Things have changed drastically
for US European Command. Personnel strength and base
facilities are down about 70 percent since the peak
of the Cold War.
The old mission, keeping
the Soviet Union out of Western Europe, is long gone.
In recent years,
the focus has
been on smaller regional conflicts, notably Operation
Allied Force in Yugoslavia in 1999, and on building
partnerships with nations that used to be part of
the Warsaw Pact.
 |
| Old Europe. In a classic
scene, an F-16 flies over picturesque villages
in Germanys Eifel
region, but US attention is shifting to Europes
rimlandsand beyond. |
Now, more changes are on
the way for EUCOM as the United States shifts its
strategic attention to
an arc
of instability that cuts across Africa, the
Middle East, and Southwest Asia.
The Cold War is over
and were not expecting the
Soviet Union, which doesnt exist anymore,
to launch a major tank war across the north German
plain, Secretary
of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld said on a visit
to Iraq in September. So we need to adjust
our footprint. One of the places were looking
at adjusting it is in Europe.
The current disposition
of our forces reflects a positioning in keeping with
the symmetrical threats of the last
century, the EUCOM commander, Marine
Gen. James L. Jones Jr., told the Senate
Armed Services Committee
in April.
The missions have
moved to the east and south, Air
Force Gen. Charles F. Wald, Joness
deputy, said at a breakfast meeting with
reporters
in Washington
in September.
Even though EUCOMs
force structure has shrunk, its geographic boundaries
have expanded. Its responsibilities
now extend as far as the Caspian Sea
and into Africa. European
Command is not the right word anymore, Wald
said. I
dont know what it is, ... but it
is something other than European Command.
Rumors have been circulating
for the past year that the United States might
pull
out of bases
in Western
Europe and move its forces closer
to the war on terrorism. That would have
considerable
impact on several European
nations, particularly Germany, where
some 70,000
US troops are currently based.
In February, Deutsche Welle
reviewed the potential effect on the German
state of
Rhineland Palatinate
if the US Air Force left Spangdahlem
Air Base. The base, which employs
800 Germans,
is the
regions
biggest employer, and 20,000
more jobs in the area depend
on the
US presence
there.
One rumor said that the
1st Armored Division, deployed to Iraq,
might not be returning
to its posts in
Germany.
There is some talk
about an Army division never coming back here [to
Germany] and going directly back to some
unspecified location in the
States, Jones told
European Stars and Stripes
in September. Thats
simply not going to happen.
Congress is interested
in European bases, too. One
reason is that
the next base
realignment and closure
round is coming up in
2005, and the elimination of
overseas bases
and the
possible relocation
of units
could take the pressure
off the need to close
bases at home.
Looking ahead to possible
base closures, Raymond
F. Dubois,
deputy undersecretary
of defense
for installations and
environment, said in
October, The
Secretary of Defense
promised the Congress
of the United States
that
he would arrange
his overseas
footprint before
he began to re-arrange
his domestic footprint.
 |
| Into Africa. Navy SEALs
land in Liberia. Said Gen. Charles Wald, European Command is not
the right word anymore. I dont know what
it is, ... but it is something other than European
Command. |
Forward Bases and Operating
Locations
The EUCOM infrastructure
of the future will
be a combination
of main operating
bases, forward
operating
bases, and
forward operating
locations.
We wont be building any more little Americas, Wald
told the Boston Globe in July, referring to the large overseas bases of the Cold War, complete
with American schools, shopping areas, and McDonalds restaurants.
Some of the main operating bases
will remain.
Jones told
German reporters
in July, We
would like
to operate
Ramstein for
as long as
were
welcome in
Germany, but
added that I
dont
want to talk
about the others.
Ramstein, located
in western
Germany,
about 85 miles
from EUCOM
headquarters
at Stuttgart,
is
headquarters
for US Air
Forces
in Europe.
Wald, interviewed
by the
Air Forces internal
information
news service in August, said, Ramstein
was critical
to the success of the Operation Enduring Freedom
and Operation Iraqi Freedom missions. A lot
of airlift
aircraft landed at Ramstein which has
significant
infrastructure, and we have a great relationship
with
the
Germans.
It makes
a lot
of sense
to keep places like Ramstein and Spangdahlem
and Moron
[AB], Spain,
open because
they have
large ramps
that can
handle large numbers of aircraft.
Camp Bondsteel
in Kosovo
is an
example of a
forward
operating
base.
