Three Ohio-class nuclear submarines — heavily armed with Tomahawk cruise missiles — are now making a show of US military power closer than usual to China.
US defense analysts, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the vessels  were in place to demonstrate US commitment to nervous allies in the  region.
“And the US military remains concerned over China’s growing  missile force — now more than 1,000 — near the Taiwan Strait,” Time  magazine said this week in a report on the submarines.
One analyst told  the Taipei Times that moving the submarines into the Pacific Ocean in part  reflected US “concern” at China’s failure to reduce the missiles aimed at Taiwan  despite a major reduction in tensions across the Taiwan Strait.
A senior  US military official would not comment on suggestions that the US was “sending a  message” to China, but did not deny that the submarines would stay in the region  for some months.
In a paper presented to a conference earlier this week  in Washington, Daniel Blumenthal, resident fellow in Asian Studies at the  American Enterprise Institute, emphasized the need for the US to stand up to  China in the Strait.
He said that in the short term President Ma Ying  Jeou’s (馬英九) cross-strait policies had made the Strait more stable, but over the  long term “China-Taiwan relations remain structurally unstable and fraught with  risk.”
While making no direct mention of the submarines or any other  military movements, he added: “The Mainland has not abandoned its policy of  reunification, and, continues to build-up its military across the Strait in a  destabilizing fashion.
“Washington thus must show its un-abiding  commitment to Taiwan’s security and welfare while engaging in energetic  diplomacy with China to stabilize the Strait for the long-term,” Blumenthal  said.
“The Second Artillery force deployed across the Strait, growing in  number, precision, and lethality is tantamount to a gun pointed at Taiwan’s  head,” he said.
The presence of the submarines was first reported in Hong  Kong’s South China Morning Post and confirmed on Thursday by  Time.
Time said the USS Ohio was in the Philippines’ Subic  Bay, the USS Michigan was at Pusan, South Korea and the USS  Florida was at the joint US-British naval base on Diego  Garcia.
The three subs have been retrofitted and no longer carry nuclear  weapons. Instead, they have as many as 462 new Tomahawk cruise missiles between  them. 
The Tomahawks are said to be “capable of hitting anything within  1,000 miles [1,609km].”
Bonnie Glaser, a China expert at the Center for  Strategic and International Studies in Washington is quoted by Time as saying:  “There’s been a decision to bolster our forces in the Pacific. There is no doubt  that China will stand up and take notice.”
She said the arrival of the  Tomahawks was “part of a larger effort to bolster our capabilities in the  region. It sends a signal that nobody should rule out our determination to be  the balancer in the region that many countries there want us to  be.”
Time said that Australia, Japan, Indonesia, South Korea and  Vietnam had all been urging the US to “push back against what they see as  China’s increasingly aggressive actions in the South China Sea.” 
Source: Taipei Times - 2010/07/10



 









