Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, and Hickam AFB, Hawaii, both
are more than 4,000 miles from the Taiwan Strait--too
far away to be effective bases for Southeast Asian
fighter operations. Osan AB, South Korea, and Misawa
AB, Japan, are closer but could be threatened by ballistic
missiles. And experience with Saudi Arabia and its
Prince Sultan Air Base has shown that host nations
may exercise control over US combat operations from
their soil.
Pentagon planners say the Air Force needs better access
to the vast Asia-Pacific region, which is growing in
importance, but identifying the need may have been
the easy part.
Because political or practical risks accompany almost
any potential USAF operating sites in the Asia-Pacific
region, analysts say the Air Force should use a broad
range of strategies in its search for new beddown locations
there. The Air Force's goal, most agree, should be
identifying the maximum number of options so that,
when a mission has to be performed, there is no single-point
basing failure. When it comes to access, more is better.
Last year's Quadrennial Defense Review noted that
the current alignment of US assets concentrated in
Western Europe and Northeast Asia "is inadequate
for the new strategic environment." The report
called for the Air Force to "increase contingency
basing in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, as well as
in the Arabian Gulf," since the Bush Administration
sees these areas as being the most likely future hot
spots.
A 2002 Rand report, Strategic Appraisal: United
States Air and Space Power in the 21st Century, zeroed
in on Southwest Asia, the Taiwan Strait, and South
China Sea as the principal areas of "problematic
access."
As a result, the Defense Department will likely reach
out to build new bilateral relationships across the
Asia-Pacific region, but it is still studying how this
should be done.
At a minimum, a larger presence on the island of Guam
in the Western Pacific seems to be the logical first
step.

Four F-15s based at Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, fly a training exercise.
Elmendorf, home to some of USAF's most advanced equipment, is too
far from China or North Korea to serve as a forward base for Asian
operations. (USAF photo by SrA. D. Myles Cullen)
The Challenge
The fundamental challenge in the Asia-Pacific region
is distance. Air Force planners are forced to balance
conflicting concerns when identifying bases. On the
one hand, aircraft should be kept as close to the action
as possible to maximize sorties. On the other, bases
need to be far enough from the battle zone to make
them less vulnerable to attack.
The current network of bases is largely optimized
for staging fighter operations in Southwest and Northeast
Asia. The drawback of being close to potential opponents,
though, is that these locations are largely within
the range of enemy short- and medium-range ballistic
missiles. Analysts say adequate force protection requires
aircraft to be at least 400 miles from enemy territory--perhaps
more--though distances beyond 1,200 miles put fighters
at the outer edge of their effective combat range.
Bombers are affected by distance, as well. Though
the Air Force showed it can fly 44-hour intercontinental
B-2 sorties from Missouri, it could have flown far
more sorties if these aircraft were based in the theater.
According to Rand, the Air Force would be wise to
maximize dependence upon bases on its own territory
because "no matter how friendly or closely aligned,
a foreign government will consider its own interests
first" even in the closest of relationships.
The think tank offered five approaches the United
States could pursue to solve this problem, but two--identifying
new, "reliable" allies akin to the United
Kingdom and negotiating long-term international base
leases--are unlikely to yield results.
Therefore, said Rand, the United States should focus
on expanding overseas main operating bases; push for
new security arrangements; and "rely on extended-range
operations from US territory" as planning guidelines.
These approaches should be pursued together, the report
stated.
New security arrangements will be key, according to
former Air Combat Command chief Gen. Richard E. Hawley,
who retired in 1999. To avoid political surprises,
the Air Force would be wise to "pick a whole slew
of places" the service may be interested in as
possible deployment locations. By seeking good relations
with large numbers of nations, Hawley said, "if
you work it right, one or two [of these options] will
pay off" when the time comes for action.
A Web of Relationships
Hawley, who also served in several Pacific command
positions, noted that when it comes to finding the
right bases for future conflicts, "everything
is scenario-dependent." Therefore, the Air Force
shouldn't be happy just with what it has--or with a
single new option like Guam. The problem, he said,
is that "we get so happy with a place ... we say
we've got what we need," even when other options
remain a necessity. As evidenced by the airfield supporting
the war on terrorism at Manas, Kyrgyzstan, a "web
of bilateral relationships works very well," Hawley
said.
