U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific:  June 6, 2023 
Background and Issues for Congress 
Luke A. Nicastro 
The Indo-Pacific occupies a central role in U.S. national strategy and hosts a large 
Analyst in U.S. Defense 
number of U.S. military forces. To enable the operation of these forces and accomplish 
Infrastructure Policy 
its strategic objectives, the United States maintains and uses at least 66 significant 
  
defense sites spread across the region. This defense infrastructure network performs and 
supports numerous military functions, including basing for military personnel and 
 
weapon systems; domain awareness and area defense; maintenance and repair; training and exercises, storage and 
prepositioning of materiel; and research, development, testing, and evaluation activities. Some Indo-Pacific 
installations are located in U.S. states, territories, or possessions (such as Hawaii and Guam); others are located in 
allied or partner nations (such as South Korea and Japan). In addition to installations directly owned or operated 
by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), the U.S. military also makes use of sites operated by allied or partner 
nations (such as the Philippines and Australia). 
DOD’s basing posture in the Indo-Pacific reflects in part the legacy of decisions made under the geopolitical and 
technological conditions of the Cold War. Following the Obama administration’s announcement of a “pivot to 
Asia,” the focus of U.S. strategy (and with it, regional defense infrastructure) shifted toward prevailing in 
competition against peer or near-peer rivals—particularly the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Since 2011, the 
United States has negotiated access to 12 new defense sites in the Philippines and Australia, constructed new 
installations in Japan and Guam, and expanded facilities at dozens of existing installations across the region. 
Congress’ role in these developments has included, for example, appropriating over $8.9 billion for new military 
construction projects at Indo-Pacific sites since fiscal year (FY) 2020 and establishing infrastructure 
improvements as an investment priority through the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI).  
Issues that Congress may consider include: (1) whether DOD’s current regional basing posture adequately 
supports strategic goals and operational requirements, and (2) whether the construction, maintenance, and 
utilization of defense infrastructure is appropriately resourced and managed. Within these issue areas, particular 
questions that may be raised in the 118th Congress include: 
•  What criteria should inform the placement of U.S. bases in the Indo-Pacific, and what role should 
Congress play in determining those criteria? 
•  How can DOD optimize the organization, operation, and resilience of its Indo-Pacific 
installations, and what assessment and oversight options are available to Congress? 
•  What is an appropriate level of investment for military construction, facilities sustainment, and 
related infrastructure activities? 
 
 
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 2 
Defining Defense Infrastructure ................................................................................................ 2 
Strategic and Operational Role ................................................................................................. 4 
Infrastructure and National Strategy ................................................................................... 4 
Infrastructure in a Contested Environment ......................................................................... 6 
Current U.S. Basing Posture ............................................................................................................ 7 
Geographic Overview ............................................................................................................. 10 
East of the International Date Line .......................................................................................... 11 
Alaska ................................................................................................................................ 11 
Washington ....................................................................................................................... 12 
California .......................................................................................................................... 12 
Hawaii ............................................................................................................................... 12 
West of the International Date Line ........................................................................................ 13 
Wake Island ....................................................................................................................... 14 
Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands .......................................................................... 14 
The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau ................................................................... 14 
Japan (Mainland) .............................................................................................................. 15 
Japan (Okinawa) ............................................................................................................... 15 
Republic of Korea ............................................................................................................. 16 
The Philippines ................................................................................................................. 16 
Singapore .......................................................................................................................... 16 
Australia ............................................................................................................................ 17 
British Indian Ocean Territory (Diego Garcia) ................................................................. 17 
Other Indo-Pacific Sites .................................................................................................... 17 
Issues for Congress ........................................................................................................................ 18 
Indo-Pacific Basing Posture .................................................................................................... 18 
Placement .......................................................................................................................... 18 
Organization ...................................................................................................................... 24 
Resilience .......................................................................................................................... 25 
Resourcing Regional Defense Infrastructure .......................................................................... 26 
Military Construction ........................................................................................................ 26 
Facilities Sustainment, Restoration, and Modernization................................................... 29 
Pacific Deterrence Initiative ............................................................................................. 30 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. The Indo-Pacific Region .................................................................................................. 2 
Figure 2. U.S. Defense Sites in the Indo-Pacific ............................................................................. 9 
Figure 3. U.S. Defense Sites, East of the International Date Line ................................................. 11 
Figure 4. U.S. Defense Sites, West of the International Date Line ............................................... 13 
Figure 5. Regional Missile Threat ................................................................................................. 20 
  
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Tables 
Table 1. Military Construction Appropriations, FY2020-23 ......................................................... 27 
  
Table A-1. U.S. Defense Sites in the Indo-Pacific ......................................................................... 44 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix A. Key Sites and Facilities ............................................................................................ 32 
Appendix B. Historical Overview of Indo-Pacific Defense Infrastructure ................................... 47 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 51 
 
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Introduction 
Encompassing the seas, islands, and littoral areas of the Pacific and Indian Oceans between the 
western coast of North America and India (see 
Figure 1), the Indo-Pacific region hosts more than 
375,000 U.S. military personnel using at least 66 distinct defense sites.1 The 2022 National 
Security Strategy describes the Indo-Pacific as the “epicenter of 21st century geopolitics,” and the 
2022 National Defense Strategy identifies attempts by the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to 
“refashion the Indo-Pacific region” as part of “the most comprehensive and serious challenge to 
U.S. national security.”2 Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin has described Indo-Pacific defense 
infrastructure as “provid[ing] us with the ability to position our troops forward in theater, so that 
we can deter much further forward.”3 
Given the role of defense infrastructure in undergirding U.S. military presence and power 
projection in the region, Congress has devoted considerable attention to Indo-Pacific defense 
infrastructure issues, and may choose to do so in the future. This report:  
•  defines the fundamental elements of infrastructure policy and basing posture;  
•  describes the historical development of Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure;  
•  characterizes the strategic and operational roles of Indo-Pacific defense sites; 
•  describes the current U.S. basing posture in Alaska, Washington, California, 
Hawaii, Wake Island, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, the Marshall Islands, 
Japan, the Republic of Korea, the Philippines, Singapore, Australia, and the 
British Indian Ocean Territory (Diego Garcia); and 
•  analyzes selected issues for congressional consideration.4 
 
1 The nomenclature and boundaries of the Indo-Pacific have changed over time. Previous presidential administrations 
and Congresses have used the terms ‘Asia-Pacific,’ the ‘East Asia-Pacific’, and the ‘Asian Pacific Rim’ in reference to 
regions which have sometimes excluded India and the west coast of North America. However, the 2022 Indo-Pacific 
Strategy of the United States broadly describes the Indo-Pacific as “stretch[ing] from [North America’s] Pacific 
coastline to the Indian Ocean,” and this report adopts this definition. Personnel figure from “About U.S. 
INDOPACOM,” U.S. INDOPACOM, at https://www.pacom.mil/About-usindopacom/; installations figure from CRS 
analysis of a variety of DOD documents, including the “FY2022 Base Structure Report.”  
2 “National Security Strategy”, The White House, October 2022, p. 37, available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-
content/uploads/2022/10/Biden-Harris-Administrations-National-Security-Strategy-10.2022.pdf; and “National 
Defense Strategy”, Department of Defense, October 2022, p. 4. available at https://media.defense.gov/2022/Oct/27/
2003103845/-1/-1/1/2022-national-defense-strategy-npr-mdr.pdf. 
3 Secretary Lloyd Austin, quoted in “House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense Hearing on Fiscal Year 2024 
Request for the Department of Defense,” March 23, 2023, available at 
https://appropriations.house.gov/legislation/hearings/budget-hearing-fiscal-year-2024-request-department-defense. 
4 All information in this report is derived from unclassified and publicly available sources.  
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Figure 1. The Indo-Pacific Region 
 
Source:
U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Figure 1. The Indo-Pacific Region 
 
Source: “U.S. INDOPACOM Area of Responsibility,” https://www.pacom.mil/About-USINDOPACOM/
USPACOM-Area-of-Responsibility/  
Notes: The continental United States, Canada, Mexico, and surrounding waters to a distance of 500 nautical 
miles from shore fall within the U.S. Northern Command AOR. See https://www.northcom.mil/About.  
Background 
Defining Defense Infrastructure 
Defense infrastructure consists of the buildings, permanent facilities, fixed systems, real property, 
and related assets owned, operated, or used by a nation’s government for military purposes. For 
DOD, the basic ‘unit’ of infrastructure is the 
installation, defined statutorily as any “base, camp, 
post, station, yard, center, or other activity under the jurisdiction…[or] operational control of the 
Secretary of a military department or the Secretary of Defense.”5 An installation or group of 
installations may serve as a 
base, which DOD defines as “a locality from which operations are 
projected or supported.”6 DOD classifies its overseas bases into two categories: 
enduring 
 
5 Title 10, 
United States Code §2801. Available at https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-
title10-section2801&num=0&edition=prelim.  
6 DOD also offers two additional definitions for 
base: 1) “An area or locality containing installations which provide 
logistics or other support”; 2) “Home airfield or home carrier”. See 
DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, 
Department of Defense, February 2023, p. 21. 
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locations, which support ongoing activities and interests on a permanent basis; and 
contingency 
locations, which provide temporary support for contingency operations.7  
Each military department (MILDEP) manages its infrastructure through its own organizational 
structures, policies, and programs, while the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment sets policy and exercises oversight of infrastructure-related matters across DOD.8 
The construction of new facilities is funded through Military Construction (MILCON) 
appropriations, while other infrastructure-related functions such as facilities sustainment, 
restoration, and modernization (FSRM) and base operations are funded through Operation and 
Maintenance (O&M) appropriations. 
Within the Indo-Pacific region, this report identifies and describes 66 military bases. Of these, 26 
are located to the east of the International Date Line (IDL), and 40 are located to the west of the 
IDL (se
e Figure 2). The majority of sites are within the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command 
(INDOPACOM) Area of Responsibility (AOR); also included are select locations in Alaska, 
Washington, and California that fall within the U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM) AOR 
but are located in the Indo-Pacific region as defined above and provide substantial support for 
regionally focused operations. 
Defense infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific performs or supports an array of military functions, 
including: 
•  
Basing of personnel and weapons systems. The most fundamental function of 
military installations is to provide space for servicemembers, weapons systems, 
and the resources necessary for their operation (e.g., food, fuel, munitions). 
Installations serve as work sites during both peacetime and wartime, enabling 
activities ranging from routine office work to launching combat missions. Larger 
installations often include housing for defense personnel and dependents, as well 
as morale, welfare and recreation (MWR) facilities.  
•  
Domain awareness and area defense. Beyond their role in hosting combat 
forces, fixed sites and facilities play a key role in detecting and countering threats 
to U.S. and allied forces and territory. Elements of Indo-Pacific defense 
infrastructure performing or supporting this mission include radar sites intended 
to detect incoming missiles or aircraft (e.g., Shariki Communications Site, Japan) 
and ground-based interceptor sites intended to neutralize incoming missiles (e.g., 
Ft. Greely, AK).9
 
