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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (2042)3/29/2001 1:38:05 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 93284
 
Martin Kettle in Washington
Saturday March 24, 2001
The Guardian

A historic shift of emphasis in United
States military deployment from Europe to
Asia, with China supplanting Russia as
America's principal foe, is at the heart of
the Bush administration's long awaited
defence strategy review, according to
reports in Washington.


Outlines of the potentially epochal rethink
of the US's global strategic priorities were
given to President George Bush by his
defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld at a
private meeting at the White House on
Wednesday, the Washington Post
reported yesterday.

"The president was complimentary, he
appreciated the policy discussion, and
gave the indication that the topics were
indeed what he had in mind," a Pentagon
official told the paper.

More than 50 years after the struggle to
deter the Soviet Union in Europe became
the centrepiece of US military strategy in
the aftermath of the second world war, the
Rumsfeld review has concluded that the
Pacific Ocean should now become the
most important focus of US military
deployments, with China now perceived
as the principal threat to American global
dominance.

The review says, in effect, that
Washington should abandon the
long-standing doctrine that the US military
must always be prepared to fight two
major world conflicts simultaneously, the
reports quote officials as saying.

By elevating China to the status of global
enemy number one, the review clearly
foreshadows an American turn away from
Europe, or at least from the levels of US
engagement and attention which have
existed for the lifetime of most Europeans.

Mr Bush ordered the strategy review
immediately on taking office. It is the
most important of three complementary
reviews intended to shape US military
priorities in the 21st century. The other
two are on nuclear weapons and missile
defence options, and on service pay and
conditions.


The huge distances involved in the Pacific
mean that the Pentagon must give
additional priority to "long-range power
projection", the report says.

This means putting fresh resources into
airlift capacity to enable the US to move
troops, vehicles and weapons many
thousands of miles from bases in America
to the frontline in Asia at short notice.

The report says the threat from hostile
missiles is likely to become so serious
that the US can no longer afford to risk its
largest and most expensive ships, the
Nimitz class aircraft carriers, in forward
positions. As a result, the navy will be told
to stop building big ships and to
concentrate on speed and
manoeuvrability, including a new
generation of smaller carriers, to avoid
them becoming targets.

The threat from weapons of mass
destruction, such as nuclear, chemical
and biological weapons, against American
military targets means that US allies may
begin to question the advisability of
allowing Washington to have bases in
their countries, the Pentagon suggests.
The report says this is another reason
why long-range supply capacity needs to
be increased.

The review does not make
recommendations about particular
weapons systems, but there is no doubt
in Washington that missile defence
shields will form a central part of the new
strategy.

Other key elements of what would be, in
effect, a rearming of the US military are
likely to include a greater role for
long-range bombers and for unmanned
aircraft. The F-22 fighter programme is
likely to face cutbacks, though there is
speculation that it will not be scrapped.

The sweep of the review is so
comprehensive and its conclusions so
radical that the publication of the final
report later this year is likely to set off a
whole series of turf wars within the US
military, as the armed services scrabble
for influence and funding in the new era.

Washington's decision to turn more of its
guns and missiles towards China came
as it was confirmed that a senior colonel
in the Chinese people's liberation army
has defected to the US while visiting as
part of a military delegation. The
defection, which apparently took place at
the end of last year or in January, involved
an unnamed officer in the foreign affairs
department of the army general staff.

guardian.co.uk



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (2042)3/29/2001 8:29:03 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Respond to of 93284
 
The problem with people who have had long periods of heavy drinking is their thought process changes to accommodate the disease.

Sure, while they're actively drinking. Once a person is grounded in their sobriety, the old way of thinking falls away pretty quickly. And whether alcoholism is a "disease" is still an open question.