It has
some
wooden buildings,
medical
facilities,
and an
airfield
for helicopters.
It has
some
basic amenities,
such
as a
theater
and a
post exchange,
but
it is
a semipermanent
installation,
built
and run for
a
fraction
of the
cost
of a
main operating
base.
When
Bondsteel
is
no longer
needed
by
the peacekeeping
force
now
stationed there,
EUCOM
hopes
to
keep the facilities
and
access, which
might
be
useful for
some
future
operation,
Wald
said.
 |
| A Keeper. For the US, Ramstein AB,
Germany, has continuing value. We would like
to operate Ramstein for as long as were welcome
in Germany, said Marine Gen. James Jones,
EUCOM commander. |
Another
example
of
a
forward operating
base
is
Thumrait
in
Oman.
The
access
agreement
has
been
in
place
for
more
than
20
years.
Air
expeditionary
forces
have
used
the
base
periodically,
and
enough
equipment
and
fuel
were
pre-positioned
there
to
support
several
elements
of
deploying
airpower.
During
combat operations
in Afghanistan
and Iraq,
the Air
Force was
fortunate to
have forward
operating bases
like Thumrait
and Diego
Garcia in
the Indian
Ocean. It
also made
use of
forward operating
locations in
such places
as Bulgaria
and Kyrgyzstan
in central
Asia.
EUCOM
is constantly
scouting for
good forward
operating locations.
The command
hopes to
put small
investments into
such locations.
That could
include such
assets as
buildings, security
fences, fuel
storage, and
even communications
capability. Some
of the investment may be
just the fact that there is a relationship
with the United States, Wald said.
Bases farther south and
east could open up training
opportunities,
which are
presently a problem
for EUCOM forces.
The training ranges
we have used historically, mostly in Western Europe,
have diminished utility due to increasing restrictions
on operating hours, costs,
limitations on the
weapons that are authorized to be employed, and the
size of forces that can maneuver on these ranges, Jones
said in his testimony
to the Senate in April.
Several nations in
Central and Eastern
Europe and
in Northern Africa
have expressed interest
in providing
suitable training
ranges,
he said.
Last year, the Pentagon
floated a proposal
to eliminate service
components
and
their four-star commanders
within the unified
command structure,
replacing them
with standing joint
force
headquarters headed
by three-star commanders.
Jones and Wald do
not believe that
arrangement
would
work in Europe,
where, for example,
the commander of
US Air Forces in
Europe is
one of seven four-star
airmen
from NATO and European
countries. The United
States is the
clear leader in
airpower,
but to believe
that
the
senior
American airman
could be
a three-star
general
and that the six
European four stars would
come to a meeting
and defer to the
senior US guy is
a little bit naive, Wald
said.
In Europe, it is rank, position, and credibility, Wald
added. In
the United States,
it is position, credibility, and rank. Rank means a
lot there. ... General Jones
is a
strong believer
in
the fact that
we need to retain
four-star components, at least in the Navy, Air Force,
and
Army.
Eyes on Africa and
Asia
The places where EUCOM
will try to establish
forward operating bases
and locations
will be influenced
by both strategic
and economic interests.
There is an emerging concern, not only for the
alliance but for the United States, to our south, Jones
said in a Newsweek interview in October. Africa
is replete with
ungoverned spaces for attracting the merchants of terrorism,
radical fundamentalism,
weapons of mass destruction, and all kinds of criminality,
and I think were
going to see more
of that.
On behalf of EUCOM,
Wald has recently
visited such places
as Sao Tome,
a small nation
off the coast
of West Africa
near Nigeria.
The United
States presently
gets about 15 percent
of its oil from
Africa, with
Nigeria
a leading
supplier.
The estimate is in the next 10 years, we will get 25 percent of our oil
from there. The Europeans will get a lot from there, Wald said. I
can see the United
States potentially
having a forward
operating location
in Sao Tome.
 |
| Balkan Bridge. In recent wars, USAF operated
from forward sites such as Burgas Airport in Bulgaria
(shown here, as a C-17 awaits loading). The Balkan
nation is close to Middle East hot spots. |
In some cases,
the relative
desirability
of a forward
location is attributable
to the range
of aircraft.
One of the things we like about Ramstein, for
example, is the footprint of one strategic flight without
refueling for an airlifter, Wald said. You
can take off
from the States, no
refueling,
[and] land at Ramstein.