•  
Maintenance and repair. The complexity of major weapons systems often 
requires specialized facilities and equipment to conduct maintenance, repair, and 
overhaul activities. These may include vehicle maintenance facilities, aircraft 
maintenance hangars, and naval shipyards. Examples of Indo-Pacific facilities 
performing maintenance and repair functions include the U.S. Naval Ship Repair 
 
7 Enduring locations are categorized based on the degree of U.S. presence and include main operating bases, forward 
operating sites, and cooperative security locations; contingency locations are categorized by intended use period and 
include initial (immediate need), temporary (1-24 months), and semipermanent (24-60 months) locations. See “Joint 
Publication 4-04, Contingency Basing,” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, January 2019, pp. vii-ix. Available at 
https://www.jcs.mil/Portals/36/Documents/Doctrine/pubs/jp4_04.pdf.  
8 For more information on installation management, see CRS In Focus IF11263, 
Defense Primer: Military Installations 
Management. 
9 See Jason Cutshaw, “Shariki Soldiers Defend Homeland, Allies,” U.S. Army, October 8, 2019, at 
https://www.army.mil/article/227673/shariki_soldiers_defend_homeland_allies and “U.S. Army Garrison Alaska – Fort 
Greely,” updated July 5, 2022, at https://home.army.mil/alaska/index.php/fort-greely. 
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Facility and Japan Regional Maintenance Center (part of Fleet Activities 
Yokosuka and Fleet Activities Sasebo, Japan).10 
 
•  
Training and exercises. U.S. and allied forces rely on regional training and 
exercise areas to maintain and enhance readiness, test operational plans and 
concepts, and demonstrate and improve interoperability. Examples of Indo-
Pacific sites used for training and exercises include the Jungle Warfare Training 
Center at Camp Gonsalves in Okinawa, Japan and the Black Rapids Training Site 
in Black Rapids, AK.11
 
•  
Storage, prepositioning, and distribution of equipment and supplies. To 
ensure logistical preparedness and enable rapid contingency responses, the U.S. 
military stores equipment and supplies at locations across the Indo-Pacific. These 
stocks are maintained in a variety of ways, including aboard regionally based 
maritime prepositioning ships (such as those homeported in Diego Garcia) and at 
facilities such as the Defense Logistics Agency’s Distribution Yokosuka in 
Japan.12
 
•  
Research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E). DOD uses a number 
of Indo-Pacific sites to develop and test new technologies and weapon systems, 
especially those requiring large amounts of air or ocean space. Examples of 
major RDT&E sites in the region include the Pacific Missile Range Facility, 
Barking Sands in Hawaii and the Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test 
Site in the Marshall Islands.13
 
Strategic and Operational Role 
Infrastructure and National Strategy 
A review of planning and policy documents issued by the White House and the Department of 
Defense since 2020 illustrates the importance of Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure to 
contemporary U.S. strategy. The 2021 Global Posture Review identified a need to “seek greater 
regional access for military partnership activities” and “enhance infrastructure in Australia and 
the Pacific Islands” to accomplish DOD’s goals of “contribut[ing] to regional stability and 
deter[ring] potential Chinese military aggression and threats from North Korea.”14 The 2022 
Indo-Pacific Strategy articulates four security-related U.S. objectives in the region: advancing a 
free and open region, building connections to and among regional partners, bolstering regional 
 
10 See “U.S. Naval Ship Repair Facility and Japan Regional Maintenance Center,” U.S. Navy, at 
https://www.srf.navy.mil/. 
11 See “Jungle Warfare Training Center,” 3rd Marine Division, at https://www.3rdmardiv.marines.mil/Units/Jungle-
Warfare-Training-Center/ and Staff Sgt. Christopher Dennis, “Northern Warfare Training Center preparing Soldiers to 
become Arctic Experts,” U.S. Army, November 24, 2021 at https://www.army.mil/article/252226/northern_warfare_
training_center_preparing_soldiers_to_become_arctic_experts.  
12 See “Maritime Prepositioning Ships,” U.S. Navy, updated October 13, 2021, at https://www.navy.mil/Resources/
Fact-Files/Display-FactFiles/Article/2223033/maritime-prepositioning-ships-t-ak-t-akr-and-t-aot/ and “DLA 
Distribution Yokosuka,” Defense Logistics Agency, at https://www.dla.mil/Distribution/Locations/Yokosuka/. 
13 See “Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands,” Commander, Navy Region Hawaii, at 
https://cnrh.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/PMRF-Barking-Sands/ and “Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test Site 
Fact Sheet,” U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command Public Affairs, at https://www.smdc.army.mil/Portals/
38/Documents/Publications/Fact_Sheets/RTS.pdf. 
14 “DOD Concludes 2021 Global Posture Review,” Department of Defense, November 29, 2021, at 
https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2855801/dod-concludes-2021-global-posture-review/. 
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security, and building resilience to transnational threats.15 Both the 2022 National Security 
Strategy (NSS) and National Defense Strategy (NDS) characterize PRC attempts to reshape the 
Indo-Pacific and the broader international order as the most acute military threat to U.S. interests, 
and DOD officials have stated in congressional testimony that “a Taiwan contingency is the 
pacing scenario” for U.S. planners.16 The NSS identifies a “strong and consistent defense 
presence” as a key contributor to regional peace and stability, while the NDS states that DOD will 
“reinforce and build out a resilient security architecture in the Indo-Pacific region.”17 The NDS 
also identifies the following four “top-level defense priorities.”  
•  Defending the homeland, paced to the growing multi-domain threat posed by 
the PRC. 
•  Deterring strategic attacks against the United States, allies, and partners. 
•  Deterring aggression, while being prepared to prevail in conflict when necessary.  
•  Building a resilient Joint Force and defense ecosystem.18 
Although only the Global Posture Review explicitly mentions defense infrastructure, the Indo-
Pacific Strategy, NSS, and NDS all emphasize the strategic centrality of a sustained, significant 
forward U.S. military presence; such a presence would rely heavily on a network of regional 
defense sites. The six broad functions of Indo-Pacific infrastructure described above—basing of 
personnel and weapons systems, domain awareness and area defense, maintenance and repair, 
support for training and exercises, storage, prepositioning, and distribution of equipment and 
supplies, and support for RDT&E activities—are essential enablers of the regional presence and 
operation of the U.S. military. This is especially true for naval and air forces, which require 
extensive and specialized facilities for storage, operation, maintenance, and repair.  
Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure also supports the four top-level defense priorities identified in 
the NDS. Sites in Japan, Alaska, California, and elsewhere host detection and defense capabilities 
intended to protect the U.S. homeland from both conventional and nuclear attack. To deter 
strategic attacks on the United States or its allies, DOD relies on Indo-Pacific sites to enable the 
“forward deployment of strategic bombers, dual-capable fighter aircraft, and nuclear weapons to 
region and globally… including ballistic missile submarine port visits and strategic bomber 
missions.”19 A robust regional basing posture may also help deter aggression by signaling 
enduring U.S. commitment to the region. Alternatively, some analysts have suggested that a large 
U.S. military footprint may intensify the security dilemma and thus make aggressive state 
behavior more likely).20 Finally, the scale and diversity of functions performed or supported by 
 
15 “Indo-Pacific Strategy of the United States,” The White House, February 2022, p. 7, at https://www.whitehouse.gov/
wp-content/uploads/2022/02/U.S.- Indo-Pacific-Strategy.pdf. 
16 “Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing on the Future of U.S. Policy on Taiwan,” December 8, 2021, p. 10. 
Committee print available at https://www.congress.gov/117/chrg/CHRG-117shrg47712/CHRG-117shrg47712.pdf. 
17 “2022 National Security Strategy”, p. 38 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Biden-Harris-
Administrations-National-Security-Strategy-10.2022.pdf and 
2022 National Defense Strategy, p. 14 
https://media.defense.gov/2022/Oct/27/2003103845/-1/-1/1/2022-NATIONAL-DEFENSE-STRATEGY-NPR-
MDR.PDF  
18 “2022 National Defense Strategy”, Department of Defense, October 2022 p. 7. Available at 
https://media.defense.gov/2022/oct/27/2003103845/-1/-1/1/2022-national-defense-strategy-npr-mdr.pdf . 
19 “2022 Nuclear Posture Review,” Department of Defense, October 2022, p. 15. Available at 
https://media.defense.gov/2022/oct/27/2003103845/-1/-1/1/2022-national-defense-strategy-npr-mdr.pdf 
20 For one interpretation of the role of overseas bases in deterring adversaries and assuring allies, see Raphael Cohen, 
“Why Overseas Bases Continue to Make Sense for the U.S.,” 
War on the Rocks, January 14, 2021,
 available at 
https://warontherocks.com/2021/01/why-overseas-military-bases-continue-to-make-sense-for-the-united-states/. For 
more on basing and the security dilemma, see “Placement” in the 
“Issues for Congress” section of this report.  
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Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure contributes to the broader priority of “building a resilient Joint 
Force and broader defense ecosystem.”21 
Infrastructure in a Contested Environment 
The operational role of defense infrastructure is susceptible to change should significant 
geopolitical shifts occur. Under current peacetime conditions, concentrating infrastructure near 
operational areas can yield a number of advantages. Clustering military facilities in a smaller 
number of sites is cheaper and creates organizational and logistical efficiencies, while locating 
bases near operational areas shortens transit and allows units to spend more time on station (this 
is particularly important for aircraft, given their range limitations).22  
However, in the event of a conflict between the United States and a regional power with 
significant air and missile capabilities, this same concentration and proximity would expose U.S. 
forces and facilities west of the International Date Line—especially those within the First and 
Second Island Chains—to a higher likelihood of successful adversary attack. Some analysts argue 
the most acute threat to U.S. infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific stems from the PRC’s missile 
capabilities, which the DOD’s 2022 Missile Defense Review characterizes in the following 
manner:  
Over  the  past  two  decades,  the  PRC  has  dramatically  advanced  its  development  of 
conventional  and  nuclear-armed  ballistic  and  hypersonic  missile  technologies  and 
capabilities,  through  intense  and  focused  investment,  development,  testing,  and 
deployments…  In  many  areas  such  as  conventional  ballistic  and  hypersonic  missile 
technologies, the PRC continues to close the gap with the United States, and will likely 
continue  to  develop  and  expand  its  missile  capabilities.  Increasingly  sophisticated  and 
proliferated space-based Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) networks, 
and improved Command and Control (C2) systems, have greatly improved the precision 
and accuracy of missile systems the PRC would employ to deter and counter U.S. forward 
presence and operations, especially in the Western Pacific region.23 
Although North Korean air and missile strike capabilities are considerably less developed than 
those of the PRC, DOD assesses that “North Korea continues to improve, expand, and diversify 
its conventional and nuclear missile capabilities, posing an increasing risk to the U.S. homeland 
and U.S. forces in theater, as well as regional allies and partners.”24 
To meet the demands of a contested environment, the Air Force, Army, Navy, and Marine Corps 
have all developed concepts for more distributed and diversified combat and logistical operations. 
The Air Force’s Agile Combat Employment (ACE), the Army’s Multi-Domain Operations 
(MDO), the Navy’s Distributed Maritime Operations (DMO), and the Marine Corps’ 
Expeditionary Advanced Basing Operations (EABO) all represent attempts to reduce the 
vulnerability of air, naval, and ground forces and increase their effectiveness against an adversary 
able to credibly disrupt, contest, or deny U.S. control of the battlespace.25 Although some aspects 
 
