Strike group will head south for training
By JACK DORSEY
The Virginian-Pilot
03/27/06 "Virginia
Pilot" -- --
NORFOLK — The Navy will send an aircraft carrier strike group,
with four ships, a 60-plane air wing and 6,500 sailors, to
Caribbean and South American waters for a major training
exercise, it was announced Monday.
Some defense analysts suggested that the unusual two-month-long
deployment, set to begin in early April, could be interpreted as
a show of force by anti-American governments in Venezuela and
Cuba.
The mission was sought by the U.S. Southern Command, which has
its headquarters in Miami and is responsible for all military
activities in Latin America south of Mexico.
The Navy was last in the region in force in January 2003, when
it used the bombing ranges at the Puerto Rican island of Vieques
for the final time.
Led by the aircraft carrier George Washington, the deployment
also will include the guided missile cruiser Monterey, guided
missile destroyer Stout – all from Norfolk – and the guided
missile frigate Underwood, based in Mayport, Fla.
“The presence of a U.S. carrier task force in the Caribbean will
definitely be interpreted as some sort of signal by the
governments of Cuba and Venezuela,” said Loren Thompson of the
Lexington Institute, a pro-defense think tank in Washington.
“If I was sitting in the Venezuela capital looking at this
American task force, the message I would be getting is America
still is not so distracted by Iraq that it is unable to enforce
its interests in the Caribbean,” Thompson said.
The objective of the deployment is to support the Southern
Command’s maritime security in its area of responsibility, the
Navy said, which includes 32 countries: 19 in Central and South
America and 13 in the Caribbean.
The Navy, citing security requirements, declined to say which
nations the carrier group would work with or which ports it
might visit.
“Each ship will make two or three port visits in the region
throughout their two-month deployment, but at this time no
announcements are being made,” said Lt. Cmdr. Chris Loundermon,
a spokesman for the U.S. Southern Command.
Called Partnership of the Americas, the exercise will focus on
“unconventional threats, such as narco-terrorism and human
trafficking, and improving training levels in a variety of
mission areas,” the Navy said in a news release.
Stephen Johnson, a former State Department and senior policy
analyst for Latin America at The Heritage Foundation, said such
training exercises are relatively common in the region for the
United States , albeit smaller ones.
“It’s a chance to show the flag and let our friends know we
care,” he said.
As far as the exercise also sending a message to Latin American
countries opposed to U.S. policies, particularly to Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez, “there is a challenge for us not to be
threatening and reignite hostilities in the region,” Johnson
said.
However, there also is increasing concern Venezuela has begun to
amass new weapons – from rifles to helicopters – possibly
including Russian Su-27 or Chinese J-10 aircraft .
Tom Baranauskas, a Latin American defence analyst with Forecast
International, said Venezuela has plans to procure 138 naval
vessels, from small patrol craft to larger ones capable of
carrying surface-to-air missiles.
It also wants to buy 30 transports and gunship helicopters for
the army, he said.
Venezuela has always announced plans for acquiring new military
hardware, even before Chavez came to power in 1998, but couldn’t
afford it , he said.
“That was before the oil prices went up,” Baranauskas said. “Now
the money is available, and there is a pretty nice pool to buy
this stuff from.”
Thompson, with the Lexington Institute, said that although the
Caribbean is a natural training area for the United States , “we
don’t have a task force there very often because of the
political sensitivities.
“So the fact we are doing it now will be interpreted by Castro
and Chavez as indicative of some sort of U.S. plan, or
initiative, or whatever you want to call it ,” said Thompson,
referring to the Venezuelan leader and Cuban President Fidel
Castro.
He said U.S. military interests in the region “waxes and wanes”
depending on the political rhythms.
“ Right now, in addition to the persistent irritation of Castro,
we have a very anti-American government in Venezuela, and we
have a chronic guerrilla insurgency and narcotics problem in
Colombia.
“Needless to say, the Venezuela issues intersect rather
powerfully with our energy dependence.”
Norfolk-based Navy officials said the last time an aircraft
carrier was in that region was summer 2004, when the Ronald
Reagan sailed around South America after it left Norfolk to join
the Pacific Fleet. However, that was a relatively quick trip to
get the ship to its new home in San Diego.
The Navy drastically cut back sending its carrier groups, as
well as all other warships, to the Caribbean for training when
it agreed to abandon the island of Vieques near Puerto Rico in
May 2003. Such training activities have since moved to the Gulf
of Mexico and the Atlantic.
Likewise, a yearly exercise in the area, called UNITAS, has been
scaled back in recent years. UNITAS is a multinational naval
deployment exercise. Every year since 1960, U.S. Navy ships have
circumnavigated the South American continent, participating in
maneuvers with local navies.
L ately, however, fewer than four U.S. ships have participated.
Instead of an exercise that once lasted as long as six months,
it now is relegated to a month or two and is conducted in
phases.
Reach Jack Dorsey at (757) 446-2284 or
jack.dorsey@pilotonline.com.
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