The airlifter
can refuel
in flight,
of course,
but we
are not always
going to want
to use refueling, he
said. We
want to use
refueling for
other things,
maybe.
The same thing going south, he added. You can only go so far
unrefueled with a strategic lifter. It turns out it is about in the middle part
of Africa.
You want to
take a look at places you can land. From
Ramstein to
Kinshasa (in the Congo)
or to Entebbe
(in Uganda) is about
the same distance
as from Washington,
D.C., to Ramstein.
At Entebbe
airport,
Wald said,
the
US has two
K-Span steel
buildingsbasic
construction
but clean
and dry,
with cement
floors. We
built those
quite a while
ago, just
in case we
ever needed
to use something
there. UN
peacekeeping
forces, as
well as the
French, have
been
allowed to
operate from
the K-Spans
at Entebbe.
In Asia,
Wald said, we
have an initiative
called Caspian
Guard. ...
It will be
building
surveillance
capabilities
for both
air and
sea in the
Caspian Sea
in conjunction
with the
Azerbaijanis.
In the near
future, Azerbaijan
will
substantially
increase
its production
of oil, and
Southeast
Europe
will get
a majority
of its natural
gas
from the
Caspian Sea.
That becomes a significant strategic issue, Wald said, but noted
that the
majority
of that economic benefit is going into European capitals.
Thus, stability of
the area around
the Caspian
Sea should
be of
keen interest
to the Europeans. I asked the Germans
yesterday, Why should the United
States
ensure the oil flow out of the Caspian Sea
if it is all going to go to Europe? Wald
said. To
me that
is a NATO mission. ... They
agreed.
The same
applies
to the
Persian
Gulf.
There isnt any reason why the United States should have been the
guarantor of the Middle East for all those years, along with Britain, Wald
said. We
should
have had other participants
helping
us all along. ... Europe
benefitted
from the oil from
the Middle
East just as much
as the
United States.
European
Challenge
to NATO
Changes
are also
sweeping
through
NATO,
of which
US
European
Command
is
the leading
in-place
military
component.
(Jones,
the EUCOM
commander,
is
Supreme
Allied
Commander,
Europe
as well.)
NATO
continues
to expand.
Membership,
which
stood
at 15
nations
for many
years,
is now
headed
for 26
as seven
more
countriesBulgaria,
Estonia,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Romania,
Slovakia,
and Sloveniajoin
in 2004.
For most
of its
54-year
history,
NATO
strictly
avoided
out-of-area
operations
and kept
its attention
within
the borders
of
Europe.
In August,
however,
NATO
took
formal
control
of
the
International
Security
Assistance
Force
in
Kabul,
Afghanistan,
its
first
major
mission
ever
outside
of Europe.
At the
Prague
Summit
in
November
2002,
NATO
announced
that
it would
deal
with
threats from
wherever
they
may come and field
forces
that
can move
quickly
to
wherever
they
are needed.
The alliance
agreed
to form
a NATO
Response
Force,
with
full
operational
capability
in 2006.
This
force
would
be tailored
for specific
operations,
as required,
based
on a
brigade-size
land
element,
a joint
naval
task
force,
and
an
air element
capable
of 200
combat
missions
per
day.
It would
be able
to deploy
quickly
and
act either
in a
stand-alone
role
or as
an initial
entry
force.
Its elements
would
be
drawn
from
the regular
NATO
force
structure.
The latest
imbroglio
centers
on whether
the European
Union,
which
pointedly
does
not include
the United
States,
will
field
its
own military
force
in competition
with
NATO.
At a
mini-summit
of the
European
Unionformerly
the European
Economic
Communityon
April
29, France,
Germany,
Belgium,
and Luxembourg
voted
to push
ahead
with
a European
Union
defense
force
with
a command
headquarters
separate
from
NATO.
We consider our commitments within the Atlantic
alliance and the European Union as being complementary, the
four
nations said in a joint statement.
Belgian
Prime
Minister
Guy
Verhofstadt
said
the
separate
headquarters
was
needed
so
Europe
could plan
and
execute
European
operations
autonomously, meaning
without
the
United
States.
An
independent
military
command
for
the
European
Union does
cast
a doubt
about
where
those
countries
are
headed
and
what
their
intentions
are, said
US
Ambassador
to
NATO
R.
Nicholas
Burns. Europe
does
not
need
more
headquarters.
