Pacific Commander Urges Faster Arming of Forces
U.S.
Indo-Pacific Command Commander, Admiral Samuel Paparo gestures during a press
conference on the Mutual Defense Board-Security Engagement Board meeting held
at the Philippine Military Academy in Baguio, northern Philippines on Thursday,
August 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Posted:February 16, 2025 --- Honolulu Star-Advertiser | By Kevin
Knodell
Published February
14, 2025, at 3:26pm ET
The
top Commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific wants to see a major revamp in how
forces are armed and equipped amid simmering tensions in the region. In a
keynote address opening the Honolulu Defense Forum in Waikiki, Admiral Samuel
Paparo bemoaned what many senior Commanders see as a slow, burdensome federal
bureaucracy that has made it harder for the military to field new weapons and
technology.
Paparo
told an audience of attendees from 19 countries at the ‘Alohilani Resort that
there needs to be a concerted effort to remove "bureaucratic obstacles within
our system that impede progress—every unnecessary review, every duplicative
process—that damage our readiness.” "(We need) procurement at the speed of
combat, not at the speed of committees,” said Paparo.
"Technology
alone is not going to win this fight. We’ve also got to reform defense
bureaucracy with unprecedented urgency.” The conference brings together
representatives from militaries and defense contractors around the globe to
Hawaii, the nerve center of U.S. military operations in the Pacific. It takes
place amid tensions with China, Russia and North Korea—which Paparo referred to
as a "triangle of troublemakers” that he said threaten stability in the
Pacific.
Paparo
advocated for expanding the use of artificial intelligence, 3D printing and
other technology to allow the U.S. and its allies to gain an edge, telling the
audience, "We need the capability to produce parts from propellers to circuit
boards on demand. It isn’t future tech; it’s current capability … the
technology exists. I’ve seen it. It’s here in Hawaii and we have to scale it.”
The
Department of Defense (DoD) has been pouring money into Hawaii to build
up its forces in the Pacific and to train a high-tech workforce in the island
to support it. The Pentagon has considered the Pacific its top-priority theater
of operations for some time, but ongoing wars in the Middle East and the
Russian invasion of Ukraine have continually pulled attention from the Pacific.
In November, Paparo told an audience at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC that American munitions used to shoot down missiles and drones from Iranian-backed militants in the Middle East and that munitions sent to Ukraine to help Ukrainian forces fight back against invading Russian forces threatened stocks of available weapons to potentially fight China in a Pacific conflict, saying, "It’s now eating into stocks, and to say otherwise would be dishonest." The U.S. military has spent the past 2 decades fighting long, drawn-out counterterrorism campaigns while simultaneously conducting constant patrols across the world’s oceans. It’s come at steep financial and human costs, stretching the military and service members to their limits.
In
Waikiki, Paparo told the audience that "our magazines run low, our maintenance
backlogs grow longer each month for every critical joint force element—Army,
Navy, Air Force, Marines, Space Force, Coast Guard—critical air, missile,
maritime, space platforms age faster than we can replace them perfectly, and we
operate on increasingly thin margins of error. Our opponents see these gaps,
and they are moving aggressively to exploit them.”
China
has been stepping up military maneuvers around Taiwan, a self-ruled island
democracy that Beijing regards as a rogue province. Chinese Nationalist leader
Chiang Kai-shek set up a government-in-exile on the island after losing the
Chinese Civil War in 1949 and put the island under martial law, but since the
1980s it has democratized and become a key trading partner for the U.S. Paparo
said the Chinese military’s "aggressive maneuvers around Taiwan right now are
not exercises, as they call them. They are rehearsals. They are rehearsals for
the forced unification of Taiwan to the mainland.”
Though
the U.S. has not officially diplomatically recognized Taiwan since normalizing
relations with the People’s Republic of China in 1979, the Taiwan Relations Act
passed the same year maintained de facto ties and requires the U.S. to provide
Taiwan with weapons "of a defensive nature ” and "resist any resort to force or
other forms of coercion that would jeopardize the security, or the social or
economic system, of the people on Taiwan.”
Chinese
military forces have increasingly flexed their military muscles in the Pacific.
They consider the South China Sea to be their exclusive sovereign territory
against the objections of neighboring countries and have built bases on
disputed land formations in the busy waterway. Paparo accused Beijing of
claiming "sovereign rights over international waters with breathtaking audacity
and blatant disregard for international law.”
"They’ve harassed commercial vessels and intimidated regional nations, including treaty allies, attempting to exercise their legitimate rights, including poor fisher-folks,” said Paparo. "These actions also threaten the free flow of commerce through vital sea lanes that carry over one-third of global maritime trade.” Trump’s new, controversial Secretary of Defense (SecDef) Pete Hegseth has vowed to reform the Pentagon and revamp how the military works with defense contractors and look to loosen export controls on weapons—particularly to Pacific allies.
"We have to break down barriers to cooperation, align standards and create supply chains that can weather any crisis,” said Paparo. "We always talk about strengthening our alliances and partnerships, and as joined at the hip as we are, we can never take them for granted and we can never make them strong enough. These are the foundations of our strength. These are our strategic centers of gravity. They’re not diplomatic niceties.”
However, while U.S. military leaders have championed alliances, Trump has in his first weeks of office taken a confrontational stance toward several American allies. Trump has threatened high tariffs against America’s northern neighbor Canada and said he would make it the "51st State,” drawing rebukes from Canadians across the political spectrum and prompting boycotts and a growing backlash.
Trump has also said that he intended to take Greenland, a Danish territory, and make it into an American territory, and has not ruled out taking it by force. Attendees from both Canada and Denmark were present at the conference. But even as dignitaries gathered for the conference in Waikiki, media in the Philippines reported that a joint patrol of Philippine, U.S. and Canadian ships and aircraft made their way through Philippine waters and reported encountering Chinese naval ships.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - From Executive Producer Gary Sinise and Director Jake Rademacher, "Brothers After War" combines footage from Ra...
WASHINGTON - Over the past few weeks, I, like many of you, have been inundated daily with news from our nation's capital about the...
Our programs support our service members while they are on the front line, as they are being discharged and long after they return. Your tax-deductible donation will be immediately directed to the VFW programs where your support is most urgently needed.