Red star over the Atlantic?
Rather than fret about an extraregional China, I say bring it on.
The more burdens Beijing shoulders outside the Far East, the more it must disperse finite physical power—diluting the military assets it can apply to any given contingency without leaving commitments elsewhere uncovered. It will have less military might to spare for adventures like grabbing parts of Southeast Asian states’ exclusive economic zones or mounting a challenge to the forward American presence in the Western Pacific.
China, it seems, may soon discover the joys of juggling competing demands on scarce resources and policy energy. Asia is a far less permissive setting than the Americas. Consequently, Beijing may also discover that multitasking is even harder for a global power that inhabits a tough neighborhood, has abundant unfinished business close to home, and has courted few partners and allies to help advance its interests.








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Those islands should be the Africom HQ. No brainer. I mean, if we’re going to have an Africom and all, it should be at least nearby.
Akzed on December 12, 2012 at 3:08 PM
Well, Akzed, Ramstein AFB isn’t really all that far from Africa. Heck, it would have been within a few hours flight time from Benghazi…….
GWB on December 12, 2012 at 3:50 PM
That red star you see over the Atlantic is actually hovering over the White House. Adjust your perspective.
Odysseus on December 12, 2012 at 3:56 PM
(I *do* think we ought to keep a toehold on the Canaries, though. It’s somewhat uniquely situated.)
GWB on December 12, 2012 at 3:56 PM
I was born there, when it was a critical refueling site between the US and Europe. Dad was a MATS pilot at the time.
Bad military-strategy move to let it go, but since it doesn’t effect political strategy…
Who is John Galt on December 12, 2012 at 4:54 PM