21 “2022 National Defense Strategy”, p. 7. 
22 For a more detailed discussion of aircraft range and basing considerations, see “Placement” in the 
“Issues for 
Congress” section of this report. 
23 “2022 Missile Defense Review,” Department of Defense, October 2022, p. 2. Available at https://media.defense.gov/
2022/Oct/27/2003103845/-1/-1/1/2022-national-defense-strategy-npr-mdr.pdf.  
24 Ibid., p. 3. 
25 For an analysis of regional ground forces that includes a more comprehensive description of the Army’s role, see 
CRS Report R47096, 
U.S. Ground Forces in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress, by Andrew 
Feickert.  
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of these three concepts are globally applicable, they are particularly oriented around potential 
Indo-Pacific contingencies. 
These distributed operational concepts represent a break from previous planning paradigms, and 
will make accordingly different use of defense infrastructure. The most radical change may come 
in the air domain. The Air Force describes ACE as a means of “shift[ing] operations from 
centralized physical infrastructures to a network of smaller, dispersed locations that can 
complicate adversary planning and provide more options for joint force commanders.”26 Some 
analysts have characterized this as a ‘hub-and-spokes’ approach, with an enduring location (e.g., 
an existing U.S. or allied airbase) serving as a hub for a number of contingency locations (e.g., 
civilian airports) between which aircraft can be shifted and from which sorties may be launched.27  
Although the infrastructure implications of the Army’s MDO and the Navy’s DMO are less 
sweeping, both entail decreasing the concentration of logistics and supply infrastructure. As part 
of MDO, the Army seeks to “disperse deployment and sustainment,” partly through “dispersed 
supply nodes operated by forward presence units;” while the Navy’s vision of a larger, more 
dispersed fleet operating over a wider area could increase the need for forward, distributed 
logistics and maintenance sites (including what the Navy terms “distributed expeditionary shore 
infrastructure” to provide forward damage repair, mobile construction, cargo handling, and 
medical services).28 From a ground forces perspective, the Marine Corps’ EABO similarly 
envisions the “employment of mobile, low-signature, persistent… naval expeditionary forces 
from a series of austere, temporary locations ashore or inshore within a contested or potentially 
contested maritime area.”29 Given the novel character of these operational concepts, their 
implementation may carry significant implications for regional basing posture, resourcing, and 
management.  
Current U.S. Basing Posture  
Within the Indo-Pacific region, the United States currently utilizes at least 66 significant defense 
sites spread across four U.S. states, three U.S. territories, eight countries, and one British overseas 
territory (see the map of U.S. defense sites provided in 
Figure 2 below; a more detailed 
description of each regional defense site is also provided in t
he Appendix A). These sites include:  
•  installations that are owned and operated by DOD (this arrangement is the norm 
in U.S. states and territories);  
•  installations that are operated by DOD but located in host nations (this 
arrangement is the norm in South Korea, Japan, and the British Indian Ocean 
Territory); and  
 
26 See “Agile Combat Employment,” U.S. Air Force, pp. 3-4, at https://www.doctrine.af.mil/portals/61/documents/
afdn_1-21/afdn%201-21%20ace.pdf .  
27 See Patrick Mills, 
et al., Building Agile Combat Support Competencies to Enable Evolving Adaptive Basing 
Concepts, (Santa Monica: RAND Corporation, 2020), p. 23, available at https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/
research_reports/rr4200/rr4200/rand_rr4200.pdf. 
28 See “The U.S. Army in Multi-Domain Operations 2028,” U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, December 6, 
2018, p. 37, at https://www.army.mil/article/243754/the_u_s_army_in_multi_domain_operations_2028; and “CNO 
Releases Navigation Plan 2022,” U.S. Navy Press Release, July 26, 2022, p. 10, available at https://media.defense.gov/
2022/jul/26/2003042389/-1/-1/1/navigation%20plan%202022_signed.pdf 
29 See 
Tentative Manual for Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations, Department of the Navy, Headquarters, U.S. 
Marine Corps, February 2021, pp. 1-3 and 1-4. Available at https://mca-marines.org/wp-content/uploads/tm-eabo-first-
edition-1.pdf.  
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•  installations that are used by DOD but owned and operated by host nations (this 
arrangement is the norm in the Philippines, Singapore, and Australia).  
Some analysts and policymakers also divide regional defense sites between those located east of 
the International Date Line (i.e., bases in Alaska, Washington, California, and Hawaii) and those 
located west of the International Date Line.30 This division is analytically useful because sites 
west of the International Date Line (IDL) may be within range of adversaries’ conventional strike 
capabilities and would likely be used to directly support forward combat operations in a 
contingency, while those east of the IDL would likely be less susceptible to opponents’ 
conventional strike capabilities.31 Moreover, because the majority of sites west of the IDL are 
located outside of the United States, their use entails diplomatic and management considerations 
(e.g., relations with host nation governments, the applicability of foreign legal regimes to land 
use) that do not exist for sites east of the IDL. 
 
 
 
30 See, for instance, the language establishing the Pacific Deterrence Initiative, which directs that activities improve 
force design and posture “primarily west of the International Date Line.” Section 1251, William M. (Mac) Thornberry 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 116-283).  
31 For more on the ranges and capabilities of adversary weapons, see discussion under 
“Placement” in the 
“Issues for 
Congress” section of this report. 
 
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 Figure 2. U.S. Defense Sites in the Indo-Pacific 
 
Source:
 
Figure 2. U.S. Defense Sites in the Indo-Pacific 
 
Source: CRS graphic based on analysis of DOD information, including the “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” installation and unit web pages, and related documentation. 
Notes: Naval Communications Station Harold E. Holt (located near Exmouth, Australia) is not depicted due to space constraints. 
 
CRS-9 
U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Geographic Overview 
Most of the Indo-Pacific region falls within the U.S. INDOPACOM AOR. This COCOM 
accordingly exercises oversight and theater-level direction over the strategic and operational 
functions of theater infrastructure (installations located in Alaska, Washington, and California fall 
within the U.S. NORTHCOM AOR).  
All of DOD’s uniformed service branches operate installations in the region. The Army, Navy, 
Marine Corps, and Air Force operate installations in the INDOPACOM AOR.  
Major Army installations are mainly concentrated in Alaska, Washington, Hawaii, South Korea, 
Japan, and the Republic of the Marshall Islands. These installations provide basing for ground 
units, missile detection and defense capabilities, and facilities for training, exercises, RDT&E 
activities, and logistical support.  
Major Navy installations are concentrated in Washington, California, Hawaii, Guam, Japan, and 
Diego Garcia. These installations provide basing and maintenance and repair capabilities for 
ships and aircraft, as well as facilities for training, exercises, RDT&E activities, and logistical 
support. Major Marine Corps installations are concentrated in California, Hawaii, Guam, and 
Japan. These installations provide basing for ground units and aircraft as well as facilities for 
training, exercises, and logistical support.  
Major Air Force installations are concentrated in Alaska, Washington, California, Hawaii, Guam, 
South Korea, and Japan. These installations provide aircraft basing and maintenance and repair 
capabilities, missile detection and defense capabilities, and facilities for logistical support. Space 
Force installations are located in Alaska and California. These installations provide space domain 
awareness, missile detection and defense, and space launch capabilities. 
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East of the International Date Line
U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
East of the International Date Line 
This report identifies 26 bases east of the IDL that support Indo-Pacific defense functions (see 
Figure 3 below). 
Figure 3. U.S. Defense Sites, East of the International Date Line 
 
Source: CRS graphic based on analysis of DOD information, including the “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” 
installation and unit web pages, and related documentation. 
Notes: Given space and scope constraints, this map, and the 
Appendix – Key Sites and Facilities, does not 
include several major installations located in California (e.g., Edwards AFB) because their functions are not 
directly or specifically oriented around support for operations in the Indo-Pacific theater. 
Alaska 
Alaska hosts Indo-Pacific-focused Army, Air Force, and Space Force installations, including Fort 
Wainwright, Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Eielson Air Force Base, and Clear Space Force 
station. These sites are used to base Army ground units (including the headquarters of the 11th 
Airborne Division and two of its combat brigades), Army aviation units (including two aviation 
battalions and Air Force aircraft (including fighter, command and control, and airlift squadrons). 
DOD also uses defense infrastructure in Alaska to detect and intercept missile threats to the 
continental United States and provide specialized training for cold weather and mountain 
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environments.32 Several open source press reports have also highlighted the role smaller Alaskan 
airfields may play in a regional contingency.33 
Washington 
Washington hosts Indo-Pacific-focused Army, Navy, and Air Force installations, including Joint 
Base Lewis-McChord, Naval Base Kitsap, and Fairchild Air Force Base. These sites are used to 
base Army units (including the 7th Infantry Division), Navy vessels (including two aircraft 
carriers, three submarine squadrons, and seven destroyers), and Navy and Air Force aircraft 
(including Navy electronic attack, maritime patrol, and reconnaissance squadrons and Air Force 
airlift and refueling squadrons). DOD also uses defense infrastructure in Washington to maintain 
and repair naval vessels, store and maintain submarine-based nuclear weapons, store and 
distribute fuel, and train ground and air units.34 
California 
California hosts Indo-Pacific-focused Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force 
installations, including Naval Base San Diego, Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Travis Air 
Force Base, and Vandenberg Space Force Base. These sites are used to base Navy vessels and 
specialized units (including most of the Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, one submarine 
squadron, four Sea-Air-Land (SEAL) teams, and the 30th Naval Construction Regiment), Marine 
Corps ground units (including the 1st Marine Division and the 1st Marine Logistics Group), Navy, 
Marine Corps, and Air Force aircraft (including: Navy fighter, command and control, and 
helicopter squadrons; Marine Corps fighter, tiltrotor, and helicopter squadrons; and Air Force 
reconnaissance, refueling, and airlift squadrons), and a Space Force Delta. DOD also uses defense 
infrastructure in California for training and large-scale RDT&E activities, to conduct space 
launches, and provide ballistic missile defense.35  
Hawaii 
Hawaii hosts Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force installations, including Schofield 
Barracks, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, and Marine Corps Base Hawaii. These sites are used 
to base Army ground units (including the 25th Infantry Division), Navy vessels (including 
destroyers, cruisers, and attack submarines), Marine Corps ground units (including the 3rd Marine 
Littoral Regiment), and Marine Corps, and Air Force aircraft (including Air Force fighter and 
airlift squadrons and Marine Corps helicopter, tiltrotor, and UAV squadrons). DOD also uses sites 
in Hawaii to conduct training and large-scale RDT&E activities and store and distribute fuel.36 
Defense infrastructure in Hawaii has been the subject of attention from policymakers and analysts 
in part because of a highly publicized leak from the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Facility in November 
2021. Subsequent to the reported leak and defueling plan, the condition of facilities in the state 
 
