The Lily-Pad Strategy: How the Pentagon Is
Quietly Transforming Its Overseas Base Empire
By David Vine
How the Pentagon Is Quietly Transforming Its Overseas Base Empire and
Creating a Dangerous New Way of War
Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com
The first thing I saw last month when I walked
into the belly of the dark grey C-17 Air Force cargo plane was a void —
something missing. A missing left arm, to be exact, severed at the shoulder,
temporarily patched and held together. Thick, pale flesh, flecked with
bright red at the edges. It looked like meat sliced open. The face and what
remained of the rest of the man were obscured by blankets, an American flag
quilt, and a jumble of tubes and tape, wires, drip bags, and medical monitors.
That man and two other critically wounded
soldiers — one with two stumps where legs had been, the other missing a leg
below the thigh — were intubated, unconscious, and lying on stretchers hooked
to the walls of the plane that had just landed at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
A tattoo on the soldier’s remaining arm read, “DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR.”
I asked a member of the Air Force medical team
about the casualties they see like these. Many, as with this flight, were
coming from Afghanistan, he told me. “A lot from the Horn of Africa,” he added.
“You don’t really hear about that in the media.”
“Where in Africa?” I asked. He said he
didn’t know exactly, but generally from the Horn, often with critical injuries.
“A lot out of Djibouti,” he added, referring to Camp Lemonnier, the main U.S. military base in Africa, but from “elsewhere” in the
region, too.
Since the “Black Hawk Down” deaths in Somalia
almost 20 years ago, we’ve heard little, if anything, about American military
casualties in Africa (other than a strange report last week about three special
operations commandos killed, along with three women identified by U.S. military
sources as “Moroccan prostitutes,” in a mysterious car accident in Mali). The growing number of patients arriving at Ramstein from Africa
pulls back a curtain on a significant transformation in twenty-first-century
U.S. military strategy.
These casualties are likely to be the vanguard of
growing numbers of wounded troops coming from places far removed from
Afghanistan or Iraq. They reflect the increased use of relatively small bases
like Camp Lemonnier, which military planners see as a model for future U.S. bases “scattered,” as one academic explains, “across regions in which the United States has previously not
maintained a military presence.”
Disappearing are the days when Ramstein was the
signature U.S. base, an American-town-sized behemoth filled with thousands or
tens of thousands of Americans, PXs, Pizza Huts, and other amenities of home.
But don’t for a second think that the Pentagon is packing up, downsizing its
global mission, and heading home. In fact, based on developments in recent
years, the opposite may be true. While the collection of Cold War-era giant
bases around the world is shrinking, the global infrastructure of bases
overseas has exploded in size and scope.
Unknown to most Americans, Washington’s
garrisoning of the planet is on the rise, thanks to a new generation of bases
the military calls “lily pads” (as in a frog jumping across a pond toward its prey). These are small,
secretive, inaccessible facilities with limited numbers of troops, spartan
amenities, and prepositioned weaponry and supplies.
Around the world, from Djibouti to the jungles of
Honduras, the deserts of Mauritania to Australia’s tiny Cocos Islands, the
Pentagon has been pursuing as many lily pads as it can, in as many countries as
it can, as fast as it can. Although statistics are hard to assemble, given the
often-secretive nature of such bases, the Pentagon has probably built upwards
of 50 lily pads and other small bases since around 2000, while exploring the
construction of dozens more.
As Mark Gillem, author of America Town: Building the Outposts
of Empire, explains, “avoidance” of local populations, publicity, and potential opposition
is the new aim. “To project its power,” he says, the United States wants
“secluded and self-contained outposts strategically located” around the world.
According to some of the strategy’s strongest proponents at the American Enterprise Institute, the goal should be “to create
a worldwide network of frontier forts,” with the U.S. military “the ‘global
cavalry’ of the twenty-first century.”
Such lily-pad bases have become a critical part
of an evolving Washington military strategy aimed at maintaining U.S. global
dominance by doing far more with less in an increasingly competitive, ever more
multi-polar world. Central as it’s becoming to the long-term U.S. stance, this
global-basing reset policy has, remarkably enough, received almost no public
attention, nor significant Congressional oversight. Meanwhile, as the arrival
of the first casualties from Africa shows, the U.S. military is getting involved
in new areas of the world and new conflicts, with potentially disastrous
consequences.
