Friday, September 4, 2015

US has new commander for ‘listening post’ in Pacific

From the Manila Bulletin (Sep 5): US has new commander for ‘listening post’ in Pacific

Pearl Harbor, Hawaii – The US Navy on Thursday installed a new commander to lead its submarine force in the Pacific at a time when growing Chinese operations in places like the South China Sea are boosting US demand for the eavesdropping capabilities of the underwater vessels.

Rear Adm. Frederick Roegge, who most recently served in the Pentagon, took over from Rear Adm. Phillip Sawyer during a ceremony at Pearl Harbor.  Sawyer is now the deputy and chief of staff for the US Pacific Fleet.
 
The ceremony’s guest speaker, Adm. Cecil Haney, a former submarine commander himself and currently the commander of US Strategic Command, said significant disagreements and disputes challenge peace and stability in the Pacific.
 
“For example, we see China’s efforts to assert regional dominance in the East and South China Seas while at the same time they’re operating a new ballistic missile submarine force, modernizing its mobile and fixed intercontinental ballistic missiles and conducting persistent cyber activities and counter space demonstrations,” Haney said.
 
China has become more active in asserting its territorial claims, including reclaiming land to build new islands at a number of disputed Spratly reefs in the South China Sea. Several of China’s neighbors also claim the reefs – including US ally the Philippines – which lie in one of the world’s busiest shipping routes and are rich in fish and potential gas and oil reserves.
 
IMPORTANT ROLE
 
The US has a policy of not taking sides in the territorial disputes, but it has declared it has a national interest in ensuring freedom of navigation and overflights.
 
The submarine force, which often called the “silent service,” plays an important role in keeping track of China’s increased activity.
 
“There’s only one type of intelligence gathering system that is really well-suited to listening in on the Chinese. That’s the submarine. They don’t know it’s there, but it can be very close to places like Shanghai,” said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute, an Arlington, Virginia-based think tank.
 
Intelligence gathering is the single most important mission for the Pacific Fleet’s submarine force, Thompson said.
 
Submarines play an important role in preventing disputes like those in the South China Sea, as well as another territorial dispute in the East China Sea between China and another US ally, Japan, from “getting out of hand,” said Eric Wertheim, an author at the US Naval Institute in Annapolis, Maryland.
 
“Because any enemy force that would operate against us doesn’t know where the submarines are. And if you don’t know where the submarines are, they’re going to be a threat to your military forces,” Wertheim said.

http://www.mb.com.ph/us-has-new-commander-for-listening-post-in-pacific/

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