32 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Alaska.” 
33 See Tyler Rogoway, “Special Ops Train To Defend Strategic Aleutian Islands Radar Outpost During All-Out War,” 
The Drive, October 18, 2021, at https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/42783/special-ops-train-to-defend-strategic-
radar-outpost-in-the-aleutian-islands-during-all-out-war and David Axe, “The U.S. Air Force has a Base Right Next to 
Russia,” 
Forbes, October 23, 2021, at https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2021/10/23/the-us-air-force-has-a-base-
right-next-to-russia-it-just-sent-f-16s-to-visit/ 
34 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Washington.” 
35 For more information and sources, see Ibid., “California.” 
36 For more information and sources, see Ibid., “Hawaii.” Hawaii’s fuel storage functions are currently undergoing 
major shifts as the Red Hill Bulk Storage Facility is defueled (see “Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Site in Hawaii,” 
Environmental Protection Agency, at https://www.epa.gov/red-hill). 
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
has featured in a November 2022 report on Army infrastructure by the Congressional Budget 
Office (CBO).37  
West of the International Date Line 
This report identifies 40 bases west of the IDL that support Indo-Pacific defense functions (see 
Figure 4 below).  
Figure 4. U.S. Defense Sites, West of the International Date Line 
 
Source: CRS graphic based on analysis of DOD information, including the “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” 
installation and unit web pages, and related documentation. 
Notes: Naval Communications Station Harold E. Holt is not depicted due to space constraints. 
 
37 CBO assessed the Army’s deferred maintenance backlog and found that “Fort Bragg in North Carolina and U.S. 
Army Garrison Hawaii accounted for significantly higher amounts of deferred maintenance costs than other Army 
bases.” See “The Army’s Costs to Eliminate Its Deferred Maintenance Backlog and to Renovate and Modernize Its 
Buildings,” Congressional Budget Office, November 2022, p. 11, available at https://www.cbo.gov/publication/58830. 
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Wake Island 
Wake Island (an unincorporated U.S. territory) hosts Wake Island Airfield, an Air Force 
installation that supports trans-Pacific military air traffic as well as missile test activities.38  
Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands 
Guam (an unincorporated U.S. territory) hosts Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force installations, 
including Naval Base Guam, Marine Corps Base Camp Blaz, and Andersen Air Force Base (all 
managed jointly as Joint Region Marianas). These sites are used to base Army and Marine Corps 
ground units (including an Army Terminal High Altitude Area Defense Battery and future Marine 
ground units), Navy vessels (including one submarine squadron), and rotational deployments of 
Air Force bomber aircraft.39 Since 2011, Guam has attracted a considerable amount of attention 
from policymakers and analysts as a strategic hub for U.S. military operations in the Indo-Pacific. 
DOD’s infrastructure investments have undergone a significant increase over the past decade.40 
The Northern Mariana Islands (a U.S. commonwealth and unincorporated territory) hosts a 
number of sites that are used to support training and exercise activities, including the Marianas 
Island Range Complex and Tinian International Airport.41 DOD is also constructing new 
infrastructure to allow increased usage of the Northern Mariana Islands in support of ACE and 
related requirements.42 
The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau 
The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau (commonly referred to as the Compacts of Free 
Association, or COFA, states) host an Army installation used for missile defense-focused RDT&E 
activities (Army Garrison-Kwajalein Atoll) and a site to support the planned installation of an Air 
 
38 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Wake Island.” 
39 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Guam and the Northern Marianas.” 
40 
See “Congress funds the establishment and sustainment of defense infrastructure through the 
Military Construction and Operation and Maintenance appropriations titles. In addition, 
beginning in FY2021, Congress has authorized a particular set of Indo-Pacific defense 
infrastructure appropriations as part of the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI), a group of 
regionally-focused defense investments and activities typically included as part of the annual 
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).  
Military Construction” in the 
“Issues for Congress” section of this report. 
41 See reporting on recent military exercises on Tinian in Damien Cave, “An Anxious Asia Arms for a War It Hopes to 
Prevent,” 
New York Times, March 25, 2023 and Chris Gordon, “F-22s Deploy to Tinian for First Time as Part of ACE 
Exercise,” 
Air & Space Forces Magazine, March 3, 2023 at https://www.airandspaceforces.com/photos-f-22s-deploy-
to-tinian-for-first-time-as-part-of-ace-exercise/.  
42 In FY2023, Congress appropriated approximately $150 million for military construction in the 
Northern Mariana Islands. 
See “Congress funds the establishment and sustainment of defense 
infrastructure through the Military Construction and Operation and Maintenance appropriations 
titles. In addition, beginning in FY2021, Congress has authorized a particular set of Indo-Pacific 
defense infrastructure appropriations as part of the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI), a group of 
regionally-focused defense investments and activities typically included as part of the annual 
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).  
Military Construction” in the 
“Issues for Congress” section of this report.  
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Force radar system.43 Some defense analysts and policymakers hold that the importance of the 
COFA states is increasing, due to their strategic location and potential to support U.S. capabilities 
in the event of a regional contingency.44  
Japan (Mainland) 
Mainland Japan hosts Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force installations, including Camp 
Zama, Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, and Yokota Air Base. These 
sites are used to base and support Army ground and aviation units, Navy vessels (including an 
aircraft carrier, destroyers, cruisers, and amphibious assault ships), and Navy, Marine Corps, and 
Air Force fighter, electronic attack, command and control, tanker, and airlift aircraft. DOD also 
uses defense infrastructure in mainland Japan to detect and intercept missile threats, maintain and 
repair surface warships and submarines, and conduct training and exercises. 45 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Okinawa is a Japanese prefecture consisting of approximately 49 inhabited islands located about 
400 miles southwest of mainland Japan.46 It hosts Army, Marine Corps, and Air Force 
installations, including Army Garrison Okinawa, Marine Corps Base Camp Butler, and Kadena 
Air Base. These sites are used to base and support Marine Corps units (including the III Marine 
Expeditionary Force) and Marine Corps and Air Force fighter, tilt-rotor, rotary wing, airlift, and 
aerial refueling aircraft. DOD also uses sites on Okinawa to conduct training and exercises 
specific to jungle environments and support fuel storage and distribution functions.47 DOD 
installations on Okinawa also represent the closest U.S.-operated bases to Taiwan and the South 
China Sea, both possible operational areas in a potential conflict with the PRC.48 
According to the Okinawan Prefectural Government, as of 2018 approximately 70% of the “areas 
exclusively used by U.S. forces” in Japan were located on Okinawa.49 The large U.S. defense 
infrastructure footprint on Okinawa has generated significant controversy among sections of the 
Okinawan public, and—pursuant to an agreement between the U.S. and Japanese governments—
 
43 The Compacts of Free Association establish relationships between these three nations and the United States. They 
provide for, among other things, U.S. responsibilities for COFA states’ external defense and the establishment of U.S. 
military bases within COFA states’ territories. For more information on the COFA relationships, see CRS In Focus 
IF12194, 
The Compacts of Free Association, by Thomas Lum. For more information and sources on defense 
infrastructure, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau.” 
44 See, for instance, Angela Smith, “US Compacts of Free Association Are Key to Deterring a Taiwan Contingency,” 
The Diplomat, August 9, 2022 at https://thediplomat.com/2022/08/us-compacts-of-free-association-are-key-to-
deterring-a-taiwan-contingency/ and Jay Price, “As its relationship with China worsens, the US is making deals with 
smaller Pacific nations,” 
KPBS, March 13, 2023, at https://www.kpbs.org/news/national/2023/03/13/relationship-china-
worsens-us-making-deals-smaller-pacific-nations . 
45 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Japan (Mainland).” 
46 The Okinawan Prefectural Government reports that the prefecture spans 563,647 acres, representing only 0.6% of 
Japan’s total land area. 
47 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Japan (Okinawa).” 
48 From an operational perspective, this is particularly important for the employment of air power. See discussion in 
“Placement” in the “Issues for Congress” section of this report.  
49 “What Okinawa Wants You to Understand about the U.S. Military Bases,” Okinawa Prefectural Government, March 
2018, available at https://dc-office.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/E-all.pdf.  
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DOD is in the process of shifting thousands of Marines from bases in Okinawa to Guam’s Marine 
Corps Camp Blaz.50  
Republic of Korea 
The Republic of Korea (ROK; also referred to as South Korea) hosts Army, Navy, Marine Corps, 
and Air Force installations, including Camp Humphreys, Fleet Activities Chinhae, Marine Corps 
Installation Camp Mujuk, and Osan Air Base. These sites are used to base and support Army units 
(including the 2nd Infantry Division/ROK-U.S. Combined Division) and Air Force fighter, 
reconnaissance, and attack aircraft. As noted above, following a 2004 bilateral agreement 
between the ROK and U.S. governments, DOD installations are mainly concentrated around two 
‘hubs’: the first centers on the city of Pyeongtaek and includes Camp Humphreys and Osan Air 
Base, while the second centers on Daegu and includes USAG-Daegu, Fleet Activities Chinhae, 
and MCI Camp Mujuk.51 Unlike in other locations west of the IDL, U.S. basing posture in South 
Korean is primarily organized around deterring and resisting potential DPRK aggression. 
The Philippines 
The Philippines allows the U.S. DOD to deploy military forces at nine Philippine defense sites 
spread across the country. This access is governed by the Enhanced Defense Cooperation 
Agreement (EDCA), a bilateral agreement between the Philippines and the United States initially 
signed in 2014 and expanded in 2023.52 Per the EDCA text, U.S. access is authorized “on a 
rotational basis, as mutually determined;” authorized activities U.S. forces may conduct include 
“security cooperation exercises; joint and combined training activities; humanitarian assistance 
and disaster relief activities; and such other activities as may be agreed upon.”53 The increasing 
U.S. defense presence in the Philippines has generated some controversy among the Philippine 
public and certain elected officials (particularly the extent to which it is perceived to be directed 
against the PRC).54 
Singapore 
Singapore allows the U.S. DOD to maintain a small presence known as Navy Region Center 
Singapore primarily to provide logistical support for visiting surface warships. This access is 
governed by the 1990 Memorandum of Understanding Regarding United States Use of Facilities 
in Singapore, a bilateral agreement between Singapore and the United States initially signed in 
 
