Guam: U.S. Defense Deployments
Shirley A. Kan
Specialist in Asian Security Affairs
October 28, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS22570


Guam: U.S. Defense Deployments

Summary
Since 2000, the U.S. military has been building up forward-deployed forces on the westernmost
U.S. territory of Guam (west of Hawaii) to increase U.S. operational presence, deterrence, and
power projection for potential responses to crises, disasters, or other contingencies to support
Japan, Republic of Korea (ROK), the Philippines, Taiwan, or others in Asia. Since 2006, Valiant
Shield exercises based at Guam have boosted U.S. military readiness for joint operations in the
Pacific. The defense buildup on Guam has been moderate. China has concerns, suspecting
Guam’s buildup to be directed against China. There has been concern that China and North Korea
could target Guam with missiles. China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy has increased
activities in waters around Guam. Still, Guam’s role expanded in engaging with the PLA.
In 2006, the United States and Japan had agreed on a Realignment Roadmap to strengthen their
alliance, including a buildup on Guam to cost $10.3 billion, with Japan contributing 60%. Goals
were to start the related construction on Guam by 2010 and to complete relocation of about 8,000
marines from Okinawa to Guam by 2014. In Tokyo on February 17, 2009, the Secretary of State
signed a U.S.-Japan agreement on the relocation of the III Marine Expeditionary Force personnel
from Okinawa to Guam that reaffirmed the “Roadmap” of May 1, 2006. However, the Marines’
relocation will not occur by 2014 and will be more geographically distributed. Opposition on
Okinawa to the U.S.-Japan plan for a Futenma Replacement Facility (FRF) to replace the Marine
Corps Air Station Futenma brought implications for the Marines’ move from Okinawa to Guam.
Despite the dispute over the FRF, Japan has budgeted for its contributions to the Marines’ move.
By 2011, some Members urged attention to concerns that included Japan’s impasse, expanded
costs, and the delay in the realignment even as a strong U.S. military presence and readiness
remain critical in the Asia-Pacific. On May 11, 2011, Senators Carl Levin, John McCain, and Jim
Webb called for a review of plans to restructure military forces in Japan, ROK, and Guam, in
order to make progress. President Obama issued in January 2012 the defense guidance for the
strategy of “rebalancing” diplomatic, defense, and economic priorities more to the Asia-Pacific.
This “rebalance” further raised Guam’s profile as a “strategic hub.” Finally, on February 8, the
United States and Japan agreed to “adjust” the Roadmap and separate the move of marines from
the plan for the FRF, in order to make progress separately. A U.S.-Japan Joint Statement of 2012
specified that out of about 9,000 marines to be relocated from Okinawa, about 5,000 marines
would move to Guam. Out of the new estimated cost of $8.6 billion, Japan would contribute $3.1
billion. A U.S.-Japan Joint Statement of 2013 pointed to a later relocation of marines to Guam
that will start in the first half of the 2020s.
In April 2014, President Obama issued a U.S.-Japan Joint Statement, reaffirming that “the United
States and Japan are also making sustained progress towards realizing a geographically
distributed, operationally resilient, and politically sustainable U.S. force posture in the Asia
Pacific, including the development of Guam as a strategic hub.” Preparation includes a draft
environmental study (April 2014), a final study (2015), and a Master Plan for Guam (July 2014).
The Master Plan estimated total costs of $8.7 billion. Delegate Bordallo announced further
progress in October, when the Navy awarded a contract to support the marines’ move to Guam.
An overall issue is whether to repeal the restrictions on the use of U.S. and Japanese funds in the
FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). Legislation includes H.R. 4495 (Forbes);
and FY2015 NDAA, H.R. 4435 (McKeon) and S. 2410 (Levin). Updated through the 113th
Congress, this CRS Report discusses major defense-related developments and policy issues.
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Guam: U.S. Defense Deployments

Contents
Strategic Significance of Guam for Defense Buildup ...................................................................... 1
Force Relocations and Deployments from the U.S. Mainland ........................................................ 2
U.S. Force Relocations from Japan ................................................................................................. 3
Agreement ................................................................................................................................. 4
Budgets ...................................................................................................................................... 7
Concerns and Issues for Congress ................................................................................................... 7
Rationales .................................................................................................................................. 7
Concerns .................................................................................................................................... 9
Allies and Partners ................................................................................................................... 17
China ....................................................................................................................................... 19
Major Legislation .................................................................................................................... 25

Tables
Table 1. Illustrative Sailing Distances and Time ............................................................................. 8

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 28

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Strategic Significance of Guam for Defense Buildup
Guam is the westernmost U.S. territory long valued as strategically significant to U.S. forward
deployments in the Western Pacific. Historically, the United States acquired Guam from Spain in
1898 after the Spanish-American War. In the Pacific Ocean, Hawaii is about 2,400 miles west of
California, and Guam is about 3,800 miles further west of Hawaii. Guam has two important U.S.
military bases: Apra Naval Base and Andersen Air Force Base. The island, three times the size of
Washington, DC, is home to about 160,000 people. There are about 6,000 military personnel. As
the Defense Department faced increased tension on the Korean peninsula, the Pacific Command
(PACOM) based in Honolulu began in 2000 to build up air and naval forces on Guam to boost
U.S. deterrence and power projection in Asia. Concerns include crisis response, counterterrorism,
and contingencies in the Pacific. The defense buildup on Guam has been moderate.
Guam is critical to enhancing the forward presence, strengthening alliances, and shaping China’s
rise. Visiting Guam in May 2008, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said that Guam’s buildup will
be “one of the largest movements of military assets in decades” and will help to “maintain a
robust military presence in a critical part of the world.”1 Under President Obama, Secretary Gates
issued the Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) in February 2010, in which the United States
noted the importance of implementing the U.S.-Japan Realignment Roadmap of 2006 that will
ensure the deployment of U.S. forces in Japan and transform Guam into a regional security hub.
The QDR also announced the development of a new joint Air-Sea Battle Concept, to integrate the
air, sea, land, space, and cyberspace forces of the Air Force and Navy to counter challenges to
U.S. freedom of action, defeat adversaries with sophisticated anti-access and area-denial (A2/AD)
capabilities, and improve power projection operations.
As part of the Obama Administration’s effort to re-engage throughout the Asian-Pacific region
and reassure allies and partners facing a rising China that views the United States as an “outside”
power, Gates participated at an annual Asian-Pacific defense ministers’ meeting in June 2010 in
Singapore at which he declared that the United States is a Pacific nation and will remain a “power
in the Pacific.” He highlighted the South China Sea as an area of growing concern. He also stated
that the defense buildup on Guam is part of a shift in the U.S. defense posture in Asia, a shift to
be more geographically distributed, operationally resilient, and politically sustainable. Deputy
Defense Secretary William Lynn III visited Guam in July and stressed Guam’s value, saying
“from bases here, our forces can ensure the security of our allies, quickly respond to disaster and
humanitarian needs, safeguard the sea lanes that are so vital to the world economy, and address
any military provocation that may occur.” The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff issued
strategic guidance for 2011 that placed priority on U.S. security interests in the Middle East,
Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Still, he declared a sharper focus on the Asian-Pacific region in
balancing risks from an aggressive North Korea and a more assertive China and in defending
freedom of navigation. With the U.S. military’s drawdown from Afghanistan and Iraq, the U.S.
defense strategy of January 2012 declared a “rebalancing” toward a strengthened presence in the
Pacific. In May 2014, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that the Deputy Secretary of Defense
will oversee the enhancement of the U.S. force posture in Guam, Japan, and South Korea.2

1 Donna Miles, “Gates Views Growth Under Way in Guam,” American Forces Press Service, May 30, 2008.
2 Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, speech at Shangri-La Dialogue (meeting of defense ministers), Singapore, June 5,
2010; Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn III, Remarks at the University of Guam, July 27, 2010; Secretary of
Defense Chuck Hagel, speech at Shangri-La Dialogue, Singapore, May 31, 2014.
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Force Relocations and Deployments from the
U.S. Mainland

Guam’s strategic significance has risen steadily. In 2000, the Air Force reportedly sought to base
elements of an Air Expeditionary Force in Guam and sent B-2 stealth bombers to Guam to expand
the range of U.S. options for contingencies involving North Korea. As PACOM’s Commander,
Admiral Dennis Blair acquired approval to forward deploy air-launched cruise missiles on Guam
for the first time in August 2000. The Air Force moved precision munitions to be stockpiled on
Guam, including Joint Direct Attack Munitions and Joint Standoff Weapons.3
In February 1997, Guam’s Delegate Robert Underwood noted in the House that an aircraft carrier
(USS Independence, homeported in Japan) visited Guam for the first time in more than 30 years.
In 2001, the Navy announced that it would station up to three nuclear-power attack submarines
(SSNs) at Guam, shortening the travel time compared to travel from homeports in Hawaii or
California to the western Pacific and shortening deployments for sailors. The first submarine to
be based at Guam arrived in 2002. In 2007, the USS Buffalo joined USS Houston and USS City of
Corpus Christi
as the three SSNs based at Guam. (Since then, different SSNs have replaced those
first SSNs with their homeports in Guam.) The Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) of 2006
called for an adjustment in U.S. force posture, with a greater presence in the Pacific than that in
the Atlantic (including at least six aircraft carriers and 60% of submarines in the Pacific). In 2007,
the Navy decided not to homeport the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson at Guam. In 2008, the
Navy proposed a transient berth in Apra Harbor to support a carrier for up to three times a year,
each visit for up to three weeks, but the Navy later deferred the idea indefinitely. The QDR of
2010 called for maintaining a force structure of 10-11 aircraft carriers. In mid-2010, three Ohio-
class guided-missile submarines (SSGNs), USS Michigan, USS Ohio, and USS Florida, showed
their presence in the Pacific and used Guam to support their operations. In June 2012, five Los
Angeles-class SSNs and one Ohio-class SSGN simultaneously converged at Guam, in part for
repairs and maintenance.4 In June 2012, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta provided some details
for the strategic “rebalance” to the Asia-Pacific, saying that, by 2020, 60% of the Navy’s fleets
would be in the Pacific, including 6 of 11 aircraft carriers. On April 8, 2013, Deputy Secretary of
Defense Ashton Carter announced that the Navy will deploy a fourth SSN to Guam by 2015. The
Navy announced in February 2014 that the USS Topeka will be that SSN. Guam’s three SSNs
form part of the force of 56% of the total SSNs that are deployed to the Pacific, as of end of 2013.
In 2002, the Commander of Pacific Air Forces publicly detailed his request for basing aircraft in
Guam. In addition to munitions stockpiles and jet fuel, he reportedly requested F-22 stealth
fighters, 767 tankers, C-17 transports, bombers, and Global Hawk reconnaissance drones.5 In

3 Thomas Ricks, “For Pentagon, Asia Moving to Forefront,” Washington Post, May 26, 2000; “Inside the Ring,”
Washington Times, August 25, 2000; Robert Burns, “Air Force Plan Could Place Bombers Closer to Targets,” Seattle
Times
, November 30, 2000.
4 U.S. House of Representatives, “A Fair Hearing on Guam,” Congressional Record, February 25, 1997; Christian
Bohmfalk, “Navy Decides to Homeport Up to Three Attack Submarines in Guam,” Inside the Navy, January 29, 2001;
Nathan Hodge, “Navy Basing Subs in Guam,” Defense Week, October 1, 2002; Nelson Daranciang, “Senators Hope
Naval Presence Will Grow,” Honolulu Star-Bulletin, March 31, 2007; Navy Newsstand, July 12, 2007; Navy Secretary
Donald Winter, “Report on Department of Defense Planning Efforts for Guam,” September 15, 2008; Commander,
Submarine Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, December 4, 2009; South China Morning Post, July 4, 2010; “Guam Welcomes
Submarines,” Navy News Service, June 8, 2012.
5 Jim Wolf, “U.S. General Urges Warplanes Be Sent to Guam,” Reuters, August 23, 2002.
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March 2003, after a new Air Expeditionary Wing was activated at Guam’s Andersen Air Force
Base, B-1 and B-52 bombers deployed temporarily on a rotational basis from air bases in Texas
and Louisiana as U.S. forces prepared for war against Iraq. Beyond rotation of aircraft, the Air
Force began continuous deployment of aircraft into Guam. As part of this buildup, the first B-52
bombers (stationed out of Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota) to deploy to Andersen arrived
in February 2004. B-52 bombers can each carry 20 AGM-86C/D conventional air-launched cruise
missiles (CALCMs), and these long-range weapons have been fielded at Andersen.6 In April
2005, the Commander of Pacific Air Forces said that B-2 stealth bombers started to fly out of
Andersen. In April 2005, F-15 fighters temporarily deployed to Andersen from Idaho. An Air
Force official said in 2006 that the Air Force planned to station KC-135 tankers on Guam. In May
2007, the Air Force announced the deployment of 18 F-16 fighters to Guam for four months. In
the summer of 2008, several F-22 fighters, based in Alaska since 2007, began deployments to
Guam. Also, Andersen Air Force Base first planned to have four to six RQ-4 Global Hawk
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for an Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR)
Strike Task Force by 2009, but the first of three RQ-4 Global Hawks arrived in September 2010.
Andersen also plans to host the MQ-4C Broad Area Maritime Surveillance Triton drones in 2017.
The Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), Admiral Jonathan Greenert, explained in November 2012
that the strategic rebalancing of priorities and expansion of air surveillance operations involve the
operation of the Navy’s MQ-4 Global Hawk UAVs from Guam by the middle of the decade.7
Facing the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK’s) announced threats against Guam
in March 2013, the Defense Department announced on April 3 that it would deploy to Guam
within weeks a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) ballistic missile defense system
as a precautionary measure to improve defenses against the DPRK’s missile threat.
U.S. Force Relocations from Japan
Originally, the United States and Japan agreed in October 2005 to realign the U.S. force posture,
in part to sustain the alliance and meet the needs of the changing security situation. In a “2+2”
joint statement, the Secretaries of State and Defense, and their Japanese counterparts, agreed,
inter alia
, to expand the training of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces (SDF) in Guam, Alaska, Hawaii,
and the U.S. mainland, and to realign U.S. Marine Corps forces for more flexible responses to
crises (including by moving about 7,000 marines plus dependents from Okinawa to Guam). In
May 2006, the United States and Japan signed a detailed “Roadmap” to implement the
realignment, in part by agreeing to move about 8,000 marines of the III Marine Expeditionary