Transforming the Base Empire
You might think that the U.S. military is in the
process of shrinking, rather than expanding, its little noticed but enormous collection of bases abroad. After all, it was forced
to close the full panoply of 505 bases, mega to micro, that it built in Iraq, and it’s now beginning the
process of drawing down forces in Afghanistan. In Europe, the Pentagon is
continuing to close its massive bases in Germany and will soon remove two
combat brigades from that country. Global troop numbers are set to shrink by
around 100,000.
Yet Washington still easily maintains the largest
collection of foreign bases in world history: more than 1,000 military installations outside the 50 states and Washington, DC.
They include everything from decades-old bases in Germany and Japan to
brand-new drone bases in Ethiopia and the Seychelles islands in the Indian Ocean and even resorts for military vacationers
in Italy and South Korea.
In Afghanistan, the U.S.-led international force
still occupies more than 450 bases. In total, the U.S. military has some form of troop presence in
approximately 150 foreign countries, not to mention 11 aircraft carrier task
forces — essentially floating bases — and a significant, and growing, military presence in space. The United States currently spends an estimated $250 billion annually maintaining bases and troops overseas.
Some bases, like Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, date to
the late nineteenth century. Most were built or occupied during or just after
World War II on every continent, including Antarctica. Although the U.S. military vacated around 60% of its foreign bases following the Soviet Union’s collapse, the Cold
War base infrastructure remained relatively intact, with 60,000 American troops
remaining in Germany alone, despite the absence of a superpower adversary.
However, in the early months of 2001, even before
the attacks of 9/11, the Bush administration launched a major global
realignment of bases and troops that’s continuing today with Obama’s “Asia
pivot.” Bush’s original plan was to close more than one-third of the nation’s
overseas bases and shift troops east and south, closer to predicted conflict zones
in the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The Pentagon began to
focus on creating smaller and more flexible “forward operating bases” and even
smaller “cooperative security locations” or “lily pads.” Major troop
concentrations were to be restricted to a reduced number of “main operating
bases” (MOBs) — like Ramstein, Guam in the Pacific, and Diego Garcia in the
Indian Ocean — which were to be expanded.
Despite the rhetoric of consolidation and closure
that went with this plan, in the post-9/11 era the Pentagon has actually been
expanding its base infrastructure dramatically, including dozens of major bases
in every Persian Gulf country save Iran, and in several Central Asian countries critical
to the war in Afghanistan.
Hitting the Base Reset Button
Obama’s recently announced “Asia pivot” signals that East Asia will be at the center of the explosion of
lily-pad bases and related developments. Already in Australia, U.S. marines are settling into a shared base in Darwin. Elsewhere, the
Pentagon is pursuing plans for a drone and surveillance base in Australia’s
Cocos Islands and deployments to Brisbane and Perth. In Thailand, the Pentagon has negotiated rights for new Navy port visits and a
“disaster-relief hub” at U-Tapao.
In the Philippines, whose government evicted the U.S. from the massive Clark Air Base and
Subic Bay Naval Base in the early 1990s, as many as 600 special forces troops
have quietly been operating in the country’s south since January 2002. Last month, the two governments reached an agreement on the future U.S.
use of Clark and Subic, as well as other repair and supply hubs from the
Vietnam War era. In a sign of changing times, U.S. officials even signed a 2011 defense agreement with former enemy Vietnam and have begun
negotiations over the Navy’s increased use of Vietnamese ports.
Elsewhere in Asia, the Pentagon has rebuilt a
runway on tiny Tinian island near Guam, and it’s considering future bases in
Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei, while pushing stronger military ties
with India. Every year in the region, the military conducts around 170 military exercises and 250 port visits. On South
Korea’s Jeju island, the Korean military is building a base that will be part of the U.S.
missile defense system and to which U.S. forces will have regular access.