50 See “Agreement between the Government of Japan and the Government of the United States of America Concerning 
the Implementation of the Relocation of III Marine Expeditionary Force Personnel and Their Dependents From 
Okinawa to Guam,” 2009, available at https://www.mofa.go.jp/region/n-america/us/security/agree0902.pdf. See also 
CRS In Focus IF10672, 
U.S. Military Presence on Okinawa and Realignment to Guam. For a recent press report 
covering this dynamic, see Rachel Oswald, “As China threatens Taiwan, Okinawa braces for war,” 
Roll Call, October 
19, 2022, at https://rollcall.com/2022/10/19/as-china-threatens-taiwan-okinawa-braces-for-war/.  
51 See p. 8 in the “
Error! Reference source not found.” section of this report. Terence Roehrig, “South Korea: An A
lliance in Transition,” in Lord and Erickson (ed.) 
Rebalancing U.S. Forces, pp.74-75. For more information and 
sources, see
 Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Republic of Korea.” 
52 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “The Philippines.” 
53 “Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Republic of the 
Philippines on Enhanced Defense Cooperation,” signed April 28, 2014, available at https://www.state.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2019/02/14-625-Philippines-Defense-Cooperation.pdf.  
54 See, for instance, Richard Heydarian, “U.S.-Philippines Defence Cooperation Hits Turbulence Amid Domestic 
Opposition,” 
South China Morning Post, April 10, 2023, at https://www.scmp.com/comment/opinion/article/3216217/
us-philippines-defence-cooperation-hits-turbulence-amid-domestic-opposition. See also further discussion in the 
“Placement” subsection of this report’s “Issues for Congress” section.  
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1990 and renewed in 2019.55 Changi Naval Base and Sembawang shipyard are the largest 
Singaporean support facilities to which the U.S. Navy has access, while Paya Lebar Air Base 
hosts rotational U.S. Air Force personnel and aircraft.56 
Australia 
Australia allows the U.S. DOD to rotationally deploy a number of ground and air forces to bases 
within the country, including a rotational U.S. Marine Air Ground Task Force known as Marine 
Rotational Force-Darwin (at Royal Australian Air Force Base Darwin and Robertson Barracks) 
and rotational deployments of U.S. Air Force bombers and fighters under the Enhanced Air 
Cooperation (EAC) initiative.57 Additionally, as part of the Australia-United Kingdom-U.S. 
(AUKUS) pact, U.S. and U.K. nuclear-powered submarines will begin rotational deployments to 
Australia’s HMAS 
Stirling naval base in 2027 (U.S. submarines will also reportedly increase the 
frequency of visits to this base beginning in 2023). 58 DOD’s increasing presence in Australia is 
widely seen as a response to worsening relations between U.S.-aligned countries and the PRC.59  
British Indian Ocean Territory (Diego Garcia) 
The British Indian Ocean Territory (commonly referred to as Diego Garcia; a British Overseas 
Territory) hosts Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia, a U.S. Navy-operated installation that 
primarily provides logistical support for U.S. and allied forces operating in and around the 
Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. The site that would become Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia 
was established by a secret bilateral agreement reached between the U.S. and British governments 
in 1966; it has been the subject of some controversy owing to the claims of indigenous Chagos 
Islanders forcibly displaced during the base’s construction.60 
Other Indo-Pacific Sites 
In addition to the locations described above, DOD has used a number of other sites west of the 
International Date Line to base and support military forces. For example, Thailand’s location and 
relations with the United States have led U.S. forces to use a number of Thai defense sites on a 
rotational basis (e.g., U-Tapao Royal Thai Navy Air Field).61 U.S. Navy vessels also routinely 
 
55 “U.S. Security Cooperation With Singapore,” U.S. Department of State, March 28, 2023, at https://www.state.gov/u-
s-security-cooperation-with-singapore/.  
56 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Singapore.” 
57 See “United States Force Posture Initiatives,” Australian Department of Defence, at 
https://www.defence.gov.au/programs-initiatives/united-states-force-posture-initiatives.  
58 David Weber, “AUKUS deal: Jim Chalmers announces $8 billion HMAS Stirling naval base expansion,” 
Australian 
Broadcasting Corporation, March 14, 2023 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-03-14/aukus-deal-jim-chalmers-hmas-
stirling-expansion-perth-wa/102092058 . 
59 For more information and sources, se
e Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “Australia.” 
60 See “Exchange of Notes Constituting an Agreement concerning the Availability for Defence Purposes of the British 
Indian Ocean Territory,” December 30, 1966, available online at https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/
Volume%20866/volume-866-I-8737-English.pdf . For a recent summary of Chagossian claims against the U.S. and UK 
governments, see “That’s When the Nightmare Started: UK and US Forced Displacement of the Chagossians and 
Ongoing Colonial Crimes,” Human Rights Watch, February 15, 2023, at https://www.hrw.org/report/2023/02/15/thats-
when-nightmare-started/uk-and-us-forced-displacement-chagossians-and. For more information and sources, see 
Appendix A – Key Sites and Facilities, “British Indian Ocean Territory.”  
61 See Jim Garamone, “U.S., Thai Defense Leaders Look to Future in Indo-Pacific,” Department of Defense, May 13, 
2022, at https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/3030852/us-thai-defense-leaders-look-to-future-
in-indo-pacific/.  
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conduct visits at a wide array of Indo-Pacific regional ports.62 Some analysts have also speculated 
that, in the event of PRC military action against Taiwan, the United States may base significant 
forces in Taiwan.63  
Issues for Congress 
Indo-Pacific Basing Posture 
Congress may consider the degree to which the current U.S. basing posture—that is, the 
geographical and functional distribution of bases in the Indo-Pacific region—supports strategic 
priorities and operational requirements, under both peacetime and wartime conditions. Despite 
considerable geopolitical, technological, and doctrinal change in recent years, much of DOD’s 
basing posture remains, at least in part, the product of decisions made decades previously. 
According to some observers, this has led to a misalignment between regional defense 
infrastructure and the demands of the current and future threat environment. As one analyst 
framed the problem in a 2022 editorial: 
After more than a decade of promising to improve the survivability of U.S. forces in the 
Indo-Pacific, the department has little to show for it. In part, ongoing wars in the Middle 
East have inhibited efforts to rebalance the American military footprint to the Pacific, as 
has the need to obtain the consent of nations that host American forces. Additionally, the 
services  prefer  to  fund  their  priority  weapons,  and  their  reticence  to  spend  money  on 
supporting  infrastructure  is  compounded  when  uncertainty  about  future  base  access  is 
factored  in.  Finally,  the  Defense  Department  has  yet  to  break  with  its  past  approach  to 
power projection and to fully flesh out new operational concepts and ways of fighting.64  
The basing posture issues for Congress may be divided into three distinct but related questions: 
1.  Where should U.S. bases be maintained or established? 
2.  To what extent should DOD distribute—or consolidate—regional basing 
functions? 
3.  How resilient do U.S. bases need to be, and how can DOD improve infrastructure 
resilience (to the extent it falls short of congressional goals)? 
Placement 
A fundamental question with respect to basing posture is that of placement—to achieve national 
strategic aims and meet attendant operational requirements, where in the Indo-Pacific should the 
United States operate military bases? In addressing this question, Congress may weigh the 
tradeoffs between the advantages that proximity to likely operational areas could create for U.S. 
 
62 See “CNO: Port visits expanding across Asia-Pacific,” 
Navy Times, September 24, 2014, at 
https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2014/09/24/cno-port-visits-expanding-across-asia-pacific/. 
63 As of this writing, DOD is reportedly planning to increase the number of U.S. military personnel in Taiwan from 
approximately 30 to 100-200. Nancy Youssef and Gordon Lubold, “U.S. to Expand Troop Presence in Taiwan for 
Training Against China Threat,” 
Wall Street Journal, February 23, 2023 at https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-to-
expand-troop-presence-in-taiwan-for-training-against-china-threat-62198a83. For advocacy of U.S. defense sites in 
Taiwan, see Dominick Shortall and Jesse Johns, “Once unimaginable, some now debating return of U.S. forces to 
Taiwan,” 
Japan Times, October 28, 2020, at https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/10/28/asia-pacific/us-forces-
taiwan-china/.  
64 Stacie Pettyjohn, “Spiking the Problem: Developing a Resilient Posture in the Indo-Pacific,” 
War on the Rocks, 
January 2022, at https://warontherocks.com/2022/01/spiking-the-problem-developing-a-resilient-posture-in-the-indo-
pacific-with-passive-defenses/.  
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combat forces (especially air and naval), on the one hand, and the vulnerability such proximity 
could produce for U.S. forces and infrastructure, on the other. Congress may also consider factors 
such as the political and military reliability of countries hosting U.S. bases, as well as the 
potential for significant posture changes to affect regional stability. 
Although the President, as Commander-in-Chief, is ultimately responsible for the establishment 
and disestablishment of military bases, Congress may legislate requirements, restrictions, and 
other guidance (for instance, Congress has played a major role in shaping the Base Realignment 
and Closure, or BRAC, process).65 Historically, this has tended to occur as part of the annual 
defense authorization and appropriations processes. 
As described above, locating military bases close to likely operational areas reduces the transit 
time and resources required for U.S. forces to conduct combat operations in those areas. This is 
especially significant for fighter and bomber aircraft, as their combat radii (the effective distance 
an aircraft can fly, fight, and return) are constrained by the amount of fuel they can carry.66 Thus, 
sites such as Okinawa’s Kadena Air Base (located approximately 400 miles from Taiwan, well 
within the combat radius of relevant U.S. fighter and bomber aircraft) may be attractive to 
military planners as convenient bases for air operations. However, the geography of the Indo-
Pacific is such that proximity to the areas of a prospective contingency—Taiwan being the most 
prominent, but also areas of the South China Sea, the Korean peninsula, and parts of the Indian 
Ocean—entails proximity to adversary air and missile strike capabilities. As 
Figure 5 below 
illustrates, South Korea, most of Japan, and the northern portions of the Philippines may be 
within range of PRC and DPRK short or medium-range ballistic missiles, while Guam and parts 
of Japan, the Philippines, and Australia may be within range of PRC intermediate-range ballistic 
missiles. 
 
