
We recognize the challenges of operating over the Pacific's vast
distances. That is why we are investing in new aerial-refueling
tankers, a new bomber, and advanced maritime patrol and anti-submarine
warfare aircraft.
In concert with these investments in military capabilities, we are
developing new concepts of operation which will enable us to better
leverage the unique strengths of these platforms and meet the unique
challenges of operating in Asia-Pacific. In January, the department
published a Joint Operational Access Concept which, along with these
related efforts like Air-Sea Battle, are helping the Department meet the
challenges of new and disruptive technologies and weapons that could
deny our forces access to key sea routes and key lines of
communication.
It will take years for these concepts and many of the investments that I
just detailed, but we are making those investments in order that they
be fully realized. Make no mistake -- in a steady, deliberate, and
sustainable way the United States military is rebalancing and bringing
an enhanced capability development to this vital region.
Earlier this week I had the opportunity to deliver the commencement
address at the U.S. Naval Academy. And there I had the pleasure of
handing a diploma to the first foreign student to achieve top graduate
honors, a young midshipman from Singapore: Sam Tan Wei Chen.
I told that graduating class of midshipmen that it would be the project
of their generation to meet the challenges and seize the opportunities
that are emanating from the Asia-Pacific region.
By working in concert with all elements of American power, I truly
believe that these young men and women will have the opportunity to play
a vital role in securing a century of peace and prosperity for the
United States and for all of the nations of this region.
Over the course of history, the United States has fought wars, we have
spilled blood, we have deployed our forces time and time again to defend
our vital interests in the Asia-Pacific region. We owe it to all of
those who have fought and died to build a better future for all nations
in this region.
The United States has long been deeply been involved in the
Asia-Pacific. Through times of war, times of peace, under Democratic
and Republican leaders and administrations, through rancor and through
comity in Washington, through surplus and through debt. We were there
then, we are here now, and we will be here for the future. Thank you.