Hegseth Heads to Singapore to Underscore US Commitment to Indo-Pacific

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth set off to Singapore on May 28 for a series of meetings that he said would “ensure that [the] region understands America will be strong.”
“We seek no conflict with anybody, including the communist Chinese, but we will deter that,” he said at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland before departure.
“We will stand strong for our interests. And that’s a big part of what this trip is all about.”
Allies
In recent months, U.S. defense experts and officials have called for stronger U.S. partnerships in the Indo-Pacific to counter the Chinese regime’s growing influence.Navy Adm. Samuel Paparo, commander of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, said at the hearing that the Chinese military had achieved “unprecedented” modernization with respect to weapons and capabilities, posing “a real and serious threat” to the U.S. homeland and to U.S. allies.
At a separate congressional hearing on May 15, retired Gen. Charles Flynn, who served as the commanding general of U.S. Army Pacific, echoed Paparo and said the Chinese military of today is “dramatically different” from what it was when he served.
“This is not just a U.S. problem. This has to be a Taiwan problem, a Japanese problem, a Philippine problem. It’s got to be the entire first island chain, to include South Korea.”
Advancements
Gen. Chance Saltzman, chief of space operations for the U.S. Space Force, said that the Chinese military has made strides in space capabilities over the Indo-Pacific, enough to become a “powerful, destabilizing force.”China is also practicing “dogfighting in space,” Saltzman said, saying his service has seen Chinese experimental satellites conducting “unusual, large, and rapid maneuvers” in geostationary orbit in recent years. Based on the observation, Saltzman said Beijing “is resolved to contest [U.S.] spacepower through combat operations.”
The Chinese military has also drilled with its most advanced long-range H-6 bombers in the region. Satellite images showed H-6 bombers flying over the disputed Scarborough Shoal ahead of Hegseth’s visit to the Philippines in March, and they showed two H-6 bombers landing on the disputed Paracel Islands on May 19.