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Commander Reaffirms U.S. Commitment to Pacific Region
By Donna Miles American Forces Press Service
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CAMP H.M. SMITH, Hawaii, Sept. 22, 2007 – Six months into the job as
commander of the largest U.S. combatant command, Navy Adm. Timothy J.
Keating still pinches himself each morning when he arrives to work and
takes in the views of Pearl Harbor from his mountaintop headquarters.
 Navy
Adm. Timothy J. Keating, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, chats with
Timorese troops in formation as Brig. Gen .Taur Matan Ruak,
Timor-Leste’s chief of defense, looks on. Keating toured the Timorese
military headquarters during a Sept. 19, 2007, visit to Dili,
Timor-Leste. Photo by Donna Miles (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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Twenty-two years ago, when he “carried bags” as the aide to Adm.
William J. Crowe, Keating never imagined that he might follow in
Crowe’s footsteps to take the helm of U.S. Pacific Command.
“Not
in a million years did I dream I would get this job,” Keating said.
“It’s a dream job. I’ve got the best job in the Department of Defense.”
Although serving as Crowe’s flag lieutenant gave him wide
exposure to the Asia-Pacific region, Keating said much has changed
since 1985 -- mostly for the better. More people are living free in
democratic countries. U.S. trade with the region is up six fold.
Economies in the region are improving, some dramatically. Education
opportunities have improved. Health care and dental care are more
available, and the standard of living “tends to be on a positive
slope,” Keating said.
After visiting nearly half of the 43
countries in his area of responsibility since taking command in March,
Keating said he’s “heartened by what I have seen.”
“I’m trying
not to be a cheerleader, but we are on solid ground,” he said. “More
people want to be with us than wanted to be with us when I was here in
the mid-80s.” He cited examples almost inconceivable two decades ago,
including Cambodia’s and Mongolia’s desire to partner with the United
States while improving their citizens’ quality of life and protecting
them from terrorists.
While encouraged by these successes,
Keating said he never loses sight of concerns that threaten stability
in the region. Terrorist activity in the Philippines and Indonesia,
North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, and China’s military buildup and lack
of transparency all loom large. Threats range from terrorist groups to
piracy to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction technology.
“So
while I am encouraged and remain optimistic, I am also aware that there
is important and good work to be done,” Keating said.
He
called partners and allies critical in standing up to these threats and
maintaining regional stability. So since arriving at PACOM, Keating has
visited much of the region -- which covers 51 percent of the earth’s
surface -- to cement existing relationships and build new ones.
“It’s
a big theater, not just geographically, but in terms of ideas, in terms
of challenges, in terms of opportunity,” he said in July during an
address to the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington. “And you’ve got to get out there, and you’ve got to get
amongst them.”
Just returned yesterday after a five-day swing
to Tonga, Timor-Leste and Australia, Keating got a renewed sense of the
striking differences among Pacific nations and the different challenges
they face.
But despite all that sets the countries he visited
apart, Keating said he was encouraged by their common goals of peace
and stability for their people and ways they’re actively working to
secure or maintain these ideals.
Tonga, a 171-island
archipelago south of Western Samoa, is better known for its prowess on
the rugby field than on the world stage, yet it deployed 55 of its
450-member Tonga Defense Service to Iraq last week to support
Multinational Fore Iraq. The deployment is Tonga’s second to Iraq, and
the country has committed to sending a third contingent.
Keating
said he was struck by Tonga’s immense pride in its contribution, which
he called significant in light of the country’s total military size and
population. “Size is not as important as commitment,” he said during a
Sept. 17 retreat ceremony at Tonga’s Togalevu Naval Base. “And the
commitment seen in this country is huge.”
Brig. Gen. Tau’aika
“Dave” Uta’atu, Tonga’s chief of defense, told Keating his country
wants to make a difference in fighting terrorism. “It is not just a
coalition of the willing, it is a coalition of the committed,” Keating
reflected. “And by God, they are committed.”
Stopping next in
Timor-Leste, a restive island nation at the southernmost tip of the
Indonesian archipelago, Keating saw a far different situation.
Since
breaking free of a brutal 24-year Indonesian rule in 1999 and declaring
statehood three years later, Timor-Leste’s leaders have struggled to
build a new democratic government. It’s been a big challenge in the
face of weak institutions, political infighting, poor education,
extreme poverty and violence.
As Keating praised strides the
country’s leaders have made and promised U.S. support to help them, he
said he was awed by their commitment to a free, democratic country and
willingness to do what’s necessary to secure its future.