6 PACOM, “B-1Bs, B-52Hs Arrive in Guam,” March 6, 2003; Robert Burns, “Air Force Wants to Put Fighters and
Bombers Back on Guam in Pacific,” AP, January 13, 2004; Michael Sirak, “U.S. Considers Bomber Presence on
Guam,” Jane’s Defense Weekly, January 21, 2004; PACOM, “Bomber Deployment to Guam,” February 2, 2004;
“Bombers Arrive At Andersen,” AFN; Katie Worth, “B-52 Bombers Arrive,” Pacific Daily News, February 23, 2004;
U.S. Air Force, “AGM-86B/C/D Missiles.” There is also the AGM-86B version with a nuclear warhead.
7 Martin Matishak, “Hester: Air Force to Bolster Presence in Asia-Pacific Region,” Inside the Air Force, April 29,
2005; Natalie Quinata, “Fighter Squadron Arrives on Guam,” Pacific Daily News, April 30, 2005; Gregg Kakesako,
“U.S. Military to Beef Up Its Presence on Guam,” Honolulu Star-Bulletin, June 21, 2006; “United States to Deploy 18
F-16s to Guam,” Reuters News, May 24, 2007; Frank Whitman, “No Big Changes at Andersen Right Away, New 36th
Wing Commander Says,” Stars and Stripes, November 18, 2006; Audrey McAvoy, “Air Force to Deploy Alaska-Based
F-22 Raptors to Guam,” AP, May 21, 2008, quoting the Commander of Pacific Air Forces, General Carrol Chandler;
“Rear Admiral Addresses Business Leaders on Guam’s Military Importance,” KUAM, February 25, 2009; Travis
Tritten, “Andersen Receives Pacific’s First Global Hawk Drone,” Stars and Stripes, September 8, 2010; “USAF
Welcomes RQ-4 Global Hawk to Guam Watch,” Flight International, September 28-October 4, 2010; Stars and
Stripes
, August 17, 2012; Jonathan Greenert, “The Navy Pivots to Asia,” Foreign Policy, November 14, 2012.
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Force (MEF) and about 9,000 dependents from Okinawa to Guam by 2014. The relocation was
estimated to cost $10.27 billion. Of this amount, Japan pledged to provide $6.09 billion
(including $2.8 billion in direct contribution to develop Guam’s facilities and infrastructure).8
Agreement
On February 5, 2009, Admiral Timothy Keating, Commander of the Pacific Command (PACOM),
told Reuters that the transfer of 8,000 marines to Guam might be delayed and cost more, but
observers questioned his authority for the statement. Indeed, PACOM clarified the next day that
the goals remained to start the related construction by 2010 and to complete relocation by 2014.
III Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF). Soon after, on February 17, 2009, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton visited Tokyo and signed the bilateral “Agreement Between the Government of
the United States of America and the Government of Japan Concerning the Implementation of the
Relocation of the III Marine Expeditionary Force Personnel and Their Dependents From Okinawa
to Guam” that reaffirmed the “Roadmap” of May 1, 2006. The two governments agreed that of
the estimated $10.27 billion cost of the facilities and infrastructure development for the
relocation, Japan would provide $6.09 billion, including up to $2.8 billion in direct cash
contributions (in FY2008 dollars). The United States committed to fund $3.18 billion plus about
$1 billion for a road for a total of $4.18 billion. Under the agreement, about 8,000 personnel from
the III MEF and about 9,000 of their dependents would relocate from Okinawa to Guam by 2014.
Futenma Replacement Facility (FRF). In addition to Japan’s financial contribution, the
relocation to Guam would have depended upon Japan’s progress in completion of the Futenma
Replacement Facility (FRF). In the “Roadmap,” the United States and Japan agreed to replace the
Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Futenma with the FRF constructed using landfill and located
in another, less populated area of Okinawa (at Camp Schwab). The original plan expected an
interconnected package that involved relocation to the FRF, return of MCAS Futenma, transfer of
III MEF personnel to Guam, and consolidation of facilities and return of land on Okinawa.
In April 2009, the lower house of Japan’s parliament, the Diet, voted to approve the bilateral
agreement, and the Diet ratified it on May 13, 2009. The next day, the Department of State
welcomed the Diet’s ratification of the agreement and reiterated the U.S. commitment to the
completion of the relocation of 8,000 marines to Guam from Okinawa, host to about 25,000 U.S.
military personnel and their dependents.
However, on September 16, 2009, Yukio Hatoyama of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)
became prime minister. This political change raised uncertainty when Japan sought to re-
negotiate the agreement even as the United States sought its implementation. The DPJ had called
for the Futenma air station to be relocated outside of Okinawa, with concerns about the impact on
the local people and environment. In Tokyo on October 21, Defense Secretary Robert Gates
stressed to Japan’s Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa the importance of implementing the
agreement by “moving forward expeditiously on the roadmap as agreed.” Gates said at a news
conference that “without the [FRF], there will be no relocation to Guam. And without relocation
to Guam, there will be no consolidation of forces and return of land in Okinawa.” But by the time
of President Obama’s visit on November 13, 2009, the two leaders could only announce a

8 U.S.-Japan Security Consultative Committee, Joint Statements, October 29, 2005, and May 1, 2006.
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“working group” to discuss differences. The U.S. side agreed to discuss the agreement’s
“implementation,” but Japan sought to “review” the agreement. At a meeting in Honolulu on
January 12, 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stressed moving on the implementation of
the agreement but also acknowledged that the alliance had lots of other business to conduct. She
expressed an expectation of a decision on the FRF by May, after Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada
conveyed Hatoyama’s promise to decide by that time. Visiting Tokyo on January 15, Senator
Daniel Inouye said Hatoyama reiterated this promise to decide by May. (On details about Japan’s
dispute over Futenma, see CRS Report RL33436, Japan-U.S. Relations: Issues for Congress.)
Meanwhile, on May 20, 2010, the ROK announced that an international investigation found that
an attack on March 26 by the DPRK sank the ROK’s naval ship, Cheonan, and killed 46 sailors.
President Obama condemned that “act of aggression.” The crisis provoked by the DPRK
catalyzed Japan’s resolution of the dispute over the realignment. Moreover, in April, Japan said
that China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) deployed ships and submarines near Japan’s
southern islands of Okinawa and Miyakojima and dangerously confronted Japan’s surveillance
forces, including pointing guns from a PLAN destroyer at Japan’s maritime patrol plane and
flying a helicopter in close approach to Japan’s destroyer in at least two incidents. The next
month, China’s maritime survey ship approached and chased away Japan’s Coast Guard survey
ship in the East China Sea, demanding that Japan’s ship stop its surveys. While the crisis with the
DPRK involved an attack that sank the ROK’s ship and killed its sailors, the PLA’s
aggressiveness did not result in conflict at that time. Nonetheless, later in July, Assistant Secretary
of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs Wallace Gregson testified to Congress that both
the actions by North Korea and China (the PLAN’s deployment of a Surface Action Group near
Okinawa) prompted Japan’s recognition of a vital U.S. role in Japan’s deterrence.9
Joint Statements. On May 28, 2010, in Tokyo, Secretary of Defense Gates and Secretary of State
Clinton along with their counterparts in Japan issued a “2+2” Joint Statement of the U.S.-Japan
Security Consultative Committee. Thus, Japan reaffirmed its commitment to implement the 2006
Roadmap and 2009 Agreement on relocation of marines from Okinawa to Guam. The following
month, Japan’s new Prime Minister Naoto Kan affirmed the agreement. However, by July 2010,
the U.S. Navy expressed doubts about meeting the original goal of completing the relocation of
marines to Guam by 2014,10 supporting Admiral Keating’s assessment in 2009.
Just after retiring as an Assistant Secretary of Defense, Gregson said in April 2011 that about
10,000 marines would remain on Okinawa after the relocation of some marines from Okinawa to
Guam. Moreover, he clarified that the change would be a “realignment of the alliance to Guam.”
Not only will there be a buildup of U.S. forces at Guam, but there would be a new continuous
presence of Japan’s aviation, ground, and naval forces training there.11 However, Japan’s media
reported in March 2012 that marines in Okinawa increased from 18,000 to 21,000 by 2011.12
In the “2+2” Joint Statement of June 21, 2011, the United States and Japan rhetorically reaffirmed
their commitment to implement “steadily” the realignment as agreed in 2006 and the Joint
Statement of May 2010. However, the United States and Japan also conceded that the completion

9 Testimony before a hearing of the House Armed Services Committee, July 27, 2010.
10 Satoshi Ogawa, “U.S. Government Gives Up on Relocating Marines in Okinawa to Guam by 2014,” Yomiuri, July
23, 2010.
11 Yoichi Kato, “Japan-U.S. Alliance Will Grow Stronger From Quake,” Asahi Shimbun, April 10, 2011.
12 Jiji Press, March 16, 2012.
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of the FRF and the relocation of marines from Okinawa to Guam will not meet the target date of
2014. After a new Prime Minister, Yoshihiko Noda, took office on September 2, 2011, Japan
indicated it would implement the realignment. According to a press briefing by White House
officials, President Obama met with Noda at the U.N. in New York on September 21 and stressed
the importance for the alliance of implementing the relocation agreements. Before Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta left for a trip to Asia, Senator Webb wrote him on October 19, urging a
careful reexamination of alternatives to the agreements given the impasse. He wrote that senior
officials and officers of the Defense Department expressed to him and Senator Levin some deep
concerns about the affordability and workability of the 2006 Roadmap. Nonetheless, on October
25, Secretary Panetta met with Japan’s Defense and Foreign Ministers and said that both
countries remained committed to the Roadmap and moving marines to Guam.
The impasse in Japan still continued through 2011, and Japan’s environmental impact report on
Futenma had to be dropped in the cover of darkness at 4:00 AM on December 28 in Okinawa. In
early 2012, visiting Diet Members noted the dispute for some pessimism about the realignment.
Finally, on February 8, 2012, after some Members in Congress urged a review of the realignment
in realistic recognition of the persistent impasse (see below on congressional actions in May 2011
on a review of the force structure), Japan’s officials visited Washington for meetings with Deputy
Assistant Secretaries of Defense and State. The two sides agreed to “adjust” the Realignment
Roadmap of 2006 and separate the move of marines from the maintenance of the plan for the
FRF, in order to make progress separately. The United States and Japan reaffirmed the need to
strengthen the alliance and build Guam as a “strategic hub” with an “operational” Marine Corps
presence. However, the U.S.-Japan Joint Statement on Defense Posture did not provide numbers
and locations for transfers of marines, a timeline, or any changes in costs. Senator Webb noted
that the statement was an acknowledgment that the Roadmap must be adjusted to preserve the
strength of the alliance and the stability of the region.
The “2+2” Joint Statement of the Security Consultative Committee of April 26 noted the U.S.
strategy of January 2012 to “rebalance” defense priorities to the Asia-Pacific and reaffirmed the
decision to adjust the realignment. The joint statement expressed an intent to consult with
respective legislatures. Two days prior, Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb sent a letter to
Secretary Panetta to stress that any new proposal should be not considered final until it has the
support of Congress. As part of the effort for a deeper and broader U.S.-Japan alliance, the two
sides have relocated aviation training to Guam and will develop training areas in Guam and the
Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) as shared-use facilities. The Joint
Statement provided more specific numbers for the relocation of marines: out of about 9,000
marines to be relocated from Okinawa, about 5,000 marines would move to Guam, “when
appropriate facilities are available to receive them.” About 10,000 would remain on Okinawa.
The Marines in Guam would form one of four Marine Air-Ground Task Forces (MAGTFs) in the
Pacific. Concerning a new agreement on costs, the move of marines to Guam would cost $8.6
billion, with Japan’s share to be the direct cash contribution agreed in 2009 and with no longer
mention of loans. The updated value of Japan’s contribution would be $3.1 billion (including for
training ranges), according to Department of State and Defense officials who briefed reporters. At
a hearing of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness on August 1, 2012, Defense
Department officials acknowledged that they had no timeline for the distributed laydown but
called for starting the move of marines to Guam, partly to shore up political support in Japan in
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accordance with the Joint Statement and to boost U.S. credibility in the “rebalancing” strategy.
Representatives Forbes and Bordallo requested a timeline from the Defense Department.13
In December 2012, Shinzo Abe of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) became Prime Minister,
stressing a stronger alliance with the United States. The PACOM Commander, Admiral Samuel
Locklear, estimated the completion of the Marines’ move to Guam by 2020 and to Hawaii by
2026, in testimony to the House Armed Services Committee on March 5, 2013. On April 5,
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel announced an agreement with Japan on a plan to return areas on
Okinawa, after replacement facilities are constructed and a sizeable contingent of marines
relocate to Guam and Hawaii. However, the U.S.-Japan Joint Statement of the Security
Consultative Committee in October 2013 pointed to a later relocation from Okinawa to Guam that
will start in the first half of the 2020s. For his visit to Japan in April 2014, President Obama wrote
that “as part of the realignment of our forces in Japan, we’re working to close the Futenma
facility and relocate to a new facility, consolidate our presence on Okinawa into fewer locations
and move many of our forces to Guam and Hawaii.... The realignment of our forces—as part of
the broader modernization of our defense posture in the region—will ensure that our alliance
stays strong and ready for the future.” Obama and Abe issued a U.S.-Japan Joint Statement,
which reaffirmed that “the United States and Japan are also making sustained progress towards
realizing a geographically distributed, operationally resilient, and politically sustainable U.S.
force posture in the Asia Pacific, including the development of Guam as a strategic hub.”14
Budgets
Despite Japan’s dispute over the FRF in Okinawa, Japan has allocated funds in the defense
budgets for the Marines’ relocation and buildup on Guam. Japan allocated direct contributions of
$336 million in the 2009 defense budget and $497 million in the 2010 budget. (Japan’s fiscal year
covers April 1 to March 31.) The conference report for the FY2013 NDAA noted that $725
million was unobligated in the U.S. Treasury. Japan’s 2013 defense budget included $7.4 million
for the relocation of marines from Okinawa to Guam. Japan’s 2014 defense budget included
about $13.8 million for projects necessary for the relocation of marines from Okinawa to Guam.
In August 2014, Japan’s Defense Ministry requested the same amount in the 2015 budget.
Concerns and Issues for Congress
Rationales
One rationale for the military buildup on Guam is its status as a U.S. territory. Thus, the United
States is not required to negotiate with sovereign countries on force deployments or face the risks
of losing bases or access. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld visited Guam in November 2003
and expressed support for building up Guam as he considered a new round of base closings.15 In
contrast, the United States had to close Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Force Base in the