“We just can’t be in one place to do what we’ve
got to do,” Pacific Command commander Admiral Samuel Locklear III has said. For military planners, “what we’ve got to do” is clearly
defined as isolating and (in the terminology of the Cold War) “containing” the
new power in the region, China. This evidently means “peppering” new bases throughout the region, adding to the more than 200 U.S. bases
that have encircled China for decades in Japan, South Korea, Guam, and Hawaii.
And Asia is just the beginning. In Africa, the
Pentagon has quietly created “about a dozen air bases” for drones and surveillance since 2007. In addition to Camp Lemonnier, we know that the
military has created or will soon create installations in Burkina Faso,
Burundi, the Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mauritania, São Tomé
and Príncipe, Senegal, Seychelles, South Sudan, and Uganda. The Pentagon has
also investigated building bases in Algeria, Gabon, Ghana, Mali, and Nigeria,
among other places.
Next year, a brigade-sized force of 3,000 troops, and “likely more,” will arrive for exercises and
training missions across the continent. In the nearby Persian Gulf, the Navy is
developing an “afloat forward-staging base,” or “mothership,” to serve as a sea-borne “lily pad” for helicopters and patrol craft,
and has been involved in a massive build-up of forces in the region.
In Latin America, following the military’s eviction
from Panama in 1999 and Ecuador in 2009, the Pentagon has created or upgraded new bases in Aruba and Curaçao, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, and
Peru. Elsewhere, the Pentagon has funded the creation of military and police bases capable of hosting U.S.
forces in Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Costa Rica, and
even Ecuador. In 2008, the Navy reactivated its Fourth Fleet, inactive since 1950, to
patrol the region. The military may want a base in Brazil and unsuccessfully tried to create bases, ostensibly for
humanitarian and emergency relief, in Paraguay and Argentina.
Finally, in Europe, after arriving in the Balkans during 1990’s interventions, U.S. bases have moved eastward into
some of the former Eastern Bloc states of the Soviet empire. The Pentagon is
now developing installations capable of supporting rotating,
brigade-sized deployments in Romania and Bulgaria, and a missile defense base and aviation
facilities in Poland. Previously, the Bush administration maintained two CIA black sites(secret prisons) in Lithuania and another in Poland. Citizens of the Czech Republic rejected a planned radar base for the Pentagon’s still unproven missile
defense system, and now Romania will host ground-based missiles.
A New American Way of War
A lily pad on one of the Gulf of Guinea islands
of São Tomé and Príncipe, off the oil-rich west coast of Africa, helps explain what’s going on. A
U.S. official has described the base as “another Diego Garcia,” referring to the Indian Ocean base that’s helped ensuredecades of U.S. domination over Middle Eastern energy supplies. Without
the freedom to create new large bases in Africa, the Pentagon is using São
Tomé and a growing collection of other lily pads on the continent in an attempt
to control another crucial oil-rich region.
Far beyond West Africa, the nineteenth century “Great Game” competition for Central Asia has returned with a passion — and this
time gone global. It’s spreading to resource-rich lands in Africa, Asia,
and South America, as the United States, China, Russia, and members of the
European Union find themselves locked in an increasingly intense competition
for economic and geopolitical supremacy.
While Beijing, in particular, has pursued this competition in a largely economic fashion, dotting the globe
with strategic investments, Washington has focused relentlessly on military
might as its global trump card, dotting the planet with new bases and other
forms of military power. “Forget full-scale invasions and large-footprint
occupations on the Eurasian mainland,” Nick Turse has written of this new twenty-first century military strategy. “Instead,
think: special operations forces... proxy armies... the militarization of
spying and intelligence... drone aircraft... cyber-attacks, and joint Pentagon
operations with increasingly militarized ‘civilian’ government agencies.”
Add to this unparalleled long-range air and naval
power; arms sales besting any nation on Earth; humanitarian and disaster relief
missions that clearly serve military intelligence, patrol, and “hearts and
minds” functions; the rotational deployment of regular U.S. forces globally;
port visits and an expanding array of joint military exercises and training
missions that give the U.S. military de facto “presence”
worldwide and help turn foreign militaries into proxy forces.
And lots and lots of lily-pad bases.