65 See CRS Report R45705, 
Base Closure and Realignment (BRAC): Background and Issues for Congress and CRS 
Report R43102, 
“Fast Track” Legislative Procedures Governing Congressional Consideration of a Defense Base 
Closure and Realignment (BRAC) Commission Report, by Christopher M. Davis for more information. 
66 Combat radii differ by aircraft and mission type. For example, according to 
DVIDS, the F-35A has a combat radius 
of 590 nautical miles, while
 an Air Force fact sheet reports that “in an air-to-surface role, the F-16 [radius is] more than 
500 miles.” See “F-35A Combat Radius Lightning Flash Fact,” 
Defense Visual Information Distribution Service, May 
10, 2022, at https://www.dvidshub.net/video/846194/f-35a-combat-radius-lightning-flash-fact# and “F-16 Fighting 
Falcon,” U.S. Air Force at https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/104505/f-16-fighting-falcon/  
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Figure 5. Regional Missile Threat
U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Figure 5. Regional Missile Threat 
Notional ranges of PRC ballistic missiles and U.S. regional defense sites 
 
Source: CRS graphic based on PRC missile data and analysis from “Missiles of China,” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies Missile Threat Project, April 12, 2021, at https://missilethreat.csis.org/country/china and 
CRS analysis of DOD basing data.  
Notes: Ranges are notional. 
Some of the consequences of regional infrastructure placement for U.S. military performance are 
explicitly examined in two studies of a hypothetical U.S.-China war. In an August 2022 report 
(“Can China Take Taiwan? Why No One Really Knows”), Brookings Institute analyst Michael 
O’Hanlon evaluated whether the PRC could successfully conquer Taiwan. Using open-source 
data and estimates on Chinese and U.S. orders of battle, weapons capabilities and inventories, and 
doctrine, O’Hanlon modelled two scenarios for a U.S.-China conflict over Taiwan: “a maritime 
fight centered on submarines” (Scenario 1); and “a broader subregional war” (Scenario 2). In both 
scenarios, regional U.S. bases play a role. In Scenario 1, O’Hanlon speculates that air bases in 
Japan may be used to host anti-submarine (ASW) and fighter aircraft for use against Chinese 
maritime and air platforms enforcing a blockade of Taiwan, while in Scenario 2, O’Hanlon 
models the use of U.S. and allied bases in Japan and Guam to launch air and naval operations 
against Chinese maritime, air, and ground platforms, personnel, and infrastructure in and around 
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Taiwan and mainland China.67 Given their role in enabling U.S. combat operations, these bases 
would likely come under Chinese attack—especially in a situation resembling O’Hanlon’s 
Scenario 2, which sees aircraft and land-based missiles striking U.S. installations in mainland 
Japan, Okinawa, and Guam, with a high probability of destroying or damaging most 
infrastructure targets.68 
In a January 2023 report, three analysts at the Center for Strategic and International Studies 
(CSIS) summarized the results and implications of a wargame simulating the initial phases of a 
U.S.-China war precipitated by an invasion of Taiwan.69 Using open-source data and estimates, 
CSIS developed and ran 24 iterations of a wargame under “base case,” “pessimistic,” and 
“optimistic” parameters. As in the Brookings study described above, the U.S. sought to support 
air and naval operations in and around Taiwan and mainland China from bases in Japan and 
Guam, and the PRC sought to deny the use of those bases through kinetic attacks. In most of the 
“pessimistic” and “base case” iterations, U.S. air bases in mainland Japan, Okinawa, and Guam 
were subjected to effective Chinese missile attacks, damaging infrastructure and causing the 
majority of U.S. combat aircraft losses.70 
The debate over basing fighter aircraft at Kadena Air Base (AB) on Okinawa provides another 
illustration of this dynamic. In October 2022, the Air Force announced that it would begin a 
phased withdrawal of two F-15C and D fighter squadrons formerly based at Kadena AB.71 The 
withdrawal, to be accomplished in phases over a two-year period, faced criticisms from some 
analysts concerned the move might undermine regional deterrence (several Members of Congress 
delivered a letter to the Secretary of Defense alleging the move would create a “tangible 
reduction in American forward combat power”).72 However, others have defended the move, 
arguing that Chinese strike capabilities make Kadena “uniquely ill-positioned for permanently 
basing large numbers of American aircraft” and instead advocating for a more geographically 
dispersed and rotational approach to regional basing.73  
Congress may assess the tradeoffs between the proximity of defense sites to likely operational 
areas and the resultant vulnerability to adversary attack. This assessment could in turn inform 
congressional direction to DOD regarding the implementation of basing posture, as well as 
congressional prioritization of defense outlays. 
In considering the question of base placement, Congress may also note that DOD’s regional 
basing posture—along with its broader force posture—has remained broadly consistent over the 
 
67 Michael O’Hanlon, “Can China Take Taiwan? Why No One Really Knows,” Brookings Institute, August 2022, pp. 
24-26, at https://www.brookings.edu/research/can-china-take-taiwan-why-no-one-really-knows/?amp.  
68 O’Hanlon also argues that the escalation of a crisis from the limited maritime conflict envisioned in Scenario 1 to the 
expanded war envisioned in Scenario 2 might come about as a result of PRC attacks on U.S. bases: “If [China’s] 
leaders saw the United States using air bases in places like Okinawa to fly sorties (for example, with P-3 and P-8 
aircraft) that were killing Chinese submariners and to establish air dominance (for example, with F-22 fighters)…there 
would be powerful incentives to strike at the origins of those flights.” O’Hanlon, “Can China Take Taiwan,” p. 20. 
69 Mark Cancian, Matthew Cancian, and Eric Heginbotham, 
The First Battle of the Next War (Washington, D.C.: 
Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2023) available at https://csis.org/analysis/first-battle-next-war-
wargaming-chinese-invasion-taiwan. 
70 Ibid. pp. 83-115. 
71 Stephen Losey, “Air Force to replace Kadena F-15 squadrons,” 
Defense News, October 27, 2022, at 
https://www.defensenews.com/air/2022/10/27/air-force-to-replace-kadena-f-15-squadrons-with-rotational-fighters. 
72 Letter available at https://www.rubio.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/afe5d67d-0f67-42e3-ac04-a2a23ecbb685/
D9D9779A4044CC4A162EC74FD42454A9. 11.01.22--rubio-et-al-letter-to-secdef-re-okinawa-f-15s.pdf  
73 Stacie Pettyjohn, Andrew Metrick, and Becca Wasser. “The Kadena Conundrum,” 
War on the Rocks, December 1, 
2022, at https://www.warontherocks.com/2022/12/the-kadena-conundrum-developing-a-resilient-indo-pacific-posture. 
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past three decades.74 As the Brookings Institute’s Andrew Yeo and Michael O’Hanlon observe in 
a February 2023 report: 
Broadly speaking, the U.S. force posture in the Pacific looks very much like it did in the 
mid-1990s,  with  the  preponderance  of  America’s  100,000-strong  troop  presence  there 
concentrated in Japan and South Korea. Since that time, the only major changes involving 
thousands of forces have been the reduction in the U.S. Army presence in South Korea by 
about 10,000 in the early 2000s and the more recent gradual shift of about half of the 18,000 
U.S. Marines on Okinawa to Guam.75 
Although the number and distribution of DOD-operated installations has remained broadly 
consistent since the mid-1990s, one way that the United States has sought to expand its regional 
infrastructure footprint has been through the negotiation of access to bases operated by allied or 
partner governments (an approach sometimes termed ‘places not bases’).76 Since 2011, DOD has 
increased regional deployments to Australian sites (particularly in the Northern Territory and 
Queensland) and, under the U.S.-Philippines Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement 
(EDCA), secured access on a rotational basis to nine Philippine military bases (mainly on the 
northern islands of Luzon and Palawan).77 Despite this expansion, some observers have identified 
areas of the Indo-Pacific where U.S. presence and access could be increased. Yeo and O’Hanlon 
write that “a particularly large hole in U.S. force posture exists in Southeast and South Asia where 
basing access agreements remain limited,” and identify the pursuit of basing rights in the area as a 
potential option for policymakers.78  
A related issue for congressional consideration is the degree to which the United States may rely 
upon countries hosting U.S. military bases to allow access in the event of a contingency. For 
example, the importance of Philippine bases to U.S. plans for a potential conflict has grown 
considerably over the past decade—so much so that, as former PACOM commander Admiral 
(Ret.) Harry Harris stated in 2023 before the House Armed Services Committee, “it's hard to 
imagine a fight with the PRC without being able to use bases on the Philippines.”79 Statements by 
Philippine officials in 2022 and 2023—including President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr.—suggest that 
permission for U.S. forces to operate from these bases would be granted only under certain 
circumstances, and that DOD will not be permitted to undertake “offensive action” from EDCA 
sites.80 
 
74 Although neither “force posture” nor “basing posture” are statutorily or doctrinally defined, “force posture” is used in 
this report to denote the distribution and disposition of all elements of military power, while “basing posture” is used to 
denote the distribution and disposition of fixed facilities owned, operated, or used by DOD for military purposes. 
75 Andrew Yeo and Michael E. O’Hanlon, “Geostrategic Competition and Overseas Basing in East Asia and the First 
Island Chain,” Brookings Institute, February 2023, p. 2, at https://www.brookings.edu/research/geostrategic-
competition-and-overseas-basing-in-east-asia-and-the-first-island-chain/  
76 See Colonel Michael W. Pietrucha, “Making Places, Not Bases a Reality,” 
U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Vol. 
141, October 2015, at
 https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2015/october/making-places-not-bases-reality . 
77 See David Vergun, “New EDCA Sites Named in the Philippines,” Department of Defense, April 3, 2023, at 
https://www.defense.gov/News/News-stories/article/article/3350297/new-edca-sites-named-in-the-philippines/. 
78 Yeo and O’Hanlon also outline the drawbacks such expansion might entail, discussed later in this subsection. 
“Geostrategic Competition and Overseas Basing in East Asia,” p. 3. 
79 “House Armed Services Committee Holds Hearing on Chinese Threats to U.S. National Defense,” February 7, 2023. 
Available online at https://armedservices.house.gov/hearings/full-committee-hearing-pressing-threat-chinese-
communist-party-us-national-defense.  
80 See Kristina Maralit, “Marcos rules out offensive actions from new EDCA sites,” 
The Manila Times, April 11, 2023. 
It should also be noted that the Philippine ambassador to the U.S. said in September 2022 that the Philippines would 
allow U.S. forces to operate from EDCA bases “only if it is important for us, for our own security,” Ryo Nakamura and 
Yuichi Shiga, “Philippines may allow U.S. military access during Taiwan crisis,” 
Nikkei Asia, September 5, 2022 at 
https://asia.nikkei.com/Editor-s-Picks/Interview/Philippines-may-allow-U.S.-military-access-during-Taiwan-crisis.  
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Although this concern may be especially pronounced for countries that now host U.S. forces at 
non-DOD-operated facilities (such as the Philippines and Singapore), some commentators have 
also posited that even countries that have hosted DOD-operated facilities for decades, such as 
South Korea or Japan, may impose limits on U.S. usage of bases to avoid provoking Chinese 
attacks.81 Congress may consider the appropriate balance of risk, as well as direct planning for 
alternate basing options in the event of such a situation. Congress may also consider the 
appropriate level of infrastructure investment in sites to which future DOD access may be 
uncertain.82 
Finally, Congress may consider how changes in basing posture affect broader geopolitical 
developments in the Indo-Pacific. Among international relations scholars, the concept of the 
security dilemma—a problem in which states, by taking measures to improve their own security, 
may threaten others—occupies a central role. Some commentators have argued that this dynamic 
exists in the contemporary Indo-Pacific, and that U.S. basing is a factor: 
The same dynamic [i.e., the security dilemma] is operating in Asia. Not surprisingly, China 
regards  America’s  long  position  of  regional  influence—and  especially  its  network  of 
military  bases  and  its  naval  and  air  presence—as  a  potential  threat.  As  it  has  grown 
wealthier,  Beijing  has  quite  understandably  used  some  of  that  wealth  to  build  military 
forces that can challenge the U.S. position… Each side’s efforts to deal with what it regards 
as  a  potential  security  problem  merely  reinforced  the  other  side’s  own  security  fears, 
thereby triggering a response that strengthened the former’s original concerns. Each side 
sees  what  it  is  doing  as  purely  defensive  reaction  to  the  other  side’s  behavior,  and 
identifying “who started it” soon becomes effectively impossible.83 
PRC officials have strongly criticized recent U.S. moves to expand its regional defense 
infrastructure footprint, alleging that measures such as the addition of new sites to the U.S.-
Philippines EDCA “are part of U.S. efforts to encircle and contain China” and will “endanger 
regional peace and stability.”84 On the other hand, some policymakers and analysts have argued 
that establishing additional bases could strengthen U.S. deterrence of PRC aggression and thereby 
 