Britain,
worried
about
the
potential
damage
to
NATO
cohesion,
tried
to
head
off
the
idea
of
a separate
headquarters,
proposing
instead
a European
Union planning
cell at
NATO
headquarters.
In
September,
though,
the
British
joined
the
French
and
Germans
in
a position
paper
that
said
(according
to
a copy
obtained
by
the
German
magazine
Der
Spiegel), We
are
together
convinced
that
the
EU
must
be
able
to
plan
and
conduct
operations
without
the
backing
of
NATO
assets
and
NATO
capability.
The
director-general
of
the
EU
military
staff,
German
Lt.
Gen.
Rainer
Schuwirth
said
that
member
states
would
be
expected
to
cede
national
sovereignty
on
issues
of
war
and
peace. National
governments
would
have
to
give
away
their
authority
over
their
army, he
told
the
London
Financial
Times.
I think the NATO Response Force will be, frankly,
much more capable ... and probably more viable than,
say, an EU standing force, Wald said at his breakfast
meeting
with reporters. Between
the
European Union and the NATO Response
Force,
I think the
NATO
Response Force will
be
the force of choice.
His
view
was
that the
EU
is
pushing
too
hard and
that a
total
separate
military
capability
is
a
mistake
for
Europe.
Earlier
this
year,
400
soldiers
of
a
European
Union
force
began
peacekeeping
patrols
in
Macedonia.
The EUNATO relationship is not a problem,
but it is a developing relationship, Jones
said in a Defense News interview in August. However,
he said that it is
more efficient to have one military organization that
can address the security concerns of both the alliance
and the European community. I believe thats
the most efficient way. The least
efficient and most expensive way is
to develop two parallel military
structures, neither one of which
would probably get the
resources required.
Bernard
Jenkin, writing
in Londons Financial Times, said a separate
European Union military capability is essentially
a French ambition. Most EU countriesincluding
the UK, Italy, Spain, and even Germanyare
good NATO supporters. Either they fail
to see the anti-NATO, anti-US
consequences of ESDP [European
Security and Defense Policy],
or they believe security policy
in Europe is second to European integration.
European
Force Capabilities
The
question of
a separate
command and
headquarters does
not change
a problem
of long
standing in
NATO: the
gap between
the capabilities
of US
and European
forces and
their lack
of interoperability.
It
has been
proposed from
time to
time that
the smaller
nations specialize
and fill
specific niches
in the
alliance requirement
rather than
try to
maintain modern
military capabilities
across the
board.
Among
those taking
that approach
is Norway,
which concentrates
on mine
clearing and
mountain reconnaissance. Identify what you
are good at and concentrate on it, Norwegian
Defense Minister Kristin Krohn Devold told New York
Times Magazine in August. That
way, you can play with the big boys
even if you are small.
A Capabilities Commitment, adopted
at Prague, obliges the NATO nations
to improve in areas critical to
modern military operations,
such as airlift and
air-to-ground surveillance. At present, however,
the amount of force they can project
on their own is limited.
The 18 countries of NATOs Integrated Military
Structure in principle declare around 240 combat brigades
to the alliance, each about 5,000 strong, the
NATO SecretaryGeneral, George Robertson, said
in June. A huge figure.
But fewer than half of that number are declared as
deployable and therefore usable for todays real-world
operations. And when you subtract the US contribution
and those forces which NATO assesses to be undeployable
in practice, the number of usable brigades falls to
fewer than 50. Factor in the need to train, rotate,
and rest your troops, and the absolute maximum NATOs
members, less the US and France,
can sustain is around 16 brigades,
or some 80,000
soldiers. Even this would require
larger European countries such
as Germany to be willing and able
to keep two or three brigades
deployed at any one
time.
Wald
said that
to be
a real participant in worldwide missions,
Europe is
going to have to have more strategic
lift. ... I think strategic airlift
is going to be one of
the keys to this whole
NATO viability issue that
has to be watched.
He
noted the
tendency of
European nations
to procure
European systems.
For example,
The Airbus
A400M airlifter,
he said, is almost a C-130J-class aircraft.
That is not what you call strategic lift. However,
he said, You dont
necessarily have to purchase US
things.
What you do need to do is make sure that whatever you buy works with our
stuff, said
Wald. Because when we come to the fight, we bring a lot a capability that
nobody else will ever have. I used to tell people in the Middle East, youre
not going to buy a B-2, but if were allies, youll
have a B-2 if a fight
starts.
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