“We
met guys who fought for their nation’s independence,” he said. “They
have a president who’s a Nobel laureate. They have a prime minister who
was imprisoned for seven years. Their chief of staff has been fighting
in the hills for over a decade. And they’re still fighting.”
Keating
conceded that the Timorese have giant challenges to overcome. He termed
the country’s challenges: “much on their plate over which to say
grace.”
“You look them in the eyes and say, ‘You understand
the price to be paid for freedom and democracy,” Keating said. “And as
you do that, you are talking to guys who are dedicating their lives to
making a difference in a new nation.”
Traveling south from
Timor-Leste to Australia, Keating met with Australian government and
military leaders to explore ways to enhance their already-rock-solid
military partnership.
As they talked about ways to collaborate
more closely, particularly in fighting terrorism and proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction, Keating said even he was surprised by the
strength of the U.S.-Australia relationship.
“It’s hard for me
to overstate the depth and breadth of the relationship we enjoy
together,” Keating said he told Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston,
Australia’s defense chief. “It was a spectacular visit.”
This week’s visits reinforced Keating’s belief in what he calls “the power of the Pacific.”
Using
the metaphor of a tapestry, he said every Asia-Pacific nation,
regardless of its size or impact beyond its own borders, is an
important part of the region’s overall fabric. “I am continually
impressed by the fabric and how much it is all interlocking, interwoven
and linked,” he said.
This bond, along with positive trends
taking place in the region, has created more opportunities for
military-to-military cooperation and collaboration, Keating said.
“They’re significant,” he said. “And they simply didn’t exist 20 years
ago.”
He pointed to exercise Malabar, which wrapped up Sept.
9, as an example of that enhanced cooperation. More than 20,000
servicemembers from the United States, India, Japan, Singapore and
Australia exercised their ability to respond together to provide
anti-submarine warfare, anti-piracy, humanitarian and combat support.
“We
had two U.S. carriers, an Indian carrier, and Japanese, Singaporean and
Australian forces in the Bay of Bengal, all talking together, all
working together,” Keating said.
Just as significant, he said,
are humanitarian efforts conducted by PACOM. USS Peleliu, for example,
completed its four-month Pacific Partnership 2007 earlier this month
after providing medical, dental and engineering support to the
Philippines, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and the
Marshall Islands.
Keating called these exercises, whether
carried out by full carrier strike groups or small military training
teams, a big part of PACOM’s effort to build relationships, strengthen
partnerships and express support to the region.
“We have so
many capabilities in the Department of Defense and Pacific Command, and
we have to pull out the stops to ensure our friends in the area know
they can count on us anytime,” he said. “That’s our main message: ‘We
understand your challenges. We want you to believe and feel viscerally
our commitment to support you.’”
Delivering that message
throughout the region requires “constant, unrelenting work,” not just
by the 300,000 PACOM servicemembers and civilian employees supporting
the command’s mission throughout the theater, Keating said.
Just
as important, he said, is the support of other U.S. agencies and
regional governments, all working together toward a common goal. “It
takes the entire spectrum,” Keating said. “This is the furthest thing
in the world from a one-man show.”
As he travels through the
region, Keating delivers personally the message that this full spectrum
of support stands solidly alongside the United States’ friends in Asia
and the Pacific. “I am going around and looking them in the eye and
saying, ‘We are here. We are not going away,’” he said.
“We
have been here since World War II and before, and we are resolutely,
irrevocably committed to freedom, stability and prosperity in the
Pacific Command area of responsibility.” |
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| Military Connection's Comments: Admiral Timothy J. Keating assumed command of the United States Pacific Command (PACOM) on March 26, 2007. Admiral Keating is the supreme military authority for the various branches of the Armed Forces serving within PACOM’ s area of responsibility. PACOM is the oldest and largest of the Unified Combatant Commands. At Camp H. M. Smith, Hawaii, Admiral Keating reminisced about his career never thinking he would one day command USPACOM. He sees tremendous change in the area from twenty years ago and for the better. He never imagined twenty years ago that Cambodia and Mongolia would want to partner with the United States. Admiral Keating is also aware of the problems in the Philippines and Indonesia. Both countries have high terrorist populations. Although he has only been on the job six months, he has visited half of the countries that come under PACOM. Last week he visited with military and government officials in Tonga and Timor-Leste. The United States has been in the Pacific Rim since World War II. Admiral Keating gave assurances that we remain committed to freedom, stability and prosperity in the Pacific Command. |
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