On 6 and 9 August, 1945, as the propellors of the two B-29 Superfortress ‘Enola Gay’ and ‘Bockscar’ ominously whirred, Japan’s history was about to be rewritten. Little Boy and Fat Man obliterated 70,000 Japanese in Hiroshima and another 46,000 in Nagasaki, respectively. The B-29s took off from Tinian, one of the four constituent municipalities of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (the overseas autonomous states of America), around 200 km north of Guam, a United States (US) territory in the Western Pacific. In 1946, the US Air Force (USAF) abandoned Tinian, which, along with Saipan and Guam, housed fleets of B-29s during WWII. After 77 years, the USAF has reclaimed the 101 sq km island, whose six runways are covered with jungle, by requesting $78 million from the Joe Biden government.
The US Air Force is stepping up construction at the Tinian North airfield, once used by the largest B-29 bomber fleet during World War II, and at the Tinian International airfield.
— Byron Wan (@Byron_Wan) December 17, 2023
Tinian lies about 200 km north of Guam and is part of the Northern Mariana Islands. Revitalizing… pic.twitter.com/CoXCsrKrT8
America has started constructing “an extensive” facility at the Tinian North airfield and the Tinian International airfield, General Kenneth Wilsbach, Commander of the US Pacific Air Forces, told Nikkei Asia last week. “If you pay attention in the next few months, you will see significant progress, especially at Tinian North. We’ll be clearing that jungle between now and summertime,” Wilsbach said. Why US focused on Tinian Once the Tinian mission is complete, it would boost the US military’s firepower in the Indo-Pacific, which has the Naval Base and the Andersen Air Force Base on Guam and the secretive US Navy Support Facility on the Indian Ocean’s British atoll Diego Garcia. Clearly, the decision to reuse Tinian is to counter the rising Chinese threat and Beijing’s muscle-flexing in the Indo-Pacific, which stretches from the US’s West Coast to the eastern coast of Africa. The US views China as its only competitor with the “intent and, increasingly, the capacity to reshape the international order”. In its 2023 annual report to Congress titled ‘Military and Security Development Involving the People’s Republic of China’ (PRC), the US Department of Defence (DoD) stated that the 2022 National Defence Strategy identifies China as the “pacing challenge”. “The PLA’s evolving capabilities and concepts continue to strengthen the PRC’s ability to fight and win wars against a strong enemy (a likely euphemism for the United States), counter an intervention by a third party in a conflict along the PRC’s periphery and project power globally,” the report reads. In 2023, China adopted “more dangerous, coercive and provocative” actions in the Indo-Pacific while accelerating its development of capabilities and concepts to strengthen its ability to “fight and win wars”, the report states. Between September-November 2021 and 2023, the US documented more than 180 instances of PLA coercive and risky air intercepts against US aircraft in the region.
Video released by the US Indo-Pacific Command shows a Chinese jet flying next to a US plane.
— Sky News (@SkyNews) December 30, 2022
The US armed forces say the Chinese jet performed an 'unsafe manoeuvre' forcing the US aircraft to take 'evasive manoeuvres'.https://t.co/mZeFbm2fmP pic.twitter.com/vPIMYnmq2o
America also recorded about 100 instances of “coercive and risky operational behaviour”—lasing, reckless manoeuvres, close approaches in the air or at sea and discharging chaff or flares in front of or in proximity—by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) against aircraft of the US and allies.
A Chinese fighter jet flew only 400 feet away from an American plane. U.S. Indo-Pacific Command called the act an "unnecessarily aggressive maneuver." pic.twitter.com/FFNGtvnRTw
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) May 31, 2023
The report also mentioned the PLA’s new “core operational concept” called ‘Multi-Domain Precision Warfare’, which aims to leverage a C4ISR—Command, Control, Communications, Computers (C4) Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR)—network. The network “incorporates advances in big data and artificial intelligence to rapidly identify key vulnerabilities in the US operational system and then combine joint forces across domains to launch precision strikes against those vulnerabilities”. The PLA Air Force (PLAAF) and PLA Navy’s (PLAN) aviation wing are the “largest aviation force” in the Indo-Pacific. The PLAAF is “rapidly catching up” to Western air forces. “In October 2019, the PLAAF signalled the return of the airborne leg of its nuclear triad after the PLAAF publicly revealed the H-6N as its first nuclear-capable air-to-air refuellable bomber,” the report states. According to the report, if China expands its overseas logistics and basing infrastructure to project its military power at greater distances, it could “disrupt US military operations”. China’s first overseas naval base, in Djibouti—on the Horn of Africa and an important nation in the geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific—built at a cost of $590 million supports Chinese warships deployed in the Indian Ocean region. The DoD report mentions the Chinese ambition of providing additional military logistics facilities to support the PLA Ground Forces, PLAAF and PLAN beyond Djibouti—Kenya, Seychelles, Tanzania, Angola, Nigeria, Namibia, Mozambique, Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, the UAE, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Tajikistan. Cambodia’s