
Monday's incident off the coast of the UAE -- in which the U.S. Navy support ship Rappahannock killed an Indian fisherman with heavy machine gun fire after his 30-foot boat came too close -- occurred just miles from Jebel Ali, one of the Navy's busiest ports in the region and a port that is only going to become busier. In fact, despite the much-publicized renewed emphasis on Asia, a lot of the Pentagon action in the coming years is actually going to focus on the Gulf. That's why, when they unveiled the Pentagon's 21st century security strategy in January, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter repeatedly emphasized that the strategic "pivot" would include the Middle East as well as the Far East.
The reasons aren't difficult to discern. The Persian Gulf's energy reserves make it a region of vital strategic interest for the United States, and the American departure from Iraq has left something of a security vacuum, dramatically reducing the U.S. presence in the region. Meanwhile, Iran is building up its navy and making threatening noises about closing the Strait of Hormuz. The United States is not necessarily prepared for the new situation. "We have a Navy that was really developed to fight the Cold War," while "the Iranians have been spending money to create capabilities that exploit the U.S. Navy's vulnerabilities in the Gulf," says Michael Eisenstadt of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. The Navy "belatedly came to the recognition that there are gaps in our capabilities that need to be filled."
The Navy is now filling those gaps. But, in addition to beefing up its own military presence, the United States is quietly strengthening its links with the six nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE -- to "promote regional stability, provide a counterweight to Iran, and reassure partners and adversaries alike of American resolve," according to a Senate Foreign Relations Committee report released in June. This effort to "formalize" coordination on security and economic issues and "further broaden strategic ties" was kicked off at the Strategic Cooperation Forum in March. Talks to discuss the actual steps necessary to strengthen these ties are slated for September 2012.
But what precisely will the physical footprint of this new "security
architecture" look like?
What's already there is pretty impressive. Take Jebel Ali. Built
in the 1970s and located roughly 20 miles southwest of Dubai in the United Arab
Emirates, the port has the largest man-made deep-water harbor in the world; and,
covering 52 square miles, it's the largest port in the Middle East, with more
than 1 million square meters of shipping container storage. A quick look on
Google Earth reveals a U.S. Navy
Nimitz class aircraft carrier tied up alongside the
service's fenced in R&R facility there. And where there are carriers, there
are Aegis radar-equipped guided missile cruisers and destroyers, frigates, at
least one attack submarine, and several supply ships similar to the
Rappahannock nearby. While it's not officially a major Navy base, it sees a steady stream of
ships that are rotating
through the region on deployments from their homeports in the United States.
Next up is the headquarters for
the Navy's Middle East operations, in Manama, Bahrain, a site the sea service describes as, "the busiest 60
acres in the world." While Naval Support Activity Bahrain, as it's formally
known, isn't necessarily bustling with as many large ships as Jebel Ali, it
serves as the nerve center for the U.S. Fifth Fleet and a variety of U.S. and
international task forces that do everything from protecting Iraq's oil
platforms to hunting pirates off the Somali coast. It's also the home port of
numerous U.S. Navy minesweepers and patrol boats, while bigger Navy ships often
pull into Bahrain's extensive repair and resupply facilities that sit just
across the harbor from the base.
Much as Jebel Ali does for the Navy, the UAE air force's Al Dhafra Air Base
serves as a major hub for U.S. and allied jets. American KC-10 and KC-135
aerial refueling tankers, E-3 Sentry AWACS jets, U-2 spy planes, and even F-22
Raptors regularly deploy there. The base is also home to the Gulf Air
Warfare Center, a facility that brings together the air forces of the GCC
states, the U.S. Air Force, and other nations for air combat exercises. Al
Dhafra is also rumored to
be a potential
home for U.S.-made high-altitude missile defense systems.
Perhaps more important than Al Dhafra is the American base at al Udeid, Qatar,
U.S. Central Command's hub for allied forces in the region, as well as host to a
number of bombers, cargo planes, tankers, and spy jets. Again, a Google Earth
overview reveals B-1 heavy bombers, KC-135 tankers, RC-135 Rivet Joint signals
intelligence collection planes, E-8 Joint STARS ground-scanning radar jets,
C-130 tactical airlifters, P-3 Orion submarine hunters, an EP-3 Aries signals
intelligence plane, a C-5 Galaxy airlifter, and C-17 airlifters on the ramp
there.
Meanwhile, Camp Arifjan in Kuwait has served as the regional depot for U.S.
military ground vehicles in the Gulf, most recently thousands of tanks, trucks,
MRAPS, and other armored vehicles departing Iraq. Camp Arifjan is closely
linked with the Kuwaiti port of Shuaiba, where the ground vehicles are loaded
and unloaded from cargo ships. The Air Force maintains a wing of C-130 Hercules
tactical airlifters at Ali al Salem Air Base in Kuwait.