Military planners see a future of endless
small-scale interventions in which a large, geographically dispersed collection
of bases will always be primed for instant operational access. With bases in as
many places as possible, military planners want to be able to turn to another
conveniently close country if the United States is ever prevented from using a
base, as it was by Turkey prior to the invasion of Iraq. In other words,
Pentagon officials dream of nearly limitless flexibility, the ability to react
with remarkable rapidity to developments anywhere on Earth, and thus, something
approaching total military control over the planet.
Beyond their military utility, the lily pads and
other forms of power projection are also political and economic tools used to
build and maintain alliances and provide privileged U.S. access to overseas
markets, resources, and investment opportunities. Washington is planning to use
lily-pad bases and other military projects to bind countries in Eastern Europe,
Africa, Asia, and Latin America as closely as possible to the U.S. military — and
so to continued U.S. political-economic hegemony. In short, American officials
are hoping military might will entrench their influence and keep as many
countries as possible within an American orbit at a time when some are
asserting their independence ever more forcefully or gravitating toward China
and other rising powers.
Those Dangerous Lily Pads
While relying on smaller bases may sound smarter
and more cost effective than maintaining huge bases that have often caused
anger in places like Okinawa and South Korea, lily pads threaten U.S. and global security in several ways:
First, the “lily pad” language can be misleading,
since by design or otherwise, such installations are capable of quickly growing
into bloated behemoths.
Second, despite the rhetoric about spreading
democracy that still lingers in Washington, building more lily pads actually
guarantees collaboration with an increasing number of despotic, corrupt, and
murderous regimes.
Third, there is a well-documented pattern of damage that military facilities of various sizes inflict on
local communities. Although lily pads seem to promise insulation from local
opposition, over time even small bases have often led to anger and protest
movements.
Finally, a proliferation of lily pads means the
creeping militarization of large swaths of the globe. Like real lily pads —
which are actually aquatic weeds — bases have a way of growing and reproducing uncontrollably.
Indeed, bases tend to beget bases, creating “base races” with other nations, heightening military tensions, and discouraging
diplomatic solutions to conflicts. After all, how would the United States
respond if China, Russia, or Iran were to build even a single lily-pad base of
its own in Mexico or the Caribbean?
For China and Russia in particular, ever more
U.S. bases near their borders threaten to set off new cold wars. Most
troublingly, the creation of new bases to protect against an alleged future
Chinese military threat may prove to be a self-fulfilling prophecy: such bases
in Asia are likely to create the threat they are supposedly designed to protect
against, making a catastrophic war with China more, not less, likely.
Encouragingly, however, overseas bases have
recently begun to generate critical scrutiny across the political spectrum from
Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison and Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul to Democratic Senator Jon Tester and New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. With everyone looking for ways to trim the deficit, closing overseas
bases offers easy savings. Indeed, increasingly influential types are recognizing that the country
simply can’t afford more than 1,000 bases abroad.
Great Britain, like empires before it, had to
close most of its remaining foreign bases in the midst of an economic crisis in
the 1960s and 1970s. The United States is undoubtedly headed in that direction
sooner or later. The only question is whether the country will give up its
bases and downsize its global mission by choice, or if it will follow Britain’s
path as a fading power forced to give up its bases from a position of weakness.
Of course, the consequences of not choosing
another path extend beyond economics. If the proliferation of lily pads,
special operations forces, and drone wars continues, the United States is
likely to be drawn into new conflicts and new wars, generating unknown forms of
blowback, and untold death and destruction. In that case, we’d better prepare
for a lot more incoming flights — from the Horn of Africa to Honduras —
carrying not just amputees but caskets.
David Vine is assistant professor of anthropology
at American University, in Washington, DC. He is the author of Island of Shame: The Secret History
of the U.S. Military Base on Diego Garcia (Princeton University Press, 2009). He has written for the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Guardian,
and Mother Jones, among other places. He is currently completing a
book about the more than 1,000 U.S. military bases located outside the United
States. To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest Tomcast audio interview in which
Vine discusses his experiences with the Pentagon’s empire of bases, click hereor download it to your iPod here.
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