13 House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness, hearing on Pacific Command Force Posture, August 1, 2012.
14 President Obama, Interview published in Yomiuri Shimbun’s Japan News, April 23, 2014; White House, “U.S.-Japan
Joint Statement,” Tokyo, Japan, April 25, 2014.
15 James Brooke, “Looking for Friendly Overseas Base, Pentagon Finds it Already Has One,” New York Times, April 7,
2004.
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Philippines in 1992. Foreign countries could restrict the use of U.S. forces based there. U.S.
forces based in Guam also do not have to contend with political sensitivities over nuclear
powered vessels. Moreover, some countries, including allies, have raised doubts at times about
their support for U.S. forces in a possible conflict between the United States and China.
Another rationale is the expansion of options that Guam offers to the evolving force structure and
joint operations. In 2004, the Navy held Summer Pulse 04, its first exercise to increase readiness
to “surge” operations in response to a crisis. As Commander of PACOM, Admiral William Fallon
expressed his vision for Guam as a staging area from which ships, aircraft, and troops can “surge”
to the Asian theater. He stressed “flexibility,” saying “we need to have forces ready to react,” and
“we must have built-in flexibility” to meet emergencies (including disaster relief).16 In June 2006,
PACOM held the first large-scale Valiant Shield exercise that brought three aircraft carriers to
Guam. Guam again hosted Valiant Shield exercises in 2007 and 2010. The fourth Valiant Shield
exercise took place at Guam in September 2012, involving the forward-deployed aircraft carrier
USS George Washington. The Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps held the fifth Valiant
Shield exercise based at Guam in September 2014, which applied the Air-Sea Battle Concept and
involved two aircraft carriers, the USS George Washington and USS Carl Vinson.17
A third rationale is the need to counter what commanders call the “tyranny of distance.” PACOM,
headquartered in Honolulu, has an area of responsibility that encompasses almost 60% of the
world’s population, over 50% of the earth’s surface, the Pacific and Indian Oceans, 16 time zones,
and five of seven U.S. defense treaties. U.S. forces on Guam are much closer to East Asia, where
the United States has five alliances with Australia, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, and the
Philippines. The United States also has concerns about tension and instability in the East China
Sea, South China Sea, and Yellow Sea; terrorism in Southeast and South Asia; humanitarian
crises; and sea lines of communication (SLOCs), particularly through the Straits of Malacca.
Combat aircraft on Guam can reach Taiwan, Japan, Philippines, or the Korean peninsula in two to
five hours.18 Moreover, Table 1 presents the shorter sailing distance and time from Guam to
Manila in East Asia, as an example, compared to that from Honolulu, Seattle, and San Diego.
Table 1. Illustrative Sailing Distances and Time
To Manila, from:
Statute miles
Days at 20 knots
Days at 30 knots
Guam 1,724
3.1
2.1
Honolulu 5,482
9.9 6.6
Seattle 6,853
12.4
8.3
San Diego
7,595
13.8
9.2
Notes: Sailing distances in statute miles were calculated using nautical miles reported by “Distances Between
Ports,” 2001, published by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency. Also, 1 nautical mile equals 1.15 statute
miles, and 1 knot equals 1.15 mph.
Relatedly, under President Obama, the United States has paid greater attention to Southeast Asia.
There is concern about potential instability over disputed islands and China’s assertiveness in the
South China Sea. In February 2011, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike

16 Richard Halloran, “Guam Seen as Pivotal U.S. Base,” Washington Times, March 11, 2006.
17 Erik Slavin, “Valiant Shield 2014,” Stars and Stripes, September 12, 2014.
18 Donna Miles, “Gates Views Massive Growth Under Way in Guam,” AFPS, May 30, 2008.
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Mullen, issued a National Military Strategy, declaring that the U.S. military also must invest new
attention and resources in Southeast and South Asia, in addition to the long-standing presence in
Northeast Asia. PACOM’s Commander, Admiral Robert Willard, testified to the House Armed
Services Committee in April 2011, elaborating that it has become increasingly important for U.S.
forces to attain more access to and support from allies and partners in South and Southeast Asia.
Concerns
Infrastructure. As U.S. forces relocate to Guam, the state of its civilian infrastructure has been
of concern to some policy makers. Also, Guam’s political leaders have expressed concerns about
the impact of additional deployments on its civilian infrastructure, including utilities, roads, and
water supplies. Guam’s location in the Western Pacific also requires construction of protection for
U.S. forces and assets against typhoons. In addition, Guam’s size, remoteness, and conditions
raised more questions about hosting and educating military dependents; training on Guam and
with other units in Asia, Hawaii, or the west coast; and greater costs and time for extended
logistical support, shipment of supplies, and long-distance travel. Addressing another concern, a
former commander of Marine Forces Pacific urged in 2007 that Guam’s buildup include more
than infrastructure to develop also human capital, communities, and the environment.19 The
Defense Department requested $106.4 million in FY2014 for water and wastewater projects and
requested an additional $80.6 million in FY2015 for the water and wastewater infrastructure.20
Strategic Target. A concern is that Guam’s higher military profile could increase its potential as a
strategic target for terrorists and adversaries during a conflict. For example, potential PRC and
DPRK missile attacks could raise Guam’s need for missile defense and hardening of facilities.
Some officials say that hardening could depend on the use of hangars, with less need of hardening
for marines who deploy for training and more need of hardening for the Air Force’s aircraft based
at Andersen for power projection. A third option is selective hardening of some facilities.21
China is believed to have deployed missiles that could target forces on or near Guam, considered
by China as part of the “Second Island Chain” from which it needs to break out of perceived
U.S.-led “encirclement.” China’s missiles that could target Guam include the DF-3A (CSS-2)
medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs) and land-attack cruise missiles (LACMs) launched
from upgraded, longer-range H-6K bombers. China also has deployed DH-10 LACMs and DF-
21D anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) to target aircraft carriers and other ships. While the DF-
21D’s initial range could be 1,500-2,000 km (930-1,240 mi), a more advanced variant could
extend the range to about 3,000 km (1,860 mi) and reach Guam. The PLA reportedly has the
world’s largest force of ground-launched LACMs, with about 100 LACMs entering the
operational force each year and up to 500 LACMs by 2014. Moreover, the PRC reportedly has
developed DF-25 and DF-26C intermediate-range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) with a range of
3,200-4,000 km. In 2012, the PLA Navy started to conduct military activities, perhaps suspected
surveillance, in the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) around Guam.22

19 W. C. “Chip” Gregson, “New Thinking Needed on Pacific Frontier,” Honolulu Advertiser, December 7, 2007. From
2009 to 2011, Wallace “Chip” Gregson was the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs.
20 Department of Defense, Office of Economic Adjustment, FY 2015 Budget Estimates, March 2014; Author’s
consultation: overall civilian infrastructure projects could cost about $300 million.
21 Author’s consultations at PACOM in December 2013.
22 Project 2049, “China’s Evolving Conventional Strategic Strike Capability,” September 14, 2009; Project 2049,
(continued...)
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In addition, the DPRK has developed an IRBM with a range of more than 3,000 miles. There has
been a question about whether North Korea deployed this IRBM. In 2008, South Korea’s Defense
White Paper stated that North Korea started to deploy its IRBM (Taepodong-X) with a range that
could reach Guam. At a military parade in October 2010, North Korea showed a new IRBM
(what some called Musudan), apparently deployed without flight testing in North Korea. The U.S.
National Intelligence Council (NIC) reported to Congress in early 2011 that North Korea in 2010
continued to develop a mobile IRBM and did not report that it was deployed. Still, the Director of
the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Lieutenant General Ronald Burgess, Jr., testified to the
Senate Armed Services Committee on March 10, 2011, that North Korea has tried to upgrade
already deployed missiles that included IRBMs. In October 2012, the DPRK asserted that it has
missiles that could strike South Korea, Japan, Guam, and the U.S. mainland.23
In February 2013, the DPRK announced a third nuclear test. The Defense Department, including
Deputy Secretary Ashton Carter, announced that the Air Force flew B-52 strategic bombers from
Andersen Air Force Base to South Korea on March 8 and 19 for “routine” exercises, extended
deterrence, and a commitment to the alliance with South Korea. The DPRK’s Korean People’s
Army then claimed that Guam’s base for the B-52s was within range of its precision strike
weapons and added a threat to “sweep away” Guam’s Andersen base. On March 28, DPRK leader
Kim Jong Un told the Strategic Rocket Force to prepare to hit military bases in Guam, Hawaii,
and South Korea. Sources in Seoul reported that North Korea moved two Musudan IRBMs to its
east coast that could be launched from mobile transporter erector launchers (TELs). The Defense
Department announced on April 3 that it would deploy to Guam within weeks a Terminal High
Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) ballistic missile defense system as a precautionary measure to
improve defenses against the DPRK’s missile threat. In early May, the DPRK reportedly removed
the Musudan missiles away from the launch position. PACOM Commander Locklear said later in
July that the missile’s capability has not been demonstrated.24
Allies and Partners. Moreover, there was concern that Guam is still too distant from flash points
in Asia and that the U.S. military could benefit from closer cooperation instead with allies and
partners such as Singapore, Australia, the Philippines, and Japan.25 Building up the U.S. presence
in those countries could enhance alliances or partnerships, increase interoperability, and reduce
costs for the United States. In 2010, Defense Secretary Gates wrote an article, calling for
“building partner capacity” to help other countries to defend themselves, or if necessary, to fight