However, Pentagon planners have realized that the current make-up of its forces in the Gulf, which have been largely focused on supporting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, is not adequate for deterring Iran. Therefore, the Defense Department is rushing equipment to the region aimed at countering the Iranian threat.
The recent buildup of U.S. naval forces in the Gulf includes the
1970s-vintage USS Ponce, a transport that was converted this spring into a floating
"lily pad" base for minesweeping operations (it can also
accommodate special operations troops) and that arrived in the Gulf this month.
Four additional Avenger
class minesweepers
arrived in the Gulf in late June, bringing the total in the region to
eight. The Navy is also arming its anti-mine forces
in the Gulf with Seafox
mine-hunting undersea drones that can be launched from Avengers or MH-53
helicopters. The Defense Department also announced that the aircraft carrier
USS John C. Stennis will leave for the Gulf in December, four months ahead of
schedule, in order to maintain the presence of two aircraft carriers and their
strike groups in the region through next year.
The Pentagon is also purchasing 40 Raytheon-made Griffin missiles and their
associated launchers for use by the Navy's Cyclone
class patrol craft stationed in the Gulf. (The Griffin is
seen as a tool to defend against swarms of fast-moving speed boats. "Swarming"
is a tactic frequently espoused by Iranian sea services as a way to confront
large U.S. warships.) The Cyclone class boats are also reportedly having laser
targeting devices added to their Mk
38 25 mm chain guns.
The United States is also reportedly set to open a powerful AN/TPY-2 X-Band
radar in Qatar that will likely be used, along with two others in Israel and
Turkey, to monitor Iranian missile launches, the Wall Street Journal is reporting. U.S.
Central Command may also deploy the Terminal High-Altitude Air Defense (THAAD)
missile defense system to Qatar in coming months.
The United States and Europe are also helping the Gulf nations
modernize their militaries. "Our approach has been to respond to Iran's ramping
up of its nuclear program with large arms sales to the Gulf," said Eisenstadt.
"The idea is, developing nuclear weapons or advancing your nuclear program will
harm rather than hurt your security because we'll respond by bolstering your
neighbors and therefore you will be more vulnerable to your neighbors."
Most recently, the United States finalized a deal to provide Saudi Arabia with
84 brand new Boeing F-15SA Strike Eagle fighter-bombers and to upgrade 70 of
the kingdom's existing F-15S Strike Eagles. The Saudis also received 24 brand
new Eurofighter Typhoons in 2011, the first of 72 Typhoons ordered by the
Saudis. The Typhoon and the latest versions of the Strike Eagle are among the
world's most advanced fighters, designed for both high-end air combat and
bombing campaigns. The Saudis have also recently purchased three stealthy air-defense
frigates from France and are reportedly considering buying two U.S. made DDG-51
class Aegis-equipped destroyers and an unknown number of littoral combat ships.
Qatar is set to decide on
a fleet of 24
or more fighter jets to replace its fleet of French-made Dassault Mirage 2000
fighters. (Six to eight of Qatar's Mirage's
participated in NATO's campaign to oust former Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi.) The tiny nation is eyeing the Typhoon, Strike Eagle, Boeing's
F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, Lockheed Martin's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, and Dassault's
Rafale.
Meanwhile, the UAE, whose Mirage 2000s and Lockheed-made F-16s also flew in
Libya, is looking to buy new fighters, possibly financing
the development of an entirely new aircraft despite the fact
that it bought the most advanced versions of the F-16, known as the F-16E/F
Block 60, in 2007. (The UAE actually paid for the development of the Block 60
F-16, making it the first country to fly a better version of an American-made
fighter than the United States itself.) The UAE's navy is also financing the
development of six brand new stealthy
corvettes designed to do everything from mine-laying and coastal patrols to
light anti-ship warfare.
Oman has recently purchased 12 new F-16s and will refurbish its older F-16s. It
is also buying three British-made
corvettes.
This infusion of new radars, planes, ships and missile defenses may be enough
to deter Iran's military today, but Mark Gunzinger, an analyst with the Center
for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, says the long term is a different
matter. Given the fact that Iran has increasing numbers of missiles and rockets
that can reach existing facilities, it makes little sense to keep American forces and command centers on the coast of the Persian Gulf.
Gunzinger has called for the U.S. to pull back its headquarters facilities from the shores of the Persian Gulf and establish a network of smaller, more widely distributed bases further back on the Arabian Peninsula that would be harder for the Iranians to target. "We need to maintain a presence in the Gulf but one that doesn't maintain a [command center] at al Udeid and Navy headquarters in Manama."
For the time being, however, the new security architecture seems to mean strengthening the existing foundation of U.S. forces in the Gulf, while beefing up GCC forces through arms sales, training, and encouraging increased military cooperation between the GCC nations. The question now is whether it will work, providing the deterrent to Iran that so many in Washington and elsewhere feel we need.

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