For all the political problems inherent in getting
approval for military action from foreign bases, officials
note that when push comes to shove, it is usually not
just the United States that feels a need for action.
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John P. Jumper recognized
this in February 1998 when planning for Aerospace Expeditionary
Force deployments. Then the commander of US Air Forces
in Europe, Jumper said at an Air Force Association
symposium that "access is an issue until you begin
to involve the vital interests of the nation that you
want and need as a host. Then access is rarely an issue."
Further, the Air Force does not necessarily need expensive,
permanent operating locations. In some cases, an argument
can be made against building new "superbases" like
Prince Sultan or Osan.
Hawley said this fall, "It behooves us to begin
cataloging" the locations the Air Force could
operate from, although the service should not become
wed to huge infrastructure investments in foreign countries
because it "may be disappointed." Notably,
the Afghanistan model showed that the Air Force is
able to build up in truly austere locations if a bare
minimum of infrastructure is in place.
As USAFE commander, Jumper saw value in maintaining
a low-profile international presence. "If you
are engaged with these countries in an aggressive exercise
program instead of a prolonged rotational presence,
if your maintenance people are involved at the grassroots
level teaching them how to maintain airplanes, if you
make yourself valuable as a training asset to these
countries in ways that are definable and measurable,
then you add a dynamic of regional stability that otherwise
would not be there," he said. Familiarity and
comfort make the host nation's decisions easier "when
you have to ask to deploy in a real situation," he
added.
The Rand report noted that relying upon five locations
to serve as "forward support locations"--essentially
superbases--would put most of the world within the
C-130's range, a distance useful for rapid resupply
and proximity to combat operations. These five support
bases could be based on US territory in Alaska, Puerto
Rico, and Guam, and in England and on the British island
of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.

Guam has ample room for growth. Next door to the underutilized Andersen
Air Force Base is Northwest Field (shown here), an abandoned airstrip
that also could be used to base bombers and other large aircraft.
(USAF photo by A1C Joshua Strang)
Expanding Guam
In the Pacific, North Korea and Japan are well covered
by Pacific Air Forces, but the Taiwan Strait and South
China Sea, farther from PACAF operating locations,
are not. This "leaves a dangerous level of uncertainty" in
the region, the Rand report asserted.
A larger presence on Guam is the consensus choice
as best place to begin when the time comes to increase
Air Force presence. Guam is closer to possible South
Asia hot spots than Alaska, Hawaii, or Diego Garcia;
Andersen Air Force Base is underutilized; and perhaps
most important, the island belongs to the United States,
assuring access for combat operations.
According to PACAF, there is really no contest when
looking for where to build up first. While "locations
in Japan and Korea are extremely important to the US,
Andersen's location, size, established infrastructure,
and politically stable environment are unmatched," a
PACAF spokesman said in response to questions from Air
Force Magazine.

US and Thai Air Force members prepare for a mission during Cope Tiger
2002 in Thailand. Cope Tiger is one of many exercises the Air Force
uses to foster cooperative military contact and good relations with
allies. (USAF photo by TSgt. Jeff Clonkey)
That assessment was confirmed by PACAF commander Gen.
William J. Begert in an August discussion with reporters.
Begert emphasized that no decisions have been made
on how to improve access in the region but said Andersen
has enormous unrealized potential. "If we could
ever grow the Air Force a little bit, I'd put forces
in there in a heartbeat," he said.
"If you take a look at the geography of where
Guam is, there's no other place like it," added
Begert.
PACAF noted, "Guam is 14 flying hours closer
to South Asia than anything within the contiguous United
States, [which] allows strike capability by long-range
aircraft throughout the PACAF area without dependence
on refueling. Tankers can then be used to aerial refuel
other assets."
Basing aircraft on Guam would also reduce "the
concentration of firepower along the western Pacific
Rim," the PACAF spokesman stated. Currently, air
forces are heavily clustered in Japan and South Korea--locations
that fall within the range of China's Intermediate-Range
Ballistic Missiles. Guam is at the outer edge of the
IRBM threat, yet 3,000 miles closer to South Asia than
Alaska or Hawaii--still close enough to serve as a
base for fighter operations.