(...continued)
“Evolving Aerospace Trends in the Asia-Pacific Region,” May 25, 2010; Global Times, February 18, 2011; Jane’s
Defense Weekly
, March 9, 2012; Kanwa, May 1, 2012; Want China Times, Taipei, October 15, 2012; Defense News,
January 31, 2013; Nanfang Dushi Bao, August 8, 2013; Ta Kung Pao, August 12, 2013; Project 2049, “China’s
Evolving Reconnaissance-Strike Capabilities,” February 2014; Want China Times, February 17, 2014; Free Beacon,
March 3, 2014; Office of the Secretary of Defense, “Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments
involving the PRC, 2014,” June 2014; Renmin Wang, Beijing, October 8, 2014.
23 Sam Kim, “N. Korea Deploys Medium-Range Missiles, Bolsters Special Forces,” Yonhap, Seoul, February 23, 2009;
Joshua Pollack, “North Korea Debuts an IRBM,” Arms Control Wonk blog, October 10, 2010; NIC, “Unclassified
Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced
Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to 31 December 2010;” KCNA, Pyongyang, October 9, 2012; National
Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC), “Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat,” July 2013.
24 Ashton Carter, media availability in Seoul, South Korea, March 18; Bloomberg, March 19; KCNA, March 21, 27, and
28, 2013; Yonhap, April 4 and 11, 2013; Reuters, May 6, 2013; Defense Department, news briefing, July 11, 2013.
25 Thomas Donnelly, “Rebasing, Revisited,” American Enterprise Institute, December 2004.
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alongside U.S. forces by providing them with equipment, training, and other security assistance.
The stress would be on helping other countries provide for their own security.26
Later in 2010, Australia proposed that the U.S. military increase use of this ally’s existing bases.27
In April 2011, PACOM’s Commander, Admiral Willard, testified to the House Armed Services
Committee that the U.S. military has increased attention to Southeast and South Asia. He
acknowledged that the U.S. force posture in Southeast Asia has involved mostly deployed U.S.
forces, making it costly and inefficient. He sought to expand the U.S. presence in Southeast Asia
beyond only Singapore. Willard also confirmed that Australia might further support the U.S.
posture. In testimony the same month to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Willard stated
that Marine Corps forces could rotate into northern Australia and other locations closer to
Southeast Asia, in addition to marines in Japan, Guam, and Hawaii. Secretary Gates announced at
a conference in June 2011 in Singapore that the United States will deploy Littoral Combat Ships
there. On September 15, the United States and Australia held Ministerial Consultations
(AUSMIN) at which the two sides, inter alia, agreed to strengthen potential defense cooperation
that would entail greater U.S. access to Australian ranges, facilities, and ports; prepositioning of
U.S. equipment in Australia; and combined activities in the Asian-Pacific region. Visiting
Australia on November 16, President Obama announced that 2,500 marines will deploy on a
rotational basis to Australia’s Darwin base and the Air Force will rotate more aircraft to Australia.
Thus, the changes would further disperse the U.S. forward presence, beyond moves to Guam.
One issue concerns whether more distributed forces in the Pacific would help or hurt deterrence.
Another concern focuses on adequate space for the Marines to train to maintain readiness. There
also are logistical challenges in sustaining forces that are distributed daily over vast distances.
Some in the Marine Corps have considered closer cooperation with the Philippines, including
training. In June 2012, the Philippines reportedly welcomed resumed U.S. use of Subic Bay and
Clark Air Base. However, the land has been privately developed in the two decades since
Manila’s opposition led to the U.S. withdrawal. Nonetheless, in June and July, Defense Secretary
Panetta noted talks with the Philippines to explore other opportunities to enhance mutual
capabilities, including sending U.S. forces on a rotational basis to strengthen maritime security.
The Marine Corps Commandant, General James Amos, said in August that he discussed more
frequent training exercises with commanders in the Philippines, Australia, Japan, and the ROK.
Visiting Manila in April 2014, President Obama announced an Enhanced Defense Cooperation
Agreement (EDCA). It would strengthen the U.S.-Philippine alliance, enhance the rotational
presence of U.S. forces, facilitate humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, expand bilateral
training, and support the Philippines’ long-term military modernization for defense.28
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) of 2010. In July 2010, the U.S. Navy’s Joint Guam
Program Office issued an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on implications of the buildup
on Guam.29 The detailed study estimated a higher population increase than a move of 8,000

26 Robert Gates, “Helping Others Defend Themselves,” Foreign Affairs, May/June 2010.
27 Phil Stewart, “U.S. Military Moves in Asia Not Aimed At China: Gates,” Reuters, November 7, 2010.
28 Travis Tritten, “Philippine Government Gives OK for US to Use Old Bases, Newspaper Reports,” Stars and Stripes,
June 7, 2012; Secretary of Defense, “Remarks at Shangri-la Dialogue,” Singapore, June 2, 2012, and letter submitting
to Congress an independent assessment on the U.S. defense posture in the Pacific, July 24, 2012; Richard Halloran,
“Budget Axe to Hit U.S. Marine Corps,” Taipei Times, August 16, 2012; Paul McLeary and Bethany Crudele, “U.S.
Marines Battle ‘Tyranny of Distance’ in Pacific Pivot,” Defense News, September 24, 2012; White House, “Fact Sheet:
United States-Philippines Bilateral Relations,” April 28, 2014.
29 Joint Guam Program Office, “Final Environmental Impact Statement: Guam and CNMI Military Relocation,” public
(continued...)
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marines to Guam. As noted above, the U.S.-Japan agreement of 2009 provided for 8,000 marines
and 9,000 of their dependents to relocate from Okinawa to Guam. However, the EIS of 2010
estimated that a total of 8,552 marines plus 630 Army soldiers would form the 9,182 permanent
military personnel to relocate to Guam. The total military population on Guam would increase by
30,190 (including 9,182 permanent military personnel, 9,950 dependents, 9,222 transient military
personnel, and 1,836 civilian workers). In addition, construction workers and others could mean a
total increase in population of about 79,000 at the peak in 2014, in this initial assumption. (After
changes in the roadmap announced in April 2012, the Joint Guam Program Office announced on
October 4 that it will prepare a new Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement. See below.)
Training. The study completed in 2010 also found that Guam cannot accommodate all training
for the relocated marines, and the nearby island of Tinian (100 miles away) could help to provide
land for their training. There would be a challenge for sustaining operational readiness in training
while limiting the time and expense to travel to train. The study found that “the training ranges
currently planned for Guam and Tinian only replicate existing individual-skills training
capabilities on Okinawa and do not provide for all requisite collective, combined arms, live and
maneuver training the Marine Corps forces must meet to sustain core competencies. As with
Marine Corps forces currently in Okinawa who must now travel to mainland Japan, other partner
nations, and the United States to accomplish this requisite core competency training, the Marine
Corps forces relocating from Okinawa to Guam would also have to use alternate locations to
accomplish requisite core competency training.” After a visit to Guam, Tinian, and Saipan in
February 2010, Senator James Webb expressed concern about placing live-fire ranges on Guam
for the Marine Corps and urged greater use of Tinian.30 Also, Guam’s Delegate Madeleine
Bordallo expressed concern about a proposed firing range on Guam and urged the Pentagon to
consider an alternative for a range on Tinian, at a hearing on March 15, 2011, of the House Armed
Services Subcommittee on Readiness. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy,
Installations, and Environment testified that certain training for the Marines needs to be on Guam.
In addition, the Navy would need a new deep-draft wharf at Apra Harbor to support a transient
aircraft carrier. Third, the Army would relocate about 600 military personnel to establish and
operate an Air and Missile Defense Task Force (AMDTF).
Record of Decision for EIS of 2010. However, as stated in the Record of Decision for the EIS
that was issued in September 2010, the Navy and Army deferred decisions on a site for the
Marines’ live-fire training range on Guam, a site for the transient aircraft carrier berth within Apra
Harbor, and construction of an AMDTF on Guam. Also, the Record of Decision used an
assumption that construction to support the Marines’ relocation would start in 2014 and not be
completed until 2016. Moreover, the Record of Decision projected that instead of a peak of an
increase of 79,178 people (including military personnel, dependents, and workers) in Guam in
2014, a “more realistic” projection would see a peak of 59,173 growth in population in 2015. The
peak of 10,552 more marines on Guam would be reached in 2017 instead of 2014.31

(...continued)
release on July 29, 2010. This followed the Draft Environment Impact Statement issued in November 2009.
30 Senator James Webb, “Proper Reengagement in Asia Requires a Strong Alliance with Japan, a Strong Relationship
with the People of Guam,” press release, February 19, 2010.
31 “Record of Decision for Guam/Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands Military Relocation,” September 2010.
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Draft SEIS of 2014. Given the new force posture adjusted in 2012, the Department of the Navy
issued a Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) on April 18, 2014. The
study planned for the relocation of about 5,000 marines with about 1,300 dependents to Guam
over a longer period of 12 years (instead of 8,600 marines with 9,000 dependents relocating over
five years assumed in the 2010 EIS). Two-thirds of the Marines will be rotated to Guam, while
their overall number will stay at about 5,000. Construction would involve moderate activity
spread over 13 years (instead of an intense period of 7 years). Guam would see fewer than 10,000
new residents at the peak of the construction boom (instead of more than 79,000). Projecting out
to 2028, Guam would have about 7,400 additional residents (instead of more than 33,000). The
Navy indicated its preferred alternative for the live-fire training range at Northwest Field on
Andersen Air Force Base. The Final SEIS would be completed in 2015, along with another
Record of Decision.32
Master Plan of 2014. The Defense Department made further progress in August 2014, when the
Navy submitted to Congress the Master Plan to execute the Marine Corps Distributed Laydown
on Guam, as required by Section 2822 of the FY2014 NDAA.33 The Master Plan stated that the
establishment of an operational Marine Corps capability in Guam is “an essential component of
the rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region.” Soon after, Guam Delegate Bordallo announced in
October that the Naval Facilities Engineering Command awarded a contract worth $44.5 million
to improve utilities infrastructure and the North Ramp at Andersen Air Force Base in support of
Marine Corps aviation and the realignment from Okinawa to Guam. The funding included Japan’s
contributions. Core Tech International of Guam and AMEC of London won the contract.34
Costs. In the fall of 2006, PACOM officials briefed Guam on some aspects of an undisclosed
draft plan for military expansion, the Integrated Military Development Plan, with possible
military projects worth a total of about $15 billion.35 The original plan would not have involved
only 10,552 marines. Congress expressed greater concern about expanding costs involved with
moving more marines (estimated at 10,552) with additional Army soldiers (estimated at 630) and
civilian military workers (estimated at 1,836). That would have been an increase of 13,018
military and civilian personnel working for the Defense Department. Also, there could be
expanded costs (for schools, health care, housing, transportation, etc.), if the option is used for
personnel to be accompanied by dependents. The estimate of additional dependents increased
from 9,000 under the U.S.-Japan agreement to 11,695 (9,000 Marine Corps dependents, 950
Army dependents, plus 1,745 civilian military dependents). Total personnel and dependent
growth had been estimated at 24,713 from 2017 on, after completion of construction. At a hearing
of the Senate Armed Services Committee on April 12, 2011, the chairman, Senator Carl Levin,
expressed concern that the delays in the realignment could increase costs significantly. The
ranking Member, Senator John McCain, said that total investments by the United States and Japan
for new bases for U.S. forces on both Okinawa and Guam could reach at least $30 billion.
PACOM’s Commander, Admiral Robert Willard, conceded that the delays and new requirements
on Guam raised uncertainty about the cost, which could be higher than $10.3 billion. Senator

32 Author’s consultations at PACOM in December 2013; Department of the Navy, “Draft Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement,” April 18, 2014; Stars and Stripes, April 18, 2014; Guam News, April 18, 2014.
33 Department of the Navy, “Master Plan for Guam,” dated July 15, 2014.
34 Madeleine Bordallo, “Navy Awards $44 Million Contract for North Ramp Construction,” October 20, 2014; Gaynor
Dumat-ol Daleno, “Core Tech, AMEC Joint Venture Wins $44.53M Contract,” Pacific Daily News, October 22, 2014.
35 KUAM News, September 12, 2006; Pacific Daily News, September 13, 2006; Stars and Stripes, September 17, 2006.
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James Webb urged for greater clarity about the realignment and attention by the Senate.36 On May
26, 2011, Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb cited, as support for their reexamination, GAO’s
estimate of costs of over $27 billion to realign bases on Okinawa and Guam.37
As discussed above, the U.S.-Japan Joint Statement of April 2012 revised the cost of the Marines’
move to $8.6 billion. In submitting to Congress the independent assessment by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) on July 24, 2012, Defense Secretary Panetta
acknowledged that there was still a need to work out details of the plan for future years but called
for near-term investments in Guam to enable the early movement of some marines from Okinawa
to Guam. The Secretary also urged investment in training ranges in Guam, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), which includes Tinian, and potentially other unspecified
areas.38 Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb stated that Congress needs to be confident that the
Defense Department’s force planning and realignment are “realistic, workable, and affordable.”
In the House, Guam’s Delegate Bordallo stressed that starting the investments in military and
infrastructure projects would be critical to moving forward with the realignment on Guam, in part
out of concern about the continued confidence of allies (specifically Japan) in U.S. planning.39
The Master Plan for Guam (dated July 2014), as cited above, estimated that the total cost to
complete 124 projects through FY2028 would be about $8.7 billion (in FY2012 dollars).
Naval and Air Assets. As another concern, the Marines on Guam would need naval assets for
transportation for both deployments and exercises. Options include basing in Guam another
Amphibious Ready Group (ARG) with amphibious ships of the Navy to transport a Marine
Expeditionary Unit (MEU). Another consideration would homeport in Guam the new non-
combatant sealift Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV). Since 2001, the III MEF in Okinawa already
has experience with using a leased theater support ship called “Westpac Express.” The Marines
used this fast, roll-on/roll-off ship to deploy with helicopters to reinforce Guam’s defense after
the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001.40 Sealift or airlift could come from Hawaii or California.41
In submitting to Congress the independent assessment by CSIS in July 2012, Defense Secretary
Panetta acknowledged that additional lift will be required to support the dispersed MAGTFs
throughout the Pacific region and that the realignment of the Marine Corps units will be more
distributed than that in the status quo and previous plans. The Secretary disagreed with the
independent assessment that the Marines could rotate fewer than about 5,000 marines to Guam,
insisting that the MAGTF would be one of four (in Guam, Okinawa, Australia, and Hawaii) that

