U.S. Indo-Pacific Command: Implications for East Asia by Motohiro Tsuchiya Paper

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U.S. Indo-Pacific Command

by Motohiro Tsuchiya, Denny Roy

The purpose of this book is to introduce readers to INDOPACOM, which is responsible for U.S. military operations in a region covering approximately 50 percent of the Earth from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean.  INDOPACOM has not received much attention in Japan compared to USFJ or the US Seventh Fleet. This book shines a spotlight on INDOPACOM in an effort to promote an understanding of its various aspects. The mission of INDOPACOM is to protect U.S. territory, people, and national interests. However, it also includes protection of the countries within its geographic scope that are U.S. allies and security partners.  INDOPACOM and its precursor Pacific Command, established in 1947, have always been major contributors to the peace and safety of Japan in the post-World War II era. In view of the importance of U.S. interests in Northeast Asia, the region also has two Sub-Unified Combatant Commands called United States Forces Japan (USFJ) and United States Forces Korea (USFK). Each of these organizations strives to strengthen the relationship with the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the Republic of Korea armed forces. Together, the United States, Japan and our partners around the globe will continue to safeguard the rules-based security order that has underpinned peace and prosperity for decades.

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Author Biography

Dr. Motohiro TSUCHIYA is Vice-President for Global Engagement and Information Technology at Keio University, and Professor at Keio University Graduate School of Media and Governance.Prior to joining the Keio faculty, he was associate professor at Center for Global Communications (GLOCOM), International University of Japan. In 2001 and 2002 he researched in Washington, DC, as visiting scholar at Center for International Development and Conflict Management (CIDCM), University of Maryland, and at Cyberspace Policy Institute (CPI), George Washington University. From March 2008 to March 2009 he was visiting scholar at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Center for International Studies. He served as deputy director of Keio University Global Security Research Institute (G-SEC) from 2009 to 2013, and was an expert member of the Information Security Policy Council (ISPC) of the Japanese government from 2009 to 2013. From March 2014 to February 2015 he was visiting scholar at East-West Center. He served as dean of Faculty of Policy Management at Keio University from October 2019 to July 2021.
He is interested in the impact of the information revolution on international relations; global governance and information technologies; and cyber security. He has been a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of Info Journal since spring of 2008 and a member of the Editorial Board of Journal of Cyber Policy since 2015. He is also a visiting research fellow at Center for Global Communications (GLOCOM) and a visiting researcher at Institute for International Socio-Economic Studies (I-ISE).He authored Information and Global Governance (Tokyo: Keio University Press, 2001, in Japanese), Net Politics (Tokyo: Iwanami Publishing, 2003, in Japanese), Network Power (Tokyo: NTT Publishing, 2007, in Japanese), Intelligence and National Security (Tokyo: Keio University Press, 2007, in Japanese), Network Hegemony (Tokyo: NTT Publishing, 2011, in Japanese), Cyber Terror (Tokyo: Bungeishunju, 2012, in Japanese), Cyber Security and International Relations (Tokyo: Chikura Shobo, 2015, in Japanese), and co-authored more than 20 books including Japanese Telecommunications: Market and Policy in Transition (London: Routledge, 2006, in English), Cybersecurity: Public Sector Threats and Responses (Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 2012, in English), The Digital Divide: The Internet and Social Inequality in International Perspective (London: Routledge, 2013, in English), Pacific Island Regional and International Cooperation: ICT Policy and Development (Honolulu: Social Science Research Institute, University of Hawaii, 2014, in English), and Information Governance in Japan: Towards a New Comparative Paradigm (SVNJ eBook series, Kindle Edition, 2016).He earned his BA in political science, MA in international relations, and Ph.D. in media and governance from Keio University.Dr. Denny ROY's work has focused mostly on Asia Pacific security issues, particularly those involving China.  Recently Roy has written on Chinese foreign policy, the North Korea nuclear weapons crisis, China-Japan relations, and China-Taiwan relations.  Before joining the East-West Center in 2007, Roy worked at the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Honolulu; the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California; the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University in Canberra; the National University of Singapore; and Brigham Young University.  Roy's most recent book  is Return of the Dragon: Rising China and Regional Security (Columbia University Press, 2013).  He has also written many articles for scholarly journals such as International Security, Survival, Asian Survey, Security Dialogue, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Armed Forces & Society, and Issues & Studies. Dr. Roy obtained a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Chicago.