Begert said the base has a huge storage area housing
modern munitions, and the Air Force has "put a
lot of money into the infrastructure." Driven
in part by the fact that Guam is in "typhoon alley," the
Air Force has continually upgraded Andersen even though
the base is not a permanent aircraft host.
"Every once in a while, we get a typhoon that
helps us modernize Andersen," Begert explained.
A recent storm required the Air Force to "spend
about six million dollars putting things back together,
and actually that's helped us keep pretty modern," he
noted.
The PACAF chief added that investments have brought
new hangars and improved munitions and fuel storage
capability to the island. "We have more fuel stored
at AAFB than any other place in the United States Air
Force. ... The base infrastructure is in very good
shape."
In addition to infrastructure, Guam has repeatedly
proved its capability as an aircraft host. "During
the beginnings of Enduring Freedom, ... almost overnight,
in 48 hours, Andersen went from zero airplanes on the
ground to 75," Begert said. "As people were
passing through, they never missed a beat. We were
not breathing hard."
Advocates of a larger presence on Guam note that Andersen
hosted more than 150 B-52s during the Vietnam War (roughly
equivalent to the entire planned Air Force bomber fleet),
but PACAF also pointed out "a peripheral drawback
[would be] a decrease in the bomber fleet in the contiguous
United States."
The island also offers built-in force protection.
The PACAF spokesman noted, "With proper surveillance
assets, nothing can approach Guam without being detected."
The advantage of proximity must be weighed against
Guam's isolation, however.
"The single largest drawback [to a larger presence
on Guam] is, simply put, monetary," according
to PACAF. Being more than 5,800 miles from the US mainland
means "most sustainment products must be brought
to the island, and this distance increases the financial
burden."

Ballistic missiles, such as this one on display in China, could endanger
US forces at bases in the Pacific. Dispersing aircraft among numerous
bases is one way to reduce vulnerability to attack.
Capabilities-Based Investment?
Given that the next battle may involve both long ranges
and sophisticated air defenses, some argue the Defense
Department is investing too little in systems offering
stealth, endurance, and long range that could overcome
the so-called tyranny of distance.
For example, USAF's Global Strike Task Force Concept
of Operations leverages the ability of the F/A-22 and
B-2 to "kick down the door" in the early
days of a conflict and eliminate enemy sanctuary. But
acquisition requirements were not changed to reflect
this CONOPS. There are no plans to build more than
the existing 21 stealth bombers, and the F/A-22 buy,
already revised downward several times, is under constant
pressure. Earlier this year, Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld asked if 180 F/A-22s would be enough.
The Air Staff argues that the F/A-22's centrality
to future Air Force plans means more Raptors are needed,
not fewer.
Air Force Secretary James G. Roche has floated the
possibility of an FB-22 variant with longer range and
greater payload than the F/A-22 as an option to address
emerging strike requirements, though no new bomber
programs are on the books. Many bomber advocates lament
this, arguing that the growing importance of the Asia-Pacific
region calls for transformational strike systems, not
incremental improvements.
As one industry analyst said this fall, "Asia
is considered the most challenging theater, not because
there aren't good basing opportunities but rather because
we don't currently have the systems to unlock the Pacific's
basing potential. Industry can deliver these systems
over the near term--it's up to the policy-makers to
decide by when they want the Asia-Pacific problem solved."
Meanwhile, Begert noted a growing need for Air Force
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance systems
that are already thinly spread. He sees a demand for
more in his area.
"Part of the problem is, we don't have enough
[ISR] assets to go around," Begert said. He said
PACAF hopes to get additional Predator and Global Hawk
unmanned aerial vehicles and Joint STARS and Rivet
Joint reconnaissance aircraft based in the Pacific
as more are procured. "I'd love to see a squadron
of Global Hawks as a permanent presence in the theater
in a place like Guam," he said.
Despite the myriad political, distance, ownership,
and systems challenges, officials stress that new bases
in the Asia-Pacific region are both achievable and
necessary. Reliable access to new bases in central
Asia, such as at Manas and Bagram, put major sections
of the continent inside a useful combat radius, greatly
simplifying planning and improving efficiency.
Force protection and political concerns mean that
the Air Force cannot become complacent, however. As
the Rand report emphasized, "Access is not a problem
to be solved--it is a portfolio to be managed."