36 In his study in 1974 for Guam, Webb had called for a broader look at the total cost of the U.S. force structure in the
Pacific that took into account any savings in consolidation of bases, more joint service uses, and the fact that bases in
Guam are permanent bases on U.S. soil. See James Webb, “The Future Land Needs of the U.S. Military on Guam,”
Guam Bureau of Planning, July 24, 1974.
37 Senator Carl Levin, “GAO Report Validates Recommendations for Bases in East Asia; Action Needed to Re-
examine DoD Planning”; Senator Jim Webb, “GAO Findings a Call to Action on Realignment of Military Bases in
East Asia,” May 26, 2011.
38 Secretary of Defense, letter to submit the independent assessment pursuant to the FY2012 NDAA, July 24, 2012. The
non-governmental, independent assessment did not represent the official position of the Defense Department.
39 Senator Jim Webb, “Statement of Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb on CSIS Asia Report,” July 27, 2012;
Delegate Madeleine Bordallo, “House Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee Addresses CSIS Report on U.S. Force
Posture in the U.S. Pacific Command Area of Responsibility,” August 1, 2012.
40 Consultations with PACOM in Honolulu in November 2010 and Pentagon in Washington in December 2010.
41 Remarks by retired Lieutenant General, USMC, George Trautman III, at Heritage Foundation, May 3, 2012.
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would be expected to respond rapidly to low-end and high-end contingencies by combining
command, maritime, ground, air, logistics, and lift capabilities that can deploy together.
The independent assessment recommended, inter alia, addition of one or more SSNs at Guam,
deployment of an additional ARG in the Pacific region, increase in roll-on/roll-off ships and
aerial tankers in the Pacific, deployment of missile defense assets (THAAD and PAC-3) to Guam,
runway repair capability at Guam, dispersal of tanker aircraft rather than hardening, and
additional assets for the Contingency Response Group and fuel pipelines at Andersen Air Force
Base. At a hearing of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness on August 1, 2012,
Defense Department officials acknowledged that the department could consider enhancing the
posture with Guam as a strategic hub but cautioned that it must consider global requirements.
Conferees on the FY2013 NDAA (P.L. 112-239) expressed congressional concerns about the need
for a clear plan for airlift and sealift to meet Guam’s operational and logistical challenges.
Outside Workers. Some have noted a concern about the potential introduction of temporary
outside workers to Guam during construction for the defense buildup. In 2009, Representative
Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii urged a preference for American workers.42 Regarding defense
policy, some have raised security considerations of the country of origin of any foreign workers,
including China. For example, in 2009, Guam’s Governor Felix Camacho said that it was likely
that foreign workers could come from skilled labor in the Philippines, if local labor is insufficient.
He said that China’s workers would not be hired “because of security concerns related to work on
military bases.”43 Workers outside of Guam could be hired from Hawaii, the U.S. mainland,
American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands, Freely Associated States, or other places.
Military Readiness. At a hearing of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness on
March 15, 2011, Representative Randy Forbes and Guam’s Delegate Bordallo focused on the
issue of whether U.S. forces in the Pacific have sufficient military readiness, including in the
realignment on Guam. Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations, and Environment
Jackalyne Pfannenstiel testified that the first focus would be on assuring adequate land to be able
to train the Marines as they arrive in Guam. Major General (USMC) Randolph Alles, PACOM’s
Director of Strategic Planning and Policy (J-5), acknowledged concern about the vulnerability of
above-ground stored fuel on Guam. Later, on January 28, 2014, at a hearing on the strategic
“rebalance” to Asia at the House Armed Services Committee, Delegate Bordallo asked about
readiness, and the Joint Staff’s Director for Strategic Plans and Policy, Vice Admiral Frank
Pandolfe, expressed concerns about the consequences of budget cuts on force readiness.
Review of Force Structure. There could be attention to how Guam fits in more broadly to the
U.S. force structure in the Pacific. Senator James Webb called for more attention to “all the
players out there in the region” regarding the realignment, at a hearing on April 12, 2011, of the
Senate Armed Services Committee.44 As Senator Levin said at the Senate Armed Services
Committee’s hearing in April, “the details of the plans for Okinawa are many and complex, as are
the details of the associated military buildup on Guam. That said, because these actions will affect

42 Neil Abercrombie, “Why Construction on Guam is Right for Americans,” letter to Washington Post, July 13, 2009.
43 “Guam Governor Expects Filipinos to Fill Jobs,” The Star, July 1, 2009.
44 Webb started in the 1970s to look strategically at Guam’s place in the U.S. defense posture in the Pacific, writing in
1974 that “it is quite conceivable that in ten to twenty years the entire U.S. Pacific presence will be centered on a
Guam-Tinian axis.” He had proposed a shift of the Marine Corps from Okinawa to Tinian. He lamented that “Guam
has been a loyal, though often unrecognized and ignored, segment of the American system.” James Webb, Jr.,
Micronesia and U.S. Pacific Strategy: A Blueprint for the 1980s, Praeger Publishers, 1974.
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the U.S. military’s strategic positioning well into the future, it is important that these issues be
discussed and resolved.” Senator Webb said, “I have a concern that we are at this point allowing
the process to be determined in many ways simply by the momentum of defense planners at a
time when a lot of these pieces are in question. So I hope we can have a hearing. I’m going to be
traveling to Korea and then into Guam again and Okinawa in the coming weeks, and Chairman
Levin is going to accompany me to Guam and Okinawa. I think it will be a very important set of
visits and perhaps we can try to find ways to at least clarify this matter and move forward.”
Subsequently, trying to move forward, Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb called in May 2011 for
a re-examination of plans to restructure military forces in South Korea, Japan, and Guam. They
critiqued the planned realignment as “unrealistic, unworkable, and unaffordable.” As another
objective, the Senators sought to reassure “Japan, Korea, and other countries that the United
States strongly supports a continuous and vigorous U.S. presence in the region” as well as “strong
bilateral alliances.”45 They also noted consideration of Japan’s enormous financial burden that
resulted from the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster in March 2011. Contrary to much
press reporting that stressed the proposal as criticizing plans and trying to “freeze” or to “put on
hold” the plans, a goal of the Senators’ proposal to review basing plans was to address concerns,
cut costs, and make progress at a time when the realignment to Guam faced an impasse and a
strong U.S. military presence remained critical in the Asian-Pacific region. For Guam, the
Senators proposed to base a permanently assigned headquarters (with family accompaniment) for
a “stripped-down” presence of the Marine Corps, but bolstered by deployments of rotating
combat troops that would be home-based elsewhere. They noted that rotating units into and out of
Guam from a home base such as in Hawaii or California (and thus leaving families at those bases)
“would make a strong difference in terms of infrastructure costs for schools, medical, recreational
facilities, and housing.” The Senators also recommended that the Defense Department examine
the feasibility of moving Marine Corps assets at Futenma into Kadena Air Base while dispersing
some Air Force assets now at Kadena to other areas in the Pacific region, including Andersen Air
Force Base in Guam. They further noted that Kadena’s 6,000-acre ammunition storage site could
be downsized by making use of two ammunition storage areas already located in Guam.
Guam’s Delegate Madeleine Bordallo promptly issued a press release on the same day. She
focused on the Senators’ “re-examination” of the plans for bases in Guam and elsewhere. She also
focused on the Senators’ appraisal of Guam’s “strategic importance.” She saw their
recommendation as another opportunity for the Defense Department to further clarify plans and
rationale concerning the bases. However, she seemed to raise concerns that consolidating Marine
Corps assets from Futenma to Kadena Air Base needs to be addressed directly between the U.S.
Government and Japan’s Government, because it would require “serious changes” to the Defense
Posture Review Initiative (DPRI). She also raised concern that moving air assets from Kadena Air
Base to Andersen Air Force Base would require “careful attention to the balance among forces on
Guam so that additional air assets and associated personnel do not overload and unduly strain
[Guam’s] infrastructure.” Further, she raised concern that a “transient presence” of marines on
Guam would reduce family housing but also reduce funds that would come from permanently
stationed forces. In addition, she expressed concern about reducing military families and their ties
to Guam. At the same time, Delegate Bordallo cited a mention in the proposal about an issue
related to firing ranges and reiterated her call for the Defense Department to certify a national
security requirement for such ranges. She also highlighted the Senators’ reference to Guam’s

45 Senate Armed Services Committee, “Senators Levin, McCain, Webb Call for Re-examination of Military Basing
Plans in East Asia,” May 11, 2011.
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“clear message” about its need for federal funds to build up its infrastructure outside of the bases.
According to her, when the time came for the conference on the National Defense Authorization
Act, the Senators “will now better see” the need for her proposal to give the Defense Department
the authority to transfer funds to support local infrastructure. Finally, she assured her constituents
that the Senators did not propose to stop Guam’s buildup and that she took their view to be in line
with views in the House, namely, that the buildup should be “done right.”46
In the House Armed Services Committee, Representative Randy Forbes and Delegate Bordallo
wrote to Secretary Panetta on September 30, 2011, to express concerns about the realignment of
forces, particularly to Guam. They sought a master plan for and senior-level attention to the
realignment as a top priority. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy finally
replied on December 13, acknowledging that the Pentagon was re-examining options for Guam.
Finally, in the Joint Statement of February 8, 2012, the Obama Administration reached an
agreement with Japan to “adjust” the Realignment Roadmap, as discussed above.
Local Concerns. Related, there has been an issue of whether policy makers have addressed
Guam’s concerns about the scope and pace of the construction, as expressed by the local people
or their elected officials. For example, at a hearing of the House Armed Services Committee on
February 3, 2010, Guam’s Delegate Madeleine Bordallo urged Secretary Gates to take into
account the concerns of the local community that the buildup would be “done right,” including in
the impact on the environment. Senator Webb visited Tokyo, Okinawa, and Guam in February
2010, in part to listen to various people about the U.S. realignment in the region. He also urged a
more open discussion about the realistic timeline for the realignment and buildup on Guam by
2014. He urged sensitivity to the stress of the people and limitations of space on Guam, including
over the issue of whether the military should have more land beyond the current one-third of the
island.47 On April 25-26, 2011, Senators James Webb and Carl Levin visited Guam and met with
local officials, who assured them that Guam’s people support the defense buildup but with local
gains and improved communication of information from the Defense Department.48
Allies and Partners
The U.S.-Japan Security Consultative Committee envisioned in 2005 that Guam would provide
expanded opportunities for training for Japan’s SDF and improved interoperability. For combined
training and engagement with allies and partners, Guam has offered valuable and less constrained
airspace and bombing ranges for the air forces of Japan, Thailand, Singapore, South Korea, and
Australia. In October 2011, exercises with fighters based at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni (on
Japan’s mainland) moved for the first time to Guam from Kadena Air Base in Okinawa. In
February 2012, Andersen Air Force Base hosted an air exercise (Cope North 2012) among U.S.,
Japanese, and Australian Air Forces, with Australia’s participation for the first time. In August-
September 2012, Japan’s Ground Self-Defense Force joined U.S. marines in exercises in Guam
and Tinian. For the first time, South Korea’s Air Force observed the Cope North exercise (its

46 Madeleine Bordallo, “Reaction to Senators’ Call for Re-examination of Military Basing Plans in East Asia,” May 11,
2011.
47 Senator James Webb, “Proper Reengagement in Asia Requires a Strong Alliance with Japan, a Strong Relationship
with the People of Guam,” press release, February 19, 2010.
48 “U.S. Senators Webb, Levin Hear Guam Concerns,” Guam Pacific Daily News, April 27, 2011; “Senator Jim
Webb’s East Asia Trip: Record of Activities and Achievements, April 16-29, 2011,” press release, April 29, 2011.
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humanitarian assistance and disaster relief portion) in February 2013. The U.S. Navy and Japan’s
Maritime Self-Defense Force held the first Guam Exercise (GUAMEX) in July 2014.
Also, Taiwan reportedly has asked to fly to Guam for training or engaging with the U.S. military.
Taiwan’s F-16 fighter pilots already train at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona. Taiwan has other
options for both training and operations (such as humanitarian assistance and disaster relief
(HA/DR) to fly to nations in the western Pacific that keep diplomatic ties with Taipei. Taiwan
could help to improve and extend their runways if needed.
South Korea. The Guam Integrated Military Development Plan, parts of which were reported in
October 2006, indicated that U.S. Army units withdrawn from South Korea were not likely to be
stationed on Guam. The Pentagon’s restructuring plan reportedly intended to maintain U.S. air
power in South Korea, particularly the three squadrons of F-16 fighters based at Osan Air Base.49
In September 2008, Secretary of the Navy Donald Winter submitted a report that envisioned a
consolidation of the expeditionary training centers of the U.S. Pacific Air Forces (PACAF) from
South Korea to Guam.50 However, the Record of Decision for Guam of 2010 did not mention
South Korea. In testimony to the House Armed Services Committee on April 6, 2011, PACOM’s
Commander, Admiral Willard, testified that PACAF has planned to use Guam as the “hub” for Air
Force assets in strike and refueling missions in the Asian-Pacific region. Also, PACAF has been
building some projects to set up the Pacific Regional Training Center at Guam.
There could be an option for South Korea to contribute to the cost of the defense buildup on
Guam. Some officials have tied the buildup to North Korea’s threat. Deputy Assistant Secretary
of Defense for East Asia Michael Schiffer testified to Congress in March 2010 that the
implementation of the 2006 Realignment Roadmap would help meet shared security challenges,
including the threat posed by North Korea. Just after North Korea launched artillery attacks on
South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island in November 2010, Guam’s Delegate Madeleine Bordallo
issued a statement that she received a briefing on the situation in South Korea from the Defense
Department. She also asserted that “this attack by North Korea is a reminder of the importance of
the United States remaining a vigilant and visible power in the Asia-Pacific region. Further it
highlights the importance of realigning our military forces in this region to be better postured to
address destabilizing events.” Senator Jim Webb delivered a speech in Tokyo in February 2011 in
which he noted that, given regional tension in the Koreas and elsewhere in Asia, “it is extremely
important for Japan and the United States to work to maintain a strategic stability in this region
and also for us to take advantage of the willingness of South Korea to join in this effort.”51
Japan. Under the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty, U.S. concerns involved possible conflict between
China and Japan over their competing claims to the Senkaku islands (called Diaoyu islands by
China) in the East China Sea. Taiwan, asserting itself as the Republic of China, also claims the
islands as the Diaoyutai islands. The United States administered the islands after World War II
and turned them over to Japanese administration in 1972. Officials of the Bill Clinton, George W.

