ASEAN Defense: Re-newed interest in USA amphibious warfare highlights importance of Thai-USA “Cobra Gold”

  • By Stingray, Thai Intel’s national security journalist

As the following article from The Diplomat says, USA‘s amphibious warfare capability is crucial. Off course, every year, in the Pacific, there is the Thai American “Cobra Gold” exercise, which is mostly about amphibious warfare. The exercise, one of the largest globally, have grown to involve most of ASEAN.

The annual Thai USA “Cobra Gold” exercise starts shortly. Currently, soldiers involved in Cobra Gold, are conducting flood relief operations in Thailand.

The following is from the Diplomat:

Why U.S. Needs Amphibious Skills

February 01, 2012

By Rep. J. Randy Forbes

 “Amphibious warfare.” To most Americans, the term conjures up images from HBO’s The Pacific, where U.S. Marines assault the beaches of Pacific islands on their way to Tokyo. Sure, it served its purpose in World War II, but are we ever going to need to fight our way onto a beach again? A decade of combat in the Middle East has only strengthened the opinion that the Marine Corps may be a muscular instrument of warfare, but its amphibious tradition is now ancient history.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Our Navy-Marine Corps team’s ability to conduct joint amphibious operations bestows the United States with a range of unique capabilities that will be in high demand in tomorrow’s uncertain security environment, specifically in the Indo-Pacific maritime region.

The advantages of maritime power, and specifically amphibious operations, are many. The Commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. James F. Amos, captured these unique capabilities best in a September 2011 letter to U.S. Secretary of Defense Panetta. By one account, since 1990 the Marine Corps has conducted some 120 amphibious operations, including amphibious raids, demonstrations of force, reinforcement of U.S embassies, humanitarian relief, and evacuations of non-combatants from conflict zones.

Amphibious forces are ideal for addressing many of the challenges we face in the Indo-Pacific region. The maritime character of the region, the geographic “tyranny of distance” it presents, the range of environmental crises that often impact the region, the threat of piracy that has affected maritime traffic in the Horn of Africa and Strait of Malacca, the tensions that often inflict the Korean Peninsula, and the modernization of China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) combined with its maritime territorial disputes, all stand to raise the profile of amphibious forces in the years ahead. A brief review of some of the capabilities an amphibious force can provide makes this abundantly clear. They can:

– Deter aggression, because their amphibious nature can provide credible forward-presence to respond rapidly in a crisis;

– Sustain operational access almost anywhere in the world, regardless of political or geographic hurdles;

– Provide ground forces in a combat zone where roads, ports, or airfields are not available;

– Complicate an opponent’s decision-making and impose new costs by multiplying the number of theaters they must seek to defend, stretching their resources and manpower. This was used to great effect during the Gulf War in 1991 when the Marines massed a large force off Iraq’s coast, luring Saddam Hussein’s forces away from the U.S.-led coalition’s main operations;

– Conduct counter-piracy operations;

– Conduct humanitarian and disaster response missions; and

– Assure allies of the United States’ credibility and capability to intervene decisively.

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