81 See, for instance, Denny Roy, “South Korea will stay out of a Taiwan Strait War,” 
The Diplomat, March 21, 2023, at 
https://thediplomat.com/2023/03/south-korea-will-stay-out-of-a-taiwan-strait-war/; and Gabriel Dominguez, “Crucial 
Role: Defense of Taiwan hinges on Japan’s support,” 
Japan Times, January 23, 2023, at https://www.japantimes.co.jp/
news/2023/01/23/national/japan-role-us-taiwan-conflict/. 
82 Per testimony given by INDOPACOM Commander Admiral Aquilino in an April 2023 hearing before the House 
Armed Services Committee, “There are identified projects [in the Philippines] that that we would like to build out in 
the current sites, that they've agreed with that, we have started work on.” “House Armed Services Committee Holds 
Hearing on Indo-Pacific National Security Challenges,” April 18, 2023, transcript available via 
CQ at 
https://plus.cq.com/doc/congressionaltranscripts-7718539?5.  
83 Stephen M. Walt, “Does Anyone Still Understand the ‘Security Dilemma’?” 
Foreign Policy, July 26, 2022 at 
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/07/26/misperception-security-dilemma-ir-theory-russia-ukraine/.  
84 “Statement of the Spokesperson of the Chinese Embassy in the Philippines,” Embassy of the PRC in the Republic of 
the Philippines, March 12, 2023, at http://ph.china-embassy.gov.cn/eng/sgdt/202303/t20230312_11039384.htm. 
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decrease the likelihood of a crisis.85 In weighing whether to establish additional bases, Congress 
may consider potential effects on Indo-Pacific stability.86 
Organization 
Aside from the question of where to maintain or seek basing more generally, Congress may also 
consider issues relating to base organization and operation. Historically, DOD has created larger, 
consolidated installations in the Indo-Pacific, clustering many defense functions within mainly 
DOD-operated sites. However, as described above, the Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps 
have each begun to develop and implement new concepts for more distributed combat and 
logistical operations. These operational concepts propose a different use of infrastructure, one in 
which larger, permanent, and concentrated bases are supplemented by—and, in some cases, 
replaced or used interchangeably with—smaller, temporary, non-U.S.-operated, or distributed 
facilities.87  
As an example of how these shifts may affect regional basing posture, CSIS senior fellow Bonny 
Lin offered the following characterization of Indo-Pacific infrastructure in a February 2023 
Senate Armed Services Committee hearing: 
Our  infrastructure  in  the  Indo-Pacific,  particularly  the  fact that  we  are  now  investing  in 
more  resilient  and  dispersed  basing  is  absolutely  critical,  particularly  as  we  look  at  the 
range of [PRC] missiles…The range of missiles that China can bring to bear means that in 
any fight over Taiwan, we will need to be able to disperse our assets so we're not reliant on 
any  particular  base.  And  in  order  to  be  able  to  maintain  that…  we  need  to  harden  our 
infrastructure. We also need to work with our allies and partners to make sure that we have 
the capabilities to quickly repair, for example, runways and other facilities.88 
To some extent, this conceptual perspective is manifested in DOD doctrine for —and investments 
in—regional infrastructure. For example, in a March 2023 interview, the commander of Pacific 
Air Forces (PACAF) stated that “from the Agile Combat Employment standpoint, what we're 
spending our dollars on this year is expanding the number of places that we can go to, and of the 
places that we're already at [sic], expanding the capability at those places.”89  
However, some analysts have identified potential drawbacks to a more distributed basing posture. 
A January 2023 report by the RAND Corporation found that operating from more dispersed air 
bases could pose significant sustainment and communication challenges, and cautioned that such 
 
85See, for instance, CNAS analyst Stacie Pettyjohn’s argument that the U.S. should “gain access to more bases” in 
“Spiking the Problem: Developing a Resilient Posture in the Indo-Pacific,” 
War on the Rocks, January 10, 2022 
(available at https://warontherocks.com/2022/01/spiking-the-problem-developing-a-resilient-posture-in-the-indo-
pacific-with-passive-defenses/ and Senator Roger Wicker’s statement that DOD “cannot successfully deter Xi with a 
brittle basing and logistics infrastructure,” in “Senate Armed Services Committee Holds Hearing on Fiscal Year 2024 
Budget Request for the Department of Defense”, March 28, 2023, available at https://plus.cq.com/doc/congressional
transcripts-7700800?7. 
86 In addition to effects stemming from PRC responses, Congress may wish to consider effects that may be produced by 
Russian and DPRK responses to significant shifts in U.S. regional basing posture. 
•  87 See discussion under the 
“ 
Strategic and Operational Role” heading on page 11 of this report.  
88 Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing on Global Security Challenges and Strategy, February 15, 2023. 
Transcript available at https://plus.cq.com/doc/congressionaltranscripts-7667132?18  
89 General Kenneth Wilsbach, quoted in Sean Carberry, “Forget Hardened Bases, Pacific Conflict Requires Agile 
Combat Employment, Commander Says,” 
National Defense, March 8, 2023 at 
https://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/articles/2023/3/8/forget-hardened-bases-pacific-conflict-requires-agile-
combat-employment-commander .  
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bases “may not be more survivable than those closer to the threat if the farther bases can be 
brought down by a small number of missiles” due to their smaller size or a lack of protective 
systems and infrastructure.90  
Congress may consider the costs and benefits of a more distributed approach to regional basing 
functions, assess the extent to which DOD is implementing such an approach, and deliberate on 
the desirability of additional investments to modify the concentration or distribution of base 
facilities. 
Resilience 
Another aspect of posture Congress may consider is the resilience—broadly defined as the ability 
to resist, adapt to, and recover from disruption—of Indo-Pacific installations.91 Given the regional 
environment described above, DOD has tended to structure its resilience efforts around the threat 
of kinetic attack, particularly by PRC air and missile capabilities.  
When it comes to protecting bases from air and missile attacks, analysts typically distinguish 
between active and passive defenses. Active defenses are measures that seek to neutralize 
incoming threats before they are able to strike their targets—whether by kinetic interception, as 
with the THAAD or PATRIOT missile defense systems, or through the use of newer technologies 
like directed energy and microwave-based countermeasures.92 Passive defenses are measures 
intended to decrease the damage, disruption, and general impact of adversary attacks, and may 
include the construction of protective physical structures (e.g., hardened aircraft shelters), the 
development of repair and damage control capabilities, and practices such as the dispersal or 
concealment of vulnerable assets.93 
The appropriate balance between active and passive defenses has been the subject of debate 
among policymakers and commentators. Some analysts, such as the Hudson Institute’s Rebeccah 
Heinrichs, emphasize the centrality of active defenses: 
While passive defenses including tactics intended to deceive an adversary and fortification 
of  military  infrastructure  to  sustain  an  attack  are  important,  there  is  no  substitute  for  a 
layered active defense. To achieve cost-effectiveness, some budget offices may be tempted 
to over-rely on passive defenses, but that would be a grave mistake. The US military must 
have the ability to blunt the impact of a fast PRC attack, and that means preventing missiles 
from hitting key targets.94 
 
90 Christopher Lynch, Rachel Costello, Jacob L. Heim, 
et al. “Operational Imperative: Investing Wisely to Bolster U.S. 
Air Bases Against Chinese and Russian Attacks.” RAND Corporation, January 2023, p. 4. 
91 A more specific definition of resilience is offered by the RAND Corporation: “the capacity of a force to withstand 
attack, adapt, and generate sufficient combat power to achieve campaign objectives in the face of continued, adaptive 
enemy action.” Hagen, Jeff, Forrest E. Morgan, Jacob L. Heim, and Matthew Carroll, “The Foundations of Operational 
Resilience—Assessing the Ability to Operate in an Anti-Access/Area Denial Environment,” available at 
https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR1265.html 
92 For more on directed energy technologies, see CRS In Focus IF11882, 
Defense Primer: Directed-Energy Weapons, 
by Kelley M. Sayler.  
93 The 
DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms defines 
active defense as “the employment of limited 
offensive action and counterattacks to deny a contested area or position to the enemy” and 
passive defense as 
“measures taken to reduce the probability of and to minimize the effects of damage caused by hostile action without the 
intention of taking the initiative.” 
DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, Department of Defense,
 February 
2023, pp. 7 and 151. 
94 Rebeccah Heinrichs, “Introduction,” in Rebecca Heinrichs (editor), 
Defending Guam (Washington, D.C.: Hudson 
Institute, 2022), p. 9. Available at https://s3.amazonaws.com/media. hudson.org/Defending+Guam+July+2022.pdf  
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Other analysts maintain that active defenses, while useful, can be expensive and vulnerable to 
attack. A January 2023 study by the RAND Corporation argues that:  
the  most-cost-effective  ways  to  improve  air  base  resilience  are  robust,  passive 
defenses…[including] hardened shelters for aircraft; dispersal of aircraft; redundant fuel 
supplies; prepositioned munitions; rapid runway repair capabilities; and tailored forms of 
camouflage, concealment, and deception.95  
The publicly available studies and wargames that examine a potential conflict with a strategic 
competitor suggest that the resilience of Indo-Pacific installations—particularly air bases—may 
be a factor in such a conflict’s outcome.96  
Congress may assess the desirability and efficacy of additional investments in resilience-building 
measures at Indo-Pacific bases, and weigh the respective benefits of active and passive defenses.  
Resourcing Regional Defense Infrastructure 
Congress funds the establishment and sustainment of defense infrastructure through the Military 
Construction and Operation and Maintenance appropriations titles. In addition, beginning in 
FY2021, Congress has authorized a particular set of Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure 
appropriations as part of the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI), a group of regionally-focused 
defense investments and activities typically included as part of the annual National Defense 
Authorization Act (NDAA).  
Military Construction 
Military construction (MILCON) appropriations fund construction, development, conversion, or 
extension activities carried out with respect to a military installation, as well as any DOD 
acquisitions of real property (for more information on MILCON authorities and activities, see 
CRS Report R44710, 
Military Construction: Authorities and Processes).  
Over the past four fiscal years, annual military construction appropriations for Indo-Pacific sites 
have ranged from a low of $1.37 billion to a high of $3.54 billion (see 
Table 1 below).  
 