49 Murayama Kohei, “U.S. to Triple Troops in Guam, but No Earlier Than 2010 for Marines,” Kyodo, October 3, 2006;
Bill Gertz, “More Muscle, With Eye on China,” Washington Times, April 20, 2006; Robert Burns, “U.S. Air Power in
East Asia Has Grown,” Associated Press, October 11, 2006.
50 Donald Winter, “Report on Department of Defense Planning Efforts for Guam,” September 15, 2008.
51 Michael Schiffer’s testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global
Environment, March 17, 2010; Guam Delegate Madeleine Bordallo’s press release, November 23, 2010; Senator Jim
Webb, keynote address, New Shimoda Conference, Tokyo, Japan, February 22, 2011.
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Bush, and Barack Obama Administrations have stated that the Senkaku Islands fall under the
scope of the U.S.-Japan alliance. Japan’s concern increased in September 2005, when the PLA
Navy deployed five ships to the disputed area in the East China Sea with competing territorial and
oil claims. After China escalated tension with Japan in wake of a PRC fishing boat’s collision
with Japan’s patrol boats in September 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense
Secretary Gates explicitly assured Japan of the U.S. position that the Senkaku Islands are covered
by the defense treaty. During China-Japan tension over the islands in September 2012, Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta visited Tokyo (before Beijing), where he said that the United States stands
by the treaty obligations, which are longstanding and unchanged. Visiting Tokyo on April 6, 2014,
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that “I restated the principles that govern long-standing U.S.
policy, U.S. policy on the Senkaku Islands and other islands. And we affirmed that since they are
under Japan’s administrative control, they fall under Article 5 of our mutual security treaty.”
Visiting Japan later in April, President Obama stated that the U.S. “treaty commitment to Japan’s
security is absolute, and Article 5 [of the U.S.-Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security]
covers all territories under Japan’s administration, including the Senkaku Islands.”52
After China’s military announced an “East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ)”
that covered the Senkaku Islands on November 23, 2013, the U.S. Air Force flew two B-52
bombers from Guam through that “ADIZ” in defiance of China’s rules for notification. The
bombers were unarmed. A Pentagon spokesman said that “we have conducted operations in the
area of the Senkakus. We have continued to follow our normal procedures, which include not
filing flight plans, not radioing ahead, and not registering our frequencies.”53 Nonetheless, while
conveying continuity of operations, sustained support for Japan, and defiance of the PRC’s
“ADIZ,” the bombers flew on a long-planned training flight. Secretary of Defense Hagel stated
on November 23 that the ADIZ is a destabilizing attempt to alter the status quo and will not
change how the U.S. military conducts operations. Hagel reiterated that the U.S.-Japan Mutual
Defense Treaty applies to the Senkaku Islands. Speaking by phone with Japan’s Defense Minister
Itsunori Onodera on November 27, Secretary Hagel stressed the top priority of resolving
remaining issues in the realignment of forces.
China
Building Guam as a strategic hub has played a critical role in balancing U.S. security interests in
responding to and cooperating with China as well as in shaping China’s perceptions and conduct.
The Obama Administration’s strategy has sought to shape China’s rise as a power that is peaceful,

52 CRS Report R42761, Senkaku (Diaoyu/Diaoyutai) Islands Dispute: U.S. Treaty Obligations, by Mark E. Manyin;
“U.S.-Japan Treaty Covers Disputed Isles,” Reuters, November 28, 1996; Yoichi Funabashi, “Maintain the Armitage
Doctrine Quietly,” Asahi Shimbun, February 2, 2004; State Department’s spokesperson, press briefing, March 24,
2004; “Clinton Tells Maehara Senkakus Subject to Japan-U.S. Security Pact,” Kyodo, September 23, 2010; Defense
Department, “News Briefing with Secretary Gates and Admiral Mullen,” September 23, 2010; White House, “press
briefing,” New York, September 23, 2010; State Department, “Joint Press Availability with Japanese Foreign Minister
Seiji Maehara,” Honolulu, October 27, 2010; Defense Department, “Joint Press Conference with Secretary Panetta and
Japanese Minister of Defense Morimoto,” Tokyo, September 17, 2012; Defense Department, “Joint Press Conference
with Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Japanese Minister of Defense Itsunori Onodera,” Tokyo, April 06, 2014;
Defense Department, “Remarks by Secretary Hagel in a Question-and-Answer Session at the People’s Liberation Army
National Defense University,” Beijing, China, April 8, 2014; President Obama, Interview published in Yomiuri
Shimbun
’s Japan News, April 23, 2014; White House, “Joint Press Conference with President Obama and Prime
Minister Abe of Japan,” Tokyo, Japan, April 24, 2014; White House, “U.S.-Japan Joint Statement,” April 25, 2014.
53 “Defying China, U.S. Bombers and Japanese Planes Fly Through New Air Zone,” Reuters, November 27, 2013.
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responsible, and respectful of international rules and laws. However, China’s Sino-centric civilian
and military commentators have suspected the defense buildup on Guam as aimed at China. Some
skeptics of U.S. policy ask whether there is a coherent strategy for countering China’s challenges,
while other critics worry that U.S. actions and statements would raise tensions with China.
Washington and Beijing have long differed over China’s threats to use the People’s Liberation
Army (PLA) against Taiwan. U.S. policy on helping Taiwan’s self-defense is governed not by a
defense treaty but by the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), P.L. 96-8. Moreover, some concerns about
the PLA’s accelerated modernization since the Taiwan Strait Crisis of 1995-1996 have expanded
beyond Taiwan to include PLA preparations for possible conflicts with the United States, Japan,
and others. In Southeast Asia, China claims much of the South China Sea as well as the disputed
Spratly and Paracel Islands in that sea as its “sovereign territory.” The PLA has raised attention to
Guam and has been building up its submarine force (both nuclear-powered and diesel-electric). In
November 2004, the PLA Navy sent a Han-class nuclear attack submarine to waters off Guam
before intruding into Japan’s territorial water.54 Further, the PLA’s rising power has implications
beyond Asia. The National Military Strategy of 2011 stated concerns about China’s assertiveness
in space, cyberspace, the Yellow Sea, East China Sea, and South China Sea. By early 2012, the
Director of National Intelligence (DNI) testified to Congress that “Many of Beijing’s military
capability goals have now been realized, resulting in impressive military might. Other goals
remain longer term, but the PLA is receiving the funding and political support to transform the
PLA into a fully modern force, capable of sustained operations in Asia and beyond.”55
In 2007, PACOM Commander Admiral Timothy Keating visited Guam and acknowledged that its
defense buildup was partly due to concerns about tension over Taiwan and North Korea. At the
same time, he stressed U.S. transparency, saying the buildup was not “under the cover of
darkness.” In answer to Senator Webb about the PLA’s expanding activities at a hearing in March
2008, Keating testified that during his first visit to China (in May 2007), the PLA Navy
proposed—in seriousness or in jest—that as it acquires aircraft carriers, it would take the Pacific
west of Hawaii while the U.S. Navy would cover east of Hawaii.56 Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for East Asia Michael Schiffer testified to Congress in March 2010 that the
implementation of the 2006 Realignment Roadmap would help meet shared security challenges,
including the threat posed by North Korea as well as uncertainty posed by the PLA’s “rapid”
modernization. In the same month in answer to Senator Daniel Akaka, PACOM’s Commander,
Admiral Willard, cited the PLA Air Force’s fighters and air defense systems for U.S. deployment
of F-22 fighters in the Pacific, including at Guam’s Andersen Air Force Base.57 The Commander
of Pacific Air Forces, General Gary North, acknowledged in October 2011 that U.S. forces
needed to watch China’s “expansive claims” in the South China Sea. He added that the three
Global Hawk reconnaissance drones based at Guam can stay airborne for over 30 hours.58
However, the impasse with Japan that started in 2009 over the realignment to Guam raised
increased concerns about PRC misperceptions of weakened U.S. alliances that could affect

54 Kyodo World Service, November 16, 2004.
55 James Clapper, testimony on worldwide threats to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, January 31, 2012.
56 Audrey McAvoy, “U.S. Pacific Commander Says Taiwan is Factor in Guam Buildup,” AP, April 15, 2007; Senate
Armed Services Committee, hearing on the FY2009 Budget for PACOM and USFK, March 11, 2008.
57 Testimonies before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment,
March 17, 2010; and Senate Armed Services Committee, March 26, 2010.
58 David Fulghum, “Recon Needs Grow for South China Sea Region,” Aviation Week, October 21, 2011.
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stability. Also, with the planned move of significant numbers of marines from Japan to Guam, the
PRC could misperceive pushing a U.S. retreat from the “first island chain” to the “second island
chain.” In Congress, Senator James Webb said in a speech in Tokyo in February 2011 that
Northeast Asia is the only place in the world where the interests of the United States, Russia,
China, and Japan intersect. He noted that the U.S.-Japan relationship resulted in regional stability.
Concerning China, Senator Webb said that when the Soviet Union collapsed, the United States
became “overexposed and unprepared” for the way that China has expanded. While affecting the
U.S. economy, China’s rise also has incrementally affected regional stability. He urged careful
handling of the realignment of bases to avoid giving the wrong signals for strategic stability.59
Also, a retired rear admiral wrote in May 2012 that the delinking of the Marines’ move to Guam
from the dispute over Futenma was a “welcome development,” because officials could focus the
attention of the U.S.-Japan alliance on its most significant challenge, namely, the change in the
strategic balance in Asia due to PLA efforts to extend its defense perimeter farther out to sea. In
this competition, the PRC tries to deny access, while the United States and others assure access.60
QDRs and Air-Sea Battle Concept. Under President Obama, the Pentagon issued a QDR in
February 2010 that announced the development of a new Air-Sea Battle Concept, as noted above.
The QDR’s discussion of that concept did not name China. Nevertheless, some analysts discussed
the Air-Sea Battle Concept as a way to counter the PLA’s rising capabilities in anti-access and
area-denial (A2/AD) (to slow or keep farther away U.S. forces in moving to a theater of
operations and to impede U.S. freedom of action in maneuvering within a theater). A year later in
February 2011, PACOM’s Commander, Admiral Robert Willard, said that the Defense
Department added the Marine Corps into the study of the new doctrine. In March, Secretary
Gates acknowledged that China, North Korea, and Iran are countries that pose emerging
asymmetric threats by developing capabilities that appear designed to neutralize the advantages of
the U.S. military in unfettered freedom of movement and projection of power to any region. Gates
added that, with the new concept, the Air Force and Navy would leverage each other’s
capabilities to overcome future A2/AD threats.61 At a hearing of the House Armed Services
Subcommittee on Readiness on March 15, 2011, Major General (USMC) Randolph Alles,
PACOM’s Director of Strategic Planning and Policy (J-5), explicitly testified that the new concept
addresses A2/AD but is broader than a focus on China. The concept would address security
situations around the world. On November 9, 2011, the Defense Department announced the
establishment of an office on the Air-Sea Battle Concept, in order to integrate air and naval
combat capabilities of the Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps to counter A2/AD challenges. In
May 2013, the Air-Sea Battle Office issued an unclassified summary of the Air-Sea Battle