Table of Contents

PrefaceChapter 1: Organization and History of the Unified Commands of the United States1.1. From "Pacific Command" to "Indo-Pacific Command"1.2. Formation of Unified Commands1.3. Goldwater-Nichols Act1.4. Positioning of Pacific Command1.5. U.S.-led Liberal International Order and Indo-Pacific Command1.6. ConclusionChapter 2: America's Deep Rationale for PACOM2.1. Introduction2.2. How the USA Became a "Resident Asian Power"2.3. Persistence of the Deep Rationale2.4. The Rationale Under ChallengeChapter 3: Hawaii and Pacific Command: Historical Backdrop and Civil Society of Hawaii, Home of Pacific Command Headquarters3.1. Introduction3.2. Hawaii as the Central Pillar of Cooperative Military Interaction in the Pacific Ocean3.3. Hawaii's Path to Becoming a Geographic Unified Combatant Command Hub3.4. Distinguished World War II Service by Japanese from Hawaii3.5. Headquarters of Four Military Branches Located in Hawaii3.6. The Hawaiian Economy and the Presence of the Military3.7. ConclusionChapter 4: PACOM and the Pentagon4.1. Introduction4.2. Biggest is not necessarily most prestigious.4.3. PACOM-Pentagon Tensions4.4. PACOM, the Pentagon and JapanChapter 5: The Japan Self-Defense Forces and the U.S. Pacific Command5.1. Introduction5.2. The Unique Conditions of the JSDF and Their Background5.2.1 The Establishment of a New Constitution and the Impact of the Cold War5.2.2. The Establishment of the JSDF5.3. Changes in the Security Relationship between Japan and the United States and the Strengthening of the Japan-U.S. Alliance5.3.1. Signing and Revision of the First Security Treaty5.3.2 Features of the Japan-U.S. Security Treatmenty5.3.3. Formulating the 1978 Guidelines – Facilitating Bilateral Operations5.3.4 Guideline Revision – Formulating the 1997 Guidelines5.3.5. Results of and Lessons from Operation Tomodachi After the Great East Japan Earthquake (a.k.a. the 2011 Tohoku earthquake)5.4. Implementing New Security Arrangements5.4.1. Revising Security Policy in the Second Abe Administration5.4.2. The 2015 Guidelines and Security Legislation5.5. The current State of Collaboration Between the JSDF and PACOM5.5.1. Ongoing Developments in Japan-U.S. bilateral Training5.5.2. Posting Japanese Liaison Officials to PACOM5.6. ConclusionChapter 6: The Korean Peninsula and the Pacific Command6.1. Introduction6.2. Security Structure on the Korean Peninsula: Pacific Command and Defense of the ROK6.3. Special Position of the Commander of United States Forces Korea: A "Triple-Hatted" Commander6.4. U.S.-ROK Military Exercises and PACOM6.5. Preparations for a Contingency on Korean Peninsula: Establishment of an Operational Plan6.6. USFJ and the Korean Peninsula: The Role of UNC-Rear6.7. ConclusionChapter 7: China and Pacific Command: The Course of Hegemony in the Indo-Pacific Region7.1. Introduction7.2. Two Taiwan Strait Crises7.3. Changes to Pacific Command's Recognition of Threats from China7.4. Pacific Command as Supporter of a "Tacit Alliance" between the United States and China7.5. Aftermath of the Tiananmen Square Incident and the Third Taiwan Strait Crisis7.6. China's Intervention Prevention Strategy and Pacific Command7.7. ConclusionChapter 8: Taiwan and Pacific Command8.1. Introduction8.2. History of Pacific Command and Taiwan8.3. Severing of Relations between the United States and Taiwan and the Taiwan Relations Act8.4. Sale of arms to Taiwan and the Six Assurances8.5. Shift after severing of ties between the United States and Taiwan8.6. Taiwan and Pacific Command during the Taiwan Strait emergencies8.6.1. Saturation attacks with ballistic missiles8.6.2. Repairing of runways8.6.3. Air superiority strategies8.7. Growing collaboration between the Pacific Command and the ROC Armed Forces under the Trump Administration8.8. ConclusionChapter 9: Joint Operations and Pacific Command: Development and Implementation of the Multi Domain Battle Concept9.1. Introduction9.2. Changes in the Operational Environment Surrounding PACOM9.3. What is the Multi Domain Battle Concept?9.4. The Western Pacific and the MDB Concept9.5. Implications for Japan's National SecurityAfterwordSpeech by Admiral Harry HarrisIndex

Details ISBN9811952701 Author Denny Roy Pages 177 Publisher Springer Verlag, Singapore Edition Description 1st ed. 2022 Series Evidence-Based Approaches to Peace and Conflict Studies Year 2023 Edition 1st ISBN-13 9789811952708 Format Paperback Imprint Springer Verlag, Singapore Subtitle Implications for East Asia Place of Publication Singapore Country of Publication Singapore Translated from Japanese Alternative 9789811952678 Edited by Denny Roy DEWEY 355.033073 Series Number 12 Illustrations 2 Illustrations, color; 3 Illustrations, black and white; XIV, 177 p. 5 illus., 2 illus. in color. Audience Professional & Vocational Publication Date 2023-11-03

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  • Condition: New
  • Format: Paperback
  • ISBN-13: 9789811952708
  • Author: Motohiro Tsuchiya, Denny Roy
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  • Book Title: U.S. Indo-Pacific Command
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  • ISBN: 9789811952708

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