95 Christopher Lynch, Rachel Costello, Jacob L. Heim, 
et al. “Operational Imperative: Investing Wisely to Bolster U.S. 
Air Bases Against Chinese and Russian Attacks.” RAND Corporation, January 2023, p. 4. 
96For two examples, see O’Hanlon, 
Can China Take Taiwan and Cancian et al., 
The First Battle of the Next War.  
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
Table 1. Military Construction Appropriations, FY2020-23 
($ in thousands) 
Appropriations for Indo-Pacific 
Appropriations for 
Appropriations for military 
military construction as a 
military construction, 
construction, Indo-Pacific 
percentage of global military 
FY 
worldwidea 
regionb 
construction 
2020 
$8,228,81
3c  
$1,812,956 
22.0% 
2021 
$5,599,209 
$1,368,810 
24.4% 
2022 
$9,033,782 
$2,267,292 
25.1% 
2023 
$12,194,728 
$3,542,995 
29.1% 
Total 
$35,056,532 
$8,992,053 
 
Source: CRS Analysis of Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Acts, 
2020-2023 and accompanying Joint Explanatory Statements. 
Notes: a.  Figures for “Appropriations for Military Construction, Worldwide” include all appropriations for Army, 
Navy and Marine Corps, Air Force, Defense-wide, Army National Guard, Air National Guard, Army 
Reserve, Navy Reserve, and Air Force Reserve Military Construction. They do not include NATO Security 
Investment, DOD Base Closure Account, Family Housing Construction, Family Housing O&M, Family 
Housing Improvement Fund, or Military Unaccompanied Housing Improvement Fund monies.  
b.  Figures for “Indo-Pacific MILCON appropriations” include appropriations for projects in: Alaska; 
Washington; California; Hawaii; Guam and the Marianas; the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Palau, and 
Micronesia; Japan; South Korea; the Philippines; Singapore; Diego Garcia; and Australia.  
c.  The FY2020 MILCON appropriation also included $10 mil ion for “Defense-Wide planning and design for 
emergent requirements in INDOPACOM” (See 
Congressional Record, Vol. 165, No. 204-Book III, p. 
H11378
).  
As 
Table 1 illustrates, the proportion of MILCON appropriations funding projects at Indo-Pacific 
sites has every fiscal year since FY2020. In FY2023, selected Indo-Pacific bases with projects 
receiving MILCON appropriations included:97  
•  
Fort Wainwright, Alaska ($99 million for a physical fitness center annex); 
•  
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson ($63 million for an aircraft maintenance 
hangar) 
•  
Clear Space Force Station, Alaska ($68 million for a new dormitory); 
•  
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska ($100 million to extend runway 
16/34); 
•  
Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Washington ($68.1 million for airfield 
pavement improvements); 
•  
Camp Pendleton, California ($85.2 million for Basilone Road Realignment); 
•  
Twentynine Palms ($120.4 million for a range simulation training and 
operations facility); 
 
97 This list is not comprehensive; rather, it represents an attempt to identify high-value regional projects with significant 
regional warfighting and readiness relevance. For a complete list of projects receiving FY2023 MILCON 
appropriations, see “Joint Explanatory Statement for Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 – Division J, Military 
Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies,” Senate Appropriations Committee, pp. 94-114, available at 
https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Division%20J%20-%20Mil%20Con%20Statement%20
FY23.pdf.  
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•  
Naval Air Station Lemoore, California ($201.3 million for F-35C maintenance 
hangar and airfield pavement); 
•  
Vandenberg Space Force Base, California ($89 million for consolidated 
maintenance facility); 
•  
Naval Base Coronado, California ($75.7 million for a SOF operations support 
facility); 
•  
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii ($111 million for the construction of company 
operations facilities); 
•  
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii ($621.2 million for the replacement 
of Dry Dock 3 and $103.4 million for the construction of missile magazines); 
•  
Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Hawaii ($87.9 million for bachelor enlisted 
quarters); 
•  
Naval Base Guam, Guam ($131.6 million for 9th Engineer Support Battalion 
equipment and maintenance facility and $149.3 million ground combat element 
infantry battalion 1 and 2 facilities); 
•  
Tinian, Northern Mariana Islands ($58 million for airfield development and 
$92 million for fuel tanks); 
•  
Army Garrison-Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands ($69 million for a medical 
clinic); 
•  
Kadena Air Base, Japan ($94.1 million for Marine Corps bachelor enlisted 
quarters, $101.3 million for a Marine Corps barracks complex, $71 million for a 
helicopter operations maintenance hangar, and $77 million for a theater a/c 
corrosion control center); 
•  
Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan ($85 million for bulk fuel storage 
tanks); 
•  
Yokota Air Base, Japan ($72.2 million for operations and warehouse facilities); 
•  
Royal Australian Air Force Base Darwin, Australia ($72.4 million for aircraft 
parking apron). 
Although Indo-Pacific military construction appropriations have increased in both absolute and 
proportional terms since FY2020, some analysts and Members of Congress argue that regional 
MILCON activities have been insufficient to meet U.S. requirements. In the joint explanatory 
statement accompanying the FY2023 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related 
Agencies Appropriations Act, the Committees expressed concern that “the Services have not 
properly prioritized projects within INDOPACOM in recent fiscal years, instead choosing to fund 
projects that are specifically beneficial to the Service and not necessarily the joint mission.”98 
Some commentators attribute what they consider insufficient MILCON funding to structural 
factors. In a 2022 piece for 
War on the Rocks, for example, three analysts at the Center for a New 
American Security argued that Indo-Pacific infrastructure upgrades “have been habitually 
shortchanged because the services prefer to invest in force structure and Congress does not like 
spending money overseas.”99 
 
98 “Division J – Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2023,” p. 4, 
available at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Division%20J%20-%20Mil%20Con%20
Statement%20FY23.pdf  
99 Pettyjohn, “The Kadena Conundrum.”  
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Congress may consider assessing whether the level of funding for Indo-Pacific military 
construction projects provided in recent appropriations acts is adequate (in both absolute terms 
and as a proportion of overall MILCON spending) to meet current and future military 
requirements, particularly if significant changes to basing posture are anticipated.  
Facilities Sustainment, Restoration, and Modernization 
A number of analysts, DOD officials, and Members of Congress have expressed concern about 
the condition of Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure. In a February 2023 Senate Armed Services 
Committee hearing, for example, Senator Mazie Hirono (HI) offered the following 
characterization of the challenges facing DOD infrastructure: 
“Clearly,  there  are  many  demands  on  our  resources—that  is  an  understatement—and  I 
would consider a foundational concern to be the need to invest in our infrastructure, which 
is not only a matter of geopolitical competition, but also the readiness of the forces… In 
the  last  year,  there  have  been  numerous  issues  with  the  military’s  infrastructure  in 
Hawaii—from  water  main  breaks  to  toxic  chemical  leaks  and  spills  endangering  our 
groundwater. And I know that these kinds of events are not particular to Hawaii.  Across 
the country, we need to better maintain and modernize our DOD infrastructure to take care 
of our people, get our systems out of maintenance on time, and be able to support national 
security.”100 
Although the Indo-Pacific region has experienced several high-visibility infrastructure problems 
(e.g., the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility leak), the issue of poor infrastructure condition is 
not unique to the region.101 In a 2022 report, the Government Accountability Office found that 
DOD had a deferred maintenance backlog that would require at least $130 billion to eliminate, 
creating “significant risk to [the Department’s] objective of maintaining facilities in good working 
order to meet working requirements.”  
Facilities sustainment, restoration, and modernization (FSRM) activities on military installations 
are funded by Operation and Maintenance (O&M) appropriations. Unlike MILCON spending, 
FSRM funding information—as documented in DOD budget requests and congressional 
authorization and appropriation legislation—is not typically disaggregated by specific locations 
or installations, making it difficult to assess the level of funding by site or region.102 In FY2023, 
Congress appropriated approximately $16.8 billion for FSRM activities across DOD, with the 
Army (approximately $5.1 billion), Air Force (approximately $4.4 billion), and Navy 
(approximately $4 billion) receiving the largest amounts, respectively.103  
Given the strategic and operational importance of Indo-Pacific defense sites, Congress may assess 
the extent to which more detailed budget reporting by DOD, adjustments to FSRM funding, or 
further studies of related infrastructure issues may be necessary to meet military requirements.  
 
100 “Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing on Global Security Challenges and Strategy”, February 15, 2023. Sen. 
Hirono statement available at https://www.hirono.senate.gov/news/press-releases/video-hirono-highlights-importance-
of-infrastructure-updates-pacific-allies-to-us-national-security  
101 For more information on Red Hill, see “Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Site in Hawai’I,” Environmental Protection 
Agency, at https://www.epa.gov/red-hill . 
102 For more information on this and military construction appropriations more generally, see CRS Report R44710, 
Military Construction: Authorities and Processes. 
103 CRS analysis of information provided in the Joint Explanatory Statement for the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Act, 2023. 
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Pacific Deterrence Initiative 
In FY2021, Congress established the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI), a set of prioritized 
defense investments and activities intended to “enhance the United States deterrence and defense 
posture in the Indo-Pacific region, assure allies and partners, and increase capability and 
readiness in the Indo-Pacific region.”104 PDI is not a separate funding source; rather, its purpose is 
to “focus resources on capability gaps” and “enhance budgetary transparency and oversight” by 
identifying and collating Indo-Pacific-focused spending and programs from the broader DOD 
budget.105 
In FY2022 and FY2023, activities authorized under PDI were divided into five categories: 
•  Presence and Posture ($4.1 billion authorized in FY2022, $6.46 billion 
authorized in FY2023) 
•  Logistics and Prepositioning of Equipment ($360 million authorized in FY2022, 
$500 million authorized in FY2023) 
•  Exercises, Training, and Experimentation ($696 million authorized in FY2022, 
$2 billion authorized in FY2023) 
•  Defense and Security Capabilities of Allies and Partners ($489 million authorized 
in FY2022, $732 million authorized in FY2023) 
•  Infrastructure Improvements ($1.5 billion authorized in FY2022, $1.8 billion 
authorized in FY2023) 
The Infrastructure Improvements category includes authