US Should Bolster Its Arctic Strategy to Counter Communist China’s Ambitions
CommentaryThe heyday of the massive construction efforts supporting the American Cold War presence in the Arctic, which encompassed Camp Century and Project Iceworm, are long gone. Meanwhile, even as the people of China are struggling with a stagnating economy, the Chinese regime is spending money on its Arctic ambitions, including building and operating multiple icebreakers and establishing a new northern naval base with Russia and North Korea to add reality to its Arctic claim.In a 2018 Arctic Policy statement, Beijing said, “Geographically, China is a ‘Near-Arctic State,’ one of the continental States that are closest to the Arctic Circle.” This is an expansive definition, which many other countries could also assert.The United States first established a formal Arctic Policy in 1971 after more than 20 years of extensive building in the Arctic, including the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System and forward bases for the Strategic Air Command. This included atomic-powered Camp Century in Greenland, which was the cover for Project Iceworm, a secret proposed network of mobile under-ice missiles.The United States during the Biden administration has responded to the Chinese regime’s assertiveness with updates of policies and strategies that are important procedural steps. The new American policies and strategies for the Arctic are voluminous, with abstract, aspirational, and platitudinal statements asserting coordination, engagement, and partnerships. Still, policies and strategies need to be backed up with action, including ships, bases, construction, transit, and presence.The US Has 2 (Broken) IcebreakersAlthough the polar ice is currently receding, creating the potential for historic new trade routes between Asia and Europe, large ships with ice-breaking capability are still vital to maintaining the routes and national presence year-round.The United States, on paper, has two icebreakers to serve both the Arctic and Antarctica. Unfortunately, the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter (USCGC) Healy had to limp back in August from the beginning of its Arctic deployment on one engine due to an engineering compartment fire. The ship is aging, and spare parts are not readily available. The Coast Guard’s other icebreaker, the USCGC Polar Star, just returned from Mare Island, California, finishing a piecemeal four-year effort to keep the 50-year-old ship in operation for another year.Related StoriesThe Coast Guard has embarked upon a program with the ambitious goal of constructing six new icebreakers. However, this effort has proceeded slowly for years and is now facing substantial cost overruns and new delays, forcing the first delivery back to 2029.In July, the White House established an agreement with Canada and new NATO member Finland for an international partnership on icebreaker construction. It’s unclear if this arrangement will supplant and cancel the existing Coast Guard program, which has become a program management debacle.The Coast Guard is buying a used commercial vessel for $125 million as an interim measure. In addition, small military exercises are conducted at periodic intervals to be visual and demonstrative. Still, significant new facilities like the massive Arctic construction projects of the Cold War are not being planned.China’s Arctic Build-upMeanwhile, China has delivered four icebreakers since 2018, and more are on the way, including a large, nuclear-powered icebreaker. “The Polar Silk Road will be cleared with Chinese icebreakers,” Jeremy Greenwood wrote in an op-ed published by the Brookings Institute. Part of the brisk pace of deliveries for Chinese Arctic capabilities will be a large vessel capable of carrying, launching, and operating large undersea “research” vessels. Such a capability could have distinct and significant dual-use implications, meaning military and intelligence research could be conducted as readily as “scientific” research.The Chinese now regularly operate ships in the Bering Sea above the American Aleutian Island chain. Below the Aleutian Islands, a first-of-its-kind joint patrol involving Russian and Chinese nuclear-capable bombers took place in July. Chinese and Russian naval vessels have regularly loitered in and around the Aleutian Islands, a provocation and potential violation of the “right of innocent passage“ between the islands of others under international maritime law.Much of China and Russia’s air and sea activity has occurred around the valuable, important, but vulnerable Cobra Dane long-range radar on Shemya Island, almost at the tip of the Aleutian Islands. The facility on Shemya is far from other U.S. forces and has little defense against a missile strike or special operations raid.A New US Alaskan Base—But in the Wrong Location?A new base facility in Alaska for the U.S. Coast Guard was announced in August but in a very subdued, low-key manner. One would think there would be more gravitas and panache accompanying the announcement of the first major Arctic nation
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Commentary
The heyday of the massive construction efforts supporting the American Cold War presence in the Arctic, which encompassed Camp Century and Project Iceworm, are long gone. Meanwhile, even as the people of China are struggling with a stagnating economy, the Chinese regime is spending money on its Arctic ambitions, including building and operating multiple icebreakers and establishing a new northern naval base with Russia and North Korea to add reality to its Arctic claim.
In a 2018 Arctic Policy statement, Beijing said, “Geographically, China is a ‘Near-Arctic State,’ one of the continental States that are closest to the Arctic Circle.” This is an expansive definition, which many other countries could also assert.
The United States first established a formal Arctic Policy in 1971 after more than 20 years of extensive building in the Arctic, including the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System and forward bases for the Strategic Air Command. This included atomic-powered Camp Century in Greenland, which was the cover for Project Iceworm, a secret proposed network of mobile under-ice missiles.
The US Has 2 (Broken) Icebreakers
Although the polar ice is currently receding, creating the potential for historic new trade routes between Asia and Europe, large ships with ice-breaking capability are still vital to maintaining the routes and national presence year-round.The United States, on paper, has two icebreakers to serve both the Arctic and Antarctica. Unfortunately, the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter (USCGC) Healy had to limp back in August from the beginning of its Arctic deployment on one engine due to an engineering compartment fire. The ship is aging, and spare parts are not readily available. The Coast Guard’s other icebreaker, the USCGC Polar Star, just returned from Mare Island, California, finishing a piecemeal four-year effort to keep the 50-year-old ship in operation for another year.
The Coast Guard has embarked upon a program with the ambitious goal of constructing six new icebreakers. However, this effort has proceeded slowly for years and is now facing substantial cost overruns and new delays, forcing the first delivery back to 2029.
China’s Arctic Build-up
Meanwhile, China has delivered four icebreakers since 2018, and more are on the way, including a large, nuclear-powered icebreaker. “The Polar Silk Road will be cleared with Chinese icebreakers,” Jeremy Greenwood wrote in an op-ed published by the Brookings Institute. Part of the brisk pace of deliveries for Chinese Arctic capabilities will be a large vessel capable of carrying, launching, and operating large undersea “research” vessels. Such a capability could have distinct and significant dual-use implications, meaning military and intelligence research could be conducted as readily as “scientific” research.A New US Alaskan Base—But in the Wrong Location?
A new base facility in Alaska for the U.S. Coast Guard was announced in August but in a very subdued, low-key manner. One would think there would be more gravitas and panache accompanying the announcement of the first major Arctic national security construction project by the U.S. government in 30 years. Juneau was announced as the new homeport for the Arctic icebreakers, with additional work on bases in Anchorage and Kodiak and new seasonal sites at Nome and the Aleutian Islands.Placing the new icebreaker base in Juneau is helpful, but it’s also 1,500 miles from where much of the seasonal ice really starts, above the Aleutian Islands. This amounts to 4 1/2 days of cruising once the ships cast off from the Juneau base. It takes additional days to do the mission planning and prepare for departure, so it would be better to forward base the icebreakers in the Aleutians.
The new facilities are helpful, but the overall pace of construction of facilities and ships needs to be quickened to demonstrate that the updated U.S. policies and strategy for the Arctic are backed up with action.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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