59 Senator James Webb, “Revitalizing Japan-U.S. Strategic Partnership for a Changing World,” keynote address, New
Shimoda Conference, Tokyo, Japan, February 22, 2011.
60 Michael McDevitt, “The Evolving Maritime Security Environment in East Asia: Implications for the U.S.-Japan
Alliance,” PacNet #33, Pacific Forum, May 31, 2012.
61 Michael McDevitt, “The 2010 QDR and Asia: Messages for the Region,” Asia Pacific Bulletin, East-West Center,
March 11, 2010; Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, “AirSea Battle: A Point-of-Departure Operational
Concept,” May 18, 2010; Bruce Rolfsen, “Air Force-Navy Team May Counter China Threat,” Navy Times, May 23,
2010; Bill Gertz, “Military to Bolster Its Forces in the Pacific,” Washington Times, February 18, 2011; Robert Gates,
speech at the Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, March 4, 2011; “Team Links AirSea Battle to China,” Inside the
Pentagon
, June 9, 2011; Dave Majumdar, “U.S. Air Force’s Bomber Will be One Aircraft, Not Many,” Defense News,
July 18, 2011; Tony Capaccio, “Panetta Reviewing Air-Sea Battle Plan Summary, Greenert Says,” Bloomberg, July 26,
2011. On one of the first studies of China’s A2/AD strategy, see Enter the Dragon’s Lair (Rand Corporation, 2007).
For skeptical views: Thomas Barnett, “Big-War Thinking in a Small-War Era,” China Security, November 2010; J.
Noel Williams, “Air-Sea Battle: An Operational Concept Looking for a Strategy,” AFJ, September 2011; Dave
Majumdar, “U.S. AirSea Battle Takes Shape Amid Debate,” Defense News, October 10, 2011.
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Concept, stressing that it is not a strategy. The Army, Marine Corps, Navy, and Air Force
collaborated on a concept to develop networked, integrated forces capable of attack-in-depth to
disrupt, destroy, and defeat adversary forces. With potential implications for Guam, the concept
assumed that adversaries will attack U.S. military equipment, networks, and people as well as
bases from which U.S. and allied forces operate.
The QDR of 2014 assessed that “in the coming years, countries such as China will continue
seeking to counter U.S. strengths using [A2/AD] approaches and by employing other new cyber
and space control technologies. Additionally, these and other states continue to develop
sophisticated integrated air defenses that can restrict access and freedom of maneuver in waters
and airspace beyond territorial limits.” The QDR reaffirmed the Marines’ move to Guam.62
“Rebalancing” Strategy. At the start of 2012, President Obama and Defense Secretary Panetta
issued the new Defense Strategic Guidance on how to maintain U.S. military superiority in the
face of budget cuts and to “rebalance” priorities, posture, and presence to stress more attention to
Asia as well as the Middle East. The strategy explicitly cited concerns about China’s rising
military power as potentially causing “friction” in Asia and about U.S. power projection against
A2/AD challenges, particularly from China and Iran.63 However, the strategy did not mention the
Air-Sea Battle Concept. Then, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff issued on January 17 a
new Joint Operational Access Concept (JOAC). Thus, the initiative expanded from a focus on the
Navy and Air Force, to add the Marine Corps, and to cover all services. At the Shangri-la
Dialogue of defense ministers in June 2012, Defense Secretary Panetta provided some details for
the new strategy, saying that, by 2020, 60% of the Navy’s vessels would be assigned to the
Pacific, including 6 of 11 aircraft carriers. However, some specialists are concerned that there
might be limits in the total numbers of available assets given budget constraints and that the goal
was not new. As noted above, the QDR of 2006 called for a greater presence in the Pacific. Still,
President Obama said that the “pivot” to Asia stresses the United States as a Pacific power.64
During a visit to Guam in July 2012, Deputy Secretary of Defense Carter cited the “strategic hub”
of Guam in the current context of the rebalancing strategy, though Guam’s buildup started years
before. Carter later explained that the strategy is “not about China” but a peaceful Pacific region
and involves shifting capacity and investment to the Pacific, including to Guam.65 Later, in
August 2014, Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work visited Guam. He noted that, even before
articulation of a strategic “rebalance” to the Pacific, Guam has been “central” to the Navy’s plans.
With the rebalancing of forces (including 60% of the Navy and Air Force in the Pacific), Guam
has become a central part of the whole Defense Department’s planning.
In his remarks, Panetta said that the rebalancing strategy also envisions investments in special
operation forces (SOF). The Special Operations Command Pacific (SOCPAC) commands the
Naval Special Warfare Unit 1 (SEALS) on Guam. SOCPAC supports the strategic rebalancing, by
expanding engagements and SOF rotational presence. In the first half of 2014, a Marines Special
Operations Company is rotating to Guam for the first time to work with the Navy SEALS.66

62 Defense Department, “Quadrennial Defense Review,” February 2010; “Quadrennial Defense Review,” March 2014.
63 Defense Department, “Sustaining U.S. Global Leadership: Priorities for 21st Century Defense,” January 5, 2012.
64 White House, “Remarks by President Obama and President Aquino of the Philippines,” June 8, 2012.
65 Ashton Carter, “The U.S. Strategic Rebalance to Asia: a Defense Perspective,” New York City, August 1, 2012.
66 Consultation with SOCPAC, August 2012 and January 2014.
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“Rebalance” and Engagement with China. Still, a policy challenge has been to avoid conflict
with China and deter aggression by China and to assure that a U.S. goal is to cooperate in any
converging interests with this rising power as a peaceful, responsible, and rules-based country.
Indeed, China has benefitted from U.S. preservation of peace and prosperity in the region. The
PRC leadership acknowledged to President Obama in November 2009, in the first U.S.-PRC Joint
Statement in 12 years, that “China welcomes the United States as an Asia-Pacific nation that
contributes to peace, stability, and prosperity in the region.” The Administration has sought to
build “strategic trust” and a “positive, cooperative, and comprehensive” relationship with Beijing.
In Guam’s buildup, the Commander of Pacific Air Forces said in 2005 that the PLA’s
modernization gave him “pause for interest” but did not make a difference in significant force
redeployment.67 Also, in 2006, Guam became a focal point for improving the military-to-military
relationship with China. To blunt charges that Guam’s buildup targeted China, PACOM’s
Commander, Admiral Fallon, invited PLA observers to the U.S. “Valiant Shield” exercise that
brought three aircraft carriers to waters off Guam in June 2006. The PLA Navy sent a Deputy
Chief of Staff and specialist in submarine operations to lead the observers, who also boarded an
aircraft carrier and visited Guam’s air and naval bases. In May 2008, two C-17 transport aircraft
flew supplies from Guam to China for earthquake relief. Also in 2008, the Deputy PACOM
Commander addressed the question of whether China posed a threat and if China could see Guam
as a threat, and he said that while the United States had concerns about China’s military buildup,
“that’s not why we’re basing forces in Guam.” He noted that the forces were already based and
standing ready in the Pacific, with new adjustments in U.S. posture.68 While in Australia in late
2010, Defense Secretary Gates stated that moves to strengthen the U.S. military presence in the
region were more about relationships with the rest of Asia than about China.69
The Obama Administration has attempted to clarify some aspects of the strategy. The Chief of
Naval Operations (CNO), Admiral Jonathan Greenert, clarified in early 2012 that the new
strategy to rebalance with a greater focus on the Asian-Pacific region would not mean a large
increase in the naval presence in the Western Pacific. Greenert said, “it’s not a big naval buildup
in the Far East. We’re there. We have been there. We will be there.” He said that the U.S. Navy
will engage closer with the PLA and cooperate more with allies and partners to promote a rules-
based order and maintain freedom of navigation. In answer to Senator Daniel Akaka at a hearing
in February, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, testified that the
rebalancing (not a pivot) in the strategy actually offers the opportunity to expand engagement
with the PLA. At another hearing, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta answered Representative Hank
Johnson about the risk of an increasingly adversarial military competition by testifying that the
U.S. military needs to engage with the PLA from a position of strength and with preservation of
the presence in the Pacific. In June, at the meeting of defense ministers in Singapore, Secretary
Panetta stressed that defense policy is only part of the “rebalancing” of the entire U.S.
Government. General Dempsey said that repositioning forces is not the essence of the rebalancing
strategy, but rather more attention, more engagement, and more quality. In submitting an
independent assessment on the U.S. posture in the Pacific on July 24, Secretary Panetta wrote to
Congress that the strategy calls for comprehensively “rebalancing defense, diplomatic, and
economic resources toward the Asia-Pacific region.” In March 2013, National Security Advisor
Tom Donilon spoke about the rebalancing with a goal to build a constructive relationship with

67 Interview with General Paul Hester, Inside the Air Force, May 6, 2005.
68 Interview with Lieutenant General Dan Leaf (USAF), Asia-Pacific Defense Forum, 1st Quarter 2008.
69 Phil Stewart, “U.S. Military Moves in Asia Not Aimed At China: Gates,” Reuters, November 7, 2010.
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China (including through military-to-military contacts). He said that the Administration disagreed
with the premise that a rising power and an established power are destined for conflict.70
In short, one issue has concerned whether the Administration’s “rebalancing” credibly conveyed a
comprehensive strategy in a Whole of Government approach.71 A related issue has asked whether
the message effectively conveyed cooperating with or countering China. A third issue has asked
whether the United States realistically sustains the rhetorical intentions, given budget constraints.
As tensions rose in the East and South China Seas, and the PLA’s posture remained focused on
Taiwan, some officials and observers have raised the issue of whether it is more urgent to
implement the “rebalance” by supporting a forward presence and signaling a sustained
commitment to allies. Four Members of the House, led by Representative Randy Forbes, wrote a
letter to National Security Advisor Susan Rice in 2013, asking for clear inter-agency guidance to
enable a broad effort, to empower departments and agencies to implement that guidance, to
communicate to Congress about the required resources, and to convey clarity to U.S. allies and
partners. The Members urged the National Security Advisor to lead a review of the strategy on the
Asia-Pacific. Although the Members asked for the National Security Advisor to lead an inter-
agency review, the State Department responded to Congress. The State Department stated that the
Administration laid out its vision for the rebalance, which has sought to strengthen regional
institutions, strengthen alliances, support economic institutions, deepen relationships with
emerging partners, and build a constructive relationship with China. The State Department
asserted that it carries out inter-agency coordination to dedicate more diplomatic, economic,
military, public diplomacy, and assistance resources to the Asia-Pacific.72 On April 28, 2014,
Representatives Forbes and Hanabusa introduced H.R. 4495, the Asia-Pacific Region Priority
Act. The next month, much of H.R. 4495 was included in H.R. 4435, the FY2015 NDAA.
Tension and Trust. Despite the goal of inclusive cooperation throughout the region, there arose
competing concerns about the risks of escalating tensions and exacerbating mistrust with China,
particularly the suspicious PLA. As the United States and its allies and partners respond to
China’s military challenges, some are concerned about the security dilemma of a potential
escalation in hostility and mistrust that could harm cooperation on any common concerns. As
Henry Kissinger wrote, “just as Chinese influence in surrounding countries may spur fears of
dominance, so efforts to pursue traditional American national interests can be perceived as a form
of military encirclement.”73 The PRC’s official, authoritative media has defended China’s
“defensive” policy of “deterrence” and criticized the Air-Sea Battle Concept and other U.S.
defense adjustments as directing “Cold War”-like threats against China and provoking China’s
unspecified “counter-measures.” Contrary to U.S. goals in seeking shared interests and access to
global commons, some in China have seen an American zero-sum pursuit of “militarism” at the
cost of PRC security interests. In contrast to much of the region’s welcome of the U.S. presence

