Think the US exit from Afghanistan was bad? Look what's brewing in the Pacific

You think America’s tail-between-its-legs departure from Afghanistan was bad? Something even worse is coming in the Pacific, albeit more quietly.

U.S. defenses in the Asia-Pacific center on a defense line running from Japan to Philippines to Taiwan and on to Borneo. The so-called First Island Chain.

Try defending against China along the first island chain without a secure “rear area” in the Central Pacific. And suppose it’s the Chinese in the rear.

think the us exit from afghanistan was bad? look what's brewing in the pacific

The Chinese destroyer Jinan and Russian cruiser Varyag sail in formation after a joint naval exercise in the East China Sea on Dec. 27, 2022. Sun Fei/Xinhua via Getty Images

American control of the Central Pacific depends on three treaties – known as Compacts of Free Association (COFA) – with three nations: Palau, Federated States of Micronesia, and Republic of Marshall Islands. These nations and their huge maritime territory comprise most of an “east-west corridor” from Hawaii to the western edge of the Pacific that is essential for U.S. control and military operations in the region.

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The COFAs give the United States the legal authority to operate freely and to keep other nations’ militaries out. In other words, military access and control.

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As part of the agreements, the three nations receive financial and other support from the U.S., to include the right of citizens to reside and work in America. And one should never forget that COFA state citizens serve in the U.S. military at higher per-capita rates than almost all U.S. states.

The COFA agreements are up for renewal, and the agreements have passed the tortuous dozen or so committees and now just need to be voted on and passed. That is very much in doubt.

One issue is $2.3 billion in offsets. That means that to fund the COFAs, $2.3 billion has to come out of the federal budget elsewhere.

The $2.3 billion is over 20 years so it averages out to about $40 million a year for each country. Yes, $40 million. A half-hour of Medicaid fraud.

We blew a trillion or two in Afghanistan. And we’re complaining about $120 million a year?

Everyone is blaming everyone else.

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Congress blames other parts of the Congress and the White House. The White House blames Congress.

The White House can find the money if it wanted. It doesn’t.

There was in fact an Asia tsar at the White House National Security Council, Kurt Campbell, who should have made passage of the COFAs his mission. He was the “tsar” after all. Instead, he bailed out and has failed upwards – just confirmed as assistant secretary of state. Par for the course in Washington.

Congress could find the money too, if it wanted. It doesn’t – or is distracted by “the border,” Ukraine, Gaza and any number of things.

Maybe the Department of Defense (DOD), which has to do the hard work of defending the Asia Pacific, could show some initiative and imagination, and offer to redirect the money from elsewhere in its large budget.

Just $120 million a year? That’s easy.

Cut DEI programs in DOD and anyone connected with them.

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Cut 10% of FOGOs – that’s “flag officers, general officers.” That’d easily get your money – and nobody would notice the “flags” were missing.

Worse, it’s said the COFA agreements were in fact arbitrarily removed from consideration the other day by a “budget conscious” congresswoman, even though the bill it was in wouldn’t even have required an offset. Now other senators are trying to get it back in.

Lose the Central Pacific and we’ll be defending from Hawaii and SoCal while every country that was counting on us – Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Philippines, Australia and others – start to hedge their bets.

China will love it.

The PRC already has strong commercial and political presence in the COFA states (and just about every other Pacific island nation) and is aiming to pry them away from the United States. And it’s succeeding.

Among the common approaches are financial payments, economic aid, bribes to officials, facilitating the entry of Chinese organized crime and even encouraging secession movements to weaken recalcitrant federal governments.

The president of each COFA nation is said to have a blank check from China on the desk. They haven’t been cashed – such is their deep attachment to the United States.

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But their patience is not unlimited – and they notice when their erstwhile friend is giving them short shrift. Indeed, they are darn angry – though they won’t show it.

Imagine you’re the president, and you’ve spent much of your term negotiating a deal with the United States that you and Washington finally signed. Then, you have to tell your citizens, months later, that Congress cares so little it hasn’t even scheduled a vote on the deal so we don’t have money for the post offices, schools, pensions or medicine – and taxes are going to have to go up.

Meanwhile, China is offering to solve all your problems.

This is serious. The price of not renewing the COFAs – and continuing to do what is necessary to maintain our ties with these nations – will be paid by many dead American service personnel.

One wishes the commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, Adm. John Aquilino, would put his stars on the table, and resign over this clown show.

Will he? Of course not. That sort of thing doesn’t happen anymore. The current crowd are not the same as the famous World War II admirals Chester Nimitz, William Halsey and Raymond Spruance.

And speaking of our friends in the Asia Pacific, perhaps Japan might step in and offer to pay?

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It wouldn’t be the first time Japan Inc. got out its checkbook when it saw its interests at risk.

It pays close to $2 billion a year to support the American military presence in Japan on which the nation’s security depends.

And as the U.S. financial system was imploding in 2008, a major Japanese bank – presumably at request of the Japanese government – wrote a $9 billion check to keep Morgan Stanley (and the U.S. financial system) afloat.

That $120 million a year for 20 years ($2.3 billion total) would be an even better deal for Japan.

If the U.S. government can’t get this done, maybe Tokyo will help. Otherwise, we deserve to lose.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM GRANT NEWSHAM

Original article source: Think the US exit from Afghanistan was bad? Look what’s brewing in the Pacific

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