Ream Naval Base is being upgraded by China, which docked its warships there for the first time this month. The US State Department expressed “serious concerns about” China’s plans for “exclusive control over portions of Ream Naval Base” as Beijing expands its military footprint. The DoD is concerned about China’s anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) counter-intervention strategy, which aims to restrict US access to the Indo-Pacific. China’s A2/AD capabilities are “the most robust” within the First Island-Chain, comprising Japan, Taiwan, portions of the Philippines, and Indonesia. Beijing seeks to strengthen its capabilities to “reach farther into the Pacific Ocean”, the report states. China can strike every American military base in the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean, including Guam, Diego Garcia, Japan, South Korea and Australia. According to the American University Digital Research Archive, 2021, the US military has 750 bases in 80 countries. Of these, 73 US bases and 26,414 troops are in South Korea; 120 bases and 53,713 troops in Japan; and 7 bases and 1,085 troops in Australia. The PLA Rocket Force (PLARF) is increasing its strategic deterrence by developing new conventionally armed ICBMs that could strike the US, Hawaii and Alaska. China has the biggest and the most varied stockpile of land-based, cruise and anti-ship missiles numbering 2,000—mobile ground-launched SRBMs, MRBMs and IRBMs, ICBMs and ground-launched cruise missiles. The PLARF’s conventional missile forces include: • DF-15 SRBM, range 725-850 km • DF-16 SRBM, range more than 700 km • DF-11 SRBM, range 600 km • Land-attack and anti-ship variants of the DF-21 MRBM, range around 1,500 km • Hypersonic glide vehicle-capable DF-17 MRBM, range 1,800-2,500 km • DF-26 IRBM, range 3,000-4,000km • DF-31 ICMB, range 7,200-8,000 km • DF-31A ICBM, range 11,000-plus km • DF-5, DF-41 ICBMs, range approximately 12,000 km • DF-41 ICBM, range 15,000 km • DH-10 GLCM, range about 1,500 km and • DF-100 GLCM, range around 2,000 km Using the DF-21D ASBM variant, China can “conduct long-range precision strikes against ships, including aircraft carriers, out to the Western Pacific from mainland China”. The DF-26 can rapidly swap conventional and nuclear warheads and conduct precision land-attack and anti-ship strikes in the Western Pacific, the Indian Ocean, and the South China Sea (SCS) from mainland China. According to the US, a Chinese military expert said in 2020 that the DF-17’s main purpose is to strike foreign military bases in the Western Pacific. The DF-31A and DF-41 can reach most locations in the US. The DF-41, which can carry 10 independently targeted nuclear warheads, could theoretically hit the US in 30 minutes, per the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). Similarly, US bases in Japan are within the striking range of DF-21s and the CJ-10 land-based cruise missile. A day after an American U-2 spy plane allegedly entered a no-fly zone in SCS in August 2020, Beijing fired the DF-21’s ‘carrier killer’ version DF-21D and the DF-26—which has a
‘carrier killer’ version called the DF-26B—as warnings to USS Nimitz and USS Ronald Reagan and Guam respectively. Besides, China has strategically docked its aircraft carriers and attack submarines to strike US bases in SCS—one aircraft carrier, four nuclear-powered attack submarines and 14 diesel-powered attack submarines of the Northern Theatre Command Navy and an aircraft carrier, four nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines and 14 diesel-powered attack submarines of the Southern Theatre Command Navy. The threat of Chinese missiles forced the US to end its 16-year-old Bomber Assurance and Deterrence (BAAD), or the Continuous Bomber Presence (CBP) mission, on Guam in 2020. Guam housed the long-range strategic American bombers B-52 Stratofortress, B-1 Lancer and B-2 Spirit to assure American allies/partners of swift US retaliation, in case, of an enemy attack or to deter adversaries. Publicly, the US said that the BAAD was ended to make American force deployments “operationally unpredictable” to “challenge competitors” by frustrating and precluding their options. The actual reason for ending the CBP mission was the DF-26 missile, or the ‘Guam Killer’, which could have destroyed several B-2s, the costliest aircraft in the USAF inventory. Besides, the PLAAF’s H-6K bomber, which has a combat radius of 3,700 km, could have fired the Changjian-20 air-launched cruise missile in Guam. The bombers could always return to protect American allies/partners from an enemy attack, the US said. However, the bombers would take 13-16 hours to cover 11,000-13,000 km between Midwestern American airbases and Guam and require midair refuelling. The time gap will be sufficient for China to attack US bases in the Indo-Pacific. A few months later, in 2020, three B-2s were deployed on Diego Garcia for the first time since 2016. Six months earlier, six B-52s were redeployed on the atoll. The two deployments were done after it was reported that the PLAAN was planning a live-fire training drill 545 km north of Taiwan near the Zhoushan Islands. The redeployment of the bombers on Diego Garcia was a veiled warning to China not to attack Guam. One year later, the USAF deployed B-1s on Diego Garcia, which already had B-52s and B-2s, for the first time in more than 15 years after China launched air drills near Taiwan and a joint naval exercise with Russia in the Sea of Japan. B-1 bombers deploy to Diego Garcia for the first time in over 15 years:https://t.co/WTKYKvl8gD