70 Chris Carroll, “Navy Chief: No Big Change in Pacific Force Presence,” Stars and Stripes, January 11, 2012; Senate
and House Armed Services Committees, hearings on FY2013 Defense Authorization, February 14-15, 2012; Tom
Donilon, Remarks at the Asia Society, March 11, 2013.
71 See for example: Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “Rebalancing the Rebalance: Resourcing the U.S. Diplomatic
Strategy in the Asia-Pacific Region,” a Majority Staff Report, S. Prt. 113–24, April 17, 2014.
72 Randy Forbes, Rob Wittman, Colleen Hanabusa, and Madeleine Bordallo, letter to Susan Rice, July 23, 2013, and
response from Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, October 9, 2013. Forbes wrote that the
Administration was reluctant to conduct a review (“Stand by Our Ally in Tokyo, Diplomat, February 18, 2014).
73 Henry Kissinger, “The Future of U.S.-Chinese Relations: Conflict Is a Choice, Not a Necessity,” Foreign Affairs,
March/April 2012.
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and concern about China, on November 30, 2011, the PLA’s spokesman attacked U.S.
announcements about deploying marines to Australia (in an established alliance) and the Air-Sea
Battle Concept as “Cold War thinking” and detrimental to regional stability and mutual trust.
On January 9, 2012, the PRC’s diplomatic and military spokesmen called the U.S. “rebalancing”
strategy’s “accusations” against China “groundless” given its “peaceful development.”
Nonetheless, in March, China announced a 2012 defense budget that increased to $106.4 billion
but at a lower rate of growth compared to that in 2011, despite the U.S. strategic shift to Asia.
With the announced defense budgets as an indicator, China’s rapidly growing economic resources
have provided greater funds for what has been already a sustained trend of mostly double-digit
percentage increases in real terms since 1997 (after the Taiwan Strait Crisis of 1995-1996).
In June 2012, the PRC defense minister chose not to attend the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore
to engage with or confront Secretary Panetta and other defense ministers, while the lower-level
PLA representative (a lieutenant general from the Academy of Military Science) warned that
China should stay calm and not over-react to the U.S. “pivot” to the Pacific. Later that month, the
Defense Ministry criticized the U.S. rebalancing strategy as an “eastward shift” in military
deployments that counters peace and cooperation. PRC authoritative commentary has depicted
the U.S. strategy as directed against China in a bilateral context, though some in China have
acknowledged that the U.S. strategy is not simply to counter China.
Some in the United States have advocated attention to accommodation with China to avoid a
relationship with a more adversarial, assertive, or aggressive China with rising military power.
Such views have included a call for a review of policy of the dispute over Taiwan.74
Thus, with a forward presence in Guam and strengthened alliances, U.S. defense has faced the
challenges of rebalancing security interests in responding to as well as cooperating with a rising
China, while mitigating risks of hostility and planning for crisis management. As the CNO wrote
in late 2011, “being forward is critical to deterring aggression without escalation, defusing threats
without fanfare, and containing conflict without regional disruption.” At the same time, he noted
the risk that a country can characterize A2/AD capabilities as defensive and deploy them from its
mainland territory, “making attacks against them highly escalatory.” The CNO and the Chief of
Staff of the Air Force (CSAF) also recognized challenges in the face of budget reductions.75
Major Legislation
In July 2006, the Senate Appropriations Committee issued a report (S.Rept. 109-286) on the
Military Construction and Veteran Affairs Appropriations Act, which expressed concerns about a
construction program on Guam estimated to cost $10.3 billion (with Japan paying 60%) and
expectations of a master plan for Guam from the Defense Secretary by December 29, 2006. In the
Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2008 (that became P.L. 110-161 on December 26, 2007),
the appropriations committees decided against a Senate provision that would have required the
Defense Secretary to submit the master plan by December 29, 2007, and provided more time for a

74 For example: Michael Swaine, “Avoiding U.S.-China Military Rivalry,” Diplomat, February 16, 2011; Zbigniew
Brzezinski, “Balancing the East, Upgrading the West,” Foreign Affairs, January/February 2012; Kenneth Lieberthal
and Stapleton Roy, “Defuse the Distrust with Beijing,” Washington Post, February 13, 2012.
75 Admiral Jonathan Greenert, “Navy 2025: Forward Warfighters,” Proceedings, December 2011; and Admiral
Jonathan Greenert and General Mark Welsh, “Breaking the Kill Chain,” Foreign Policy, May 16, 2013.
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report by September 15, 2008. In response, the Navy Secretary reported on planning for Guam,
with initiatives for the Air Force, Army, Navy, and Marine Corps. Also, he reported that the
Pentagon was developing the Guam Joint Military Master Plan.76
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for FY2009 (that became P.L. 110-417 on
October 14, 2008) authorized a total of about $180 million for Guam’s military construction
projects, established a Treasury account for all contributions for military realignment and
relocations, and required the Defense Secretary to report on projects by February 15 of each year.
On May 7, 2009, days before Japan’s Diet ratified the relocation agreement with the United
States, Defense Secretary Gates submitted the proposed defense budget for FY2010. As part of
the realignment of the Global Defense Posture, he requested $378 million to start construction in
Guam to support the relocation of 8,000 marines from Japan in order to strengthen the U.S.-Japan
alliance. This amount would contribute to the total U.S. cost of $4.18 billion for the relocation.
The NDAA for FY2010 (enacted as P.L. 111-84 on October 28, 2009) authorized the first
substantial incremental funding for the relocation of marines from Okinawa to Guam, but
conditioned upon the Defense Department’s submission to Congress of a Guam Master Plan.
Among a number of provisions related to Guam in the legislation and conference report,
Congress designated the Deputy Secretary of Defense to lead a Guam Executive Council and
coordinate interagency efforts related to Guam. Congress also required a report on training,
readiness, and movement requirements for Marine Forces Pacific, with a sense of Congress that
expansion of Marine Corps training should not impact the implementation of the U.S.-Japan
agreement on relocation from Okinawa to Guam. Congress authorized a total amount (including
for Defense-wide, Army, Navy, and Air Force) of almost $733 million.
The NDAA for FY2011 (enacted as P.L. 111-383 on January 7, 2011) changed the name of the
Guam Executive Council to Guam Oversight Council. Among the provisions related to defense
realignment on Guam, Congress required a report from the Defense Secretary on an assessment
of the natural and manmade threats to realigned forces on Guam, the facilities needed to support
those forces, and required costs. The House and Senate Armed Services Committees stated
concern on December 22, 2010, that the Defense Department failed to report to Congress the
detailed plan for projects for the realignment and that the Navy’s Record of Decision of
September 2010 deferred key decisions, including on training ranges and amphibious landings for
the Marine Corps. The committees recommended that Congress defer authorizations for
construction for the relocation on Guam pending additional information that includes an updated
master plan from the Defense Department. The committees reduced $320 million in the requested
authorization of appropriations (for three construction projects involving aircraft parking, site
preparation, and utilities). The NDAA for FY2011 authorized $176 million for projects on Guam.
On May 26, 2011, the House passed H.R. 1540, the NDAA for FY2012, to authorize a total of
$303,521,000 for Marine Corps and Air Force projects in Guam in FY2012, after a reduction of
$64 million. After Senators Levin, McCain, and Webb called for a re-examination of the
realignment of forces, on June 17, the Senate Armed Services Committee completed its markup
of the NDAA. According to the committee, it cut about $156 million for two projects for the
realignment of Marine Corps forces from Okinawa to Guam because they would not be necessary
in FY2012 and the Defense Secretary failed to provide a master plan; and it cut $33 million for
grants to purchase items related to the relocation to Guam because the funds would be ahead of

76 Donald Winter, “Department of Defense Planning Efforts for Guam,” September 15, 2008.
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need. At the same time, the committee stated that the relocation of marines to Guam remained an
important aspect of the U.S.-Japan alliance. The committee reported its NDAA for FY2012 as S.
1253 on June 22. Out of conference, the legislation authorized only $83.6 million for Air Force
projects on Guam. On December 12, Guam’s Delegate Bordallo expressed opposition to the
conference report, for delaying other investments. Enacted on December 31, 2011, as P.L. 112-81,
the final legislation also included the Senate’s language in Section 2207 on Guam, which
stipulated that none of the funds authorized to be appropriated or amounts provided by Japan for
projects on land under the Defense Department’s jurisdiction may be obligated or expended to
implement the realignment of Marine Corps forces to Guam until certain conditions are met.
Congress required a force lay-down for PACOM from the Marine Corps Commandant, a master
plan for construction from the Defense Secretary, certification of tangible progress on Futenma, a
plan on Guam’s infrastructure, and an assessment of the U.S. posture in the Asian-Pacific region.
(As discussed above, on July 24, 2012, Defense Secretary Panetta submitted to Congress an
independent assessment on the U.S. defense posture in PACOM’s Area of Responsibility.)
On May 18, 2012, the House passed the NDAA for FY2013 (H.R. 4310; McKeon) to authorize
$229,904,000 for several projects in Guam and repeal the conditions on use of funds for
realignment in Guam in P.L. 112-81. On June 4, the Senate Armed Services Committee reported
its version (S. 3254; Levin) to continue the prohibition until certain conditions are met. S. 3254
sought to authorize $8,500,000 for Guam (for the Army National Guard at Barrigada) but not the
requested projects at Andersen Air Force Base. The final NDAA for FY2013, enacted on January
2, 2013, as P.L. 112-239, authorized $159,904,000 for projects in Guam, including $58 million
for an unhardened Fuel Maintenance Hangar at Andersen (compared to $128 million for a
hardened hangar in H.R. 4310). Related to the realignment of forces in the Pacific, Section 2831
prohibits the establishment of a live fire training range on Guam until the Defense Secretary
certifies that there is a requirement for military training and readiness. Section 2832 stipulates
that none of the authorized funds and none of the amounts provided by Japan for construction
activities on land under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense may be obligated to
implement the realignment of Marine Corps forces from Okinawa to Guam or Hawaii until: (1)
the PACOM Commander provides an assessment of the strategic and logistical resources needed
to ensure the distributed lay-down of the Marine Corps meets the contingency operations plans;
(2) the Secretary of Defense submits master plans for the construction of facilities and
infrastructure to execute the lay-down, including a description of the cost and schedule; (3) the
Secretary of the Navy submits a plan for proposed investments and schedules to restore facilities
and infrastructure at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma; and (4) a plan coordinated by pertinent
Federal agencies describing work, costs, and a schedule for completion of construction,
improvements, and repairs to the non-military utilities, facilities, and infrastructure, if any, on
Guam affected by the realignment of forces. Congress provided exceptions to the restriction on
funding, authorizing the Defense Secretary to use funds to complete environmental studies, to
start the planning and design of construction projects at Andersen Air Force Base and Andersen
South, and to carry out certain military construction projects. Furthermore, Section 1068 requires
the Defense Secretary, in consultation with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to report to
Congress, not later than one year after the act’s enactment, a review of the strategy, force
structure, force modernization plans, infrastructure, budget, and other relevant policies to execute
the U.S. force posture in in the Asia-Pacific region (including Guam’s operational needs).
The House passed the NDAA for FY2014 (H.R. 1960) on June 14, seeking to authorize the
requested amount of $494,607,000 for Navy and Air Force projects on Guam, modify the amount
in P.L. 112-239 from $58 million to $128 million for a hardened hangar at Andersen, and repeal
the restrictions on the use of funds in Section 2832 of P.L. 112-239. The Senate Armed Services
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Committee reported its version (S. 1197) on June 20, which would have authorized $256,334,000
for Navy and Air Force projects and continued the restrictions on the use of funds and Japan’s
funds for the military realignment, until the conditions are met. As explained by the House and
Senate Armed Services Committees on December 10, 2013, the final FY2014 NDAA (H.R. 3304;
enacted as P.L. 113-66 on December 26, 2013) included the House’s provision to increase funds
to $128 million for the hangar at Andersen, which also would support the 1st Marine Aircraft
Wing (MAW) that deploys to Guam for training. The committees also agreed to allow an
exception for the use of Japan’s funds to construct a utility and a site improvement project, both
of which are considered by the Navy to have military value independent of the Marines’ move to
Guam. Section 2822(a) amended the conditions in the restrictions on the use of funds. None of
the authorized U.S. funds and Japan’s funds may be obligated for the realignment of marines until
the Secretary of Defense submits the report required by Section 1068(c) of P.L. 112-239 (on
military resources necessary to execute the U.S. force posture strategy in the Asia-Pacific region);
master plans for construction of facilities and infrastructure to execute the Marine Corps lay-
down in Guam and Hawaii; and a plan coordinated by all pertinent federal agencies on any non-
military utilities, facilities, and infrastructure on Guam affected by the realignment of forces.
Section 2822(b) provided exceptions to allow the Defense Secretary to use funds for
environmental studies and some construction. Section 2822(f) repealed the restrictions in Section
2832 of P.L. 112-239. The FY2014 NDAA authorized the House-approved total of $494,607,000.
On May 22, 2014, the House passed H.R. 4435 (McKeon), the NDAA for FY2015. Introduced
by Delegate Bordallo, Section 1231 would require the Defense Secretary to develop a strategy to
implement the strategic rebalance to Asia-Pacific in PACOM’s area of responsibility (AOR). That
strategy is to be informed by the strategy for rebalancing priorities to Asia as required by Section
7043(a) of the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2014 (P.L. 113-76) based on language that
Representative Forbes introduced. Also based on Bordallo’s language, Section 2831 would repeal
the restrictions on use of funds for the Marines’ realignment to Guam in Section 2822(a), the
exceptions in Section 2822(b), and the restrictions on development of public infrastructure in
Section 2822(c) of the FY2014 NDAA (P.L. 113-66). Section 2831 would insert new language on
restrictions on development of public infrastructure. H.R. 4435 would authorize $128,051,000 for
Navy and Air Force projects on Guam, including $51 million to establish a MAGTF. Also,
H.Rept. 113-446 for H.R. 4435 requires the Secretary of the Army to report by January 31, 2015,
on sustained deployment of THAAD missile defense. On June 2, the Senate Armed Services
Committee reported its version of the FY2015 NDAA, S. 2410 (Levin) with Section 2821 to
continue the restrictions on use of funds in P.L. 113-66. S. 2410 would authorize $162,451,000
for Guam, $34,400,000 more than the House-approved amount. The $34.4 million would fund a
corrosion control and composite repair shop at Andersen Air Force Base. On June 26, Senator
Dan Coats submitted an amendment intended to be proposed to S. 2410 to authorize Taiwan to fly
C-130 aircraft to and from Guam.

Author Contact Information

Shirley A. Kan

Specialist in Asian Security Affairs
skan@crs.loc.gov, 7-7606

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