Taranaki Daily News

Why Guam carries vital strategic importance to the US military

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UNITED STATES: The small US territory of Guam has become a focal point after North Korea’s army threatened to use ballistic missiles to create an ``enveloping fire’' around the island. The exclamatio­n came after President Donald Trump warned Pyongyang of ``fire and fury like the world has never seen’'.

Here’s a look at the US military’s role on the island, which became a US territory in 1898. There are two major bases on Guam: Andersen Air Force Base in the north and Naval Base Guam in the south. They are both managed under Joint Base Marianas. The tourist district of Tumon, home to many of Guam’s hotels and resorts, is in between.

The naval base dates to 1898, when the US took over Guam from Spain after the Spanish-American War. The air base was built in 1944, when the US was preparing to send bombers to Japan during World War II.

Today, Naval Base Guam is the home port for four nuclearpow­ered fast attack submarines and two submarine tenders.

Andersen Air Force Base hosts a navy helicopter squadron and air force bombers that rotate to Guam from the US mainland. It has two 3km-long runways and large fuel and munitions storage facilities.

Altogether, 7000 US military personnel are stationed on Guam. Most are sailors and airmen. The military plans to move thousands of US Marines to Guam from Okinawa in southern Japan.

Guam’s total population 160,000. is Guam is strategica­lly located a short flight from the Korean peninsula and other potential flashpoint­s in East Asia. Seoul is 3200km to the northwest, Tokyo is 2400km north and Taipei is 2700km west.

Because Guam is a US territory, the US military may launch forces from there without worrying about upsetting a host nation that may object to US actions.

The naval base is an important outpost for US fast-attack submarines that are a key means for gathering intelligen­ce in the region, including the Korean peninsula and the South China Sea where China has been building military bases on man-made islands. The US military began rotating bombers – the B-2 stealth bomber as well as the B-1 and B-52 – to Andersen in 2004. It did so to compensate for US forces diverted from other bases in the AsiaPacifi­c region to fight in the Middle East.

The rotations also came as North Korea increasing­ly upped the ante in the standoff over its developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

In 2013, the Army sent a missile defence system to Guam called Terminal High Altitude Area Defence or THAAD.

It’s designed to destroy ballistic missiles during their final phase of flight. A THAAD battery includes a truck-mounted launcher, tracking radar, intercepto­r missiles and an integrated fire control system. The US took control of Guam in 1898, when Spanish authoritie­s surrendere­d to the US Navy.

President William McKinley ordered Guam to be ruled by the US Navy.

The navy used the island as a coaling base and communicat­ions station until Japan seized the island on December 10, 1941. The US took back control of Guam on July 21, 1944.

During the Vietnam War, the air force sent 155 B-52 bombers to Andersen to hit targets in Southeast Asia. Guam was also a refuelling and transfer spot for military person- nel heading to Southeast Asia. Many refugees fleeing Vietnam were evacuated through Guam. – AP

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Aircraft from Marine All Weather Fighter Attack Squadron 533 on the runway of one of Guam’s major military bases - Andersen Air Force Base.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Aircraft from Marine All Weather Fighter Attack Squadron 533 on the runway of one of Guam’s major military bases - Andersen Air Force Base.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Guam - home to 160,000 people. At various times the island has belonged to Spain, Japan and the United States.
SUPPLIED Guam - home to 160,000 people. At various times the island has belonged to Spain, Japan and the United States.
 ??  ?? Navy vessels moored in port at the US Naval Base Guam at Apra Harbour.
Navy vessels moored in port at the US Naval Base Guam at Apra Harbour.

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