Hagel Describes Role Of Partnerships In Asia-Pacific Rebalance

In a world where security challenges do not adhere to political boundaries and economies are linked as never before, no nation can go it alone and hope to prosper, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel wrote in an op-ed article published on the Defense One website.

"Achieving sustained security and prosperity in the 21st century requires nations to work together and to meet common challenges with uncommon unity and purpose," Hagel added in the article published Tuesday.

The US defense secretary noted that the response of more than 25 nations to the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 shows how that kind of unity is increasingly visible in the Asia-Pacific, which he called one of the most critical regions for global security and the global economy. And Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines led to a massive international relief and recovery effort last fall and produced Japan's largest overseas military deployment in the post-war period, Hagel wrote.

"In both cases, nations in the region were able to set aside rivalries and differences and instead work together," the secretary wrote. "At the same time, both cases underscore the reality that nations must engage in more practical security cooperation ahead of time in order to work together more effectively when challenges arise."

Deepening cooperation does not materialize on its own, Hagel wrote, but requires deliberate and sustained efforts such as those of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, to continue building a stronger regional security architecture that can address shared challenges.

These efforts have the full support of the United States and will be highlighted this week in Hawaii, at the first US-hosted gathering of US and ASEAN defense ministers, Hagel wrote. By hosting this meeting at the start of his fourth visit to the Asia-Pacific region -- which will include stops in Japan, China and Mongolia -- it serves to underscore the growing role ASEAN members are playing in promoting regional stability and enhanced security cooperation, he added.

"As a leading economic and military power in the Pacific -- one with no disputed territorial claims or ambitions in the region -- the United States is uniquely positioned to continue to help Asian nations build a vibrant regional security architecture," he explained.

"It has been more than five years since President Barack Obama came to office determined to lead America's rebalance toward the Asia-Pacific, and it remains front and center in our national security strategy," he added. "The rebalance has helped to strengthen our alliances and partnerships in Asia and led to increased engagement, exercises and training on a bilateral and multilateral basis."

The deployment of advanced military capabilities to the region has also proven indispensable, Hagel wrote, noting that the US contributions to the search for Flight 370 included the world's most advanced maritime patrol aircraft -- the P-8A Poseidon -- which was recently deployed to Japan. The US military will continue to build new types of partnerships that tackle nontraditional security challenges more effectively, Hagel added.

Even as the United States looks for new ways to tackle shared challenges, Hagel wrote, the U.S. military will defend its allies and consistently champion the international laws and norms that have provided the basis for regional security and prosperity for generations.

"Over the course of 10 days, I will meet with 13 defense ministers whose nations represent more than 30 percent of the global economy," Hagel wrote. "They recognize that there can be no economic growth without stability and prosperity for their people."

For more than 60 years, Hagel wrote, the Asia-Pacific region has enjoyed relative peace and stability and become an engine for global progress and prosperity.

"The beneficiaries of this progress have been the people of the region, and that includes the American people," he added. "The region has benefited from American leadership, and it will continue to do so. But sustaining this progress is not the work of any single nation -- it is a shared responsibility. And the more nations that embrace this responsibility and spirit of cooperation, the more confident we can be that Asia in the 21st century will be defined by security and prosperity for all its people."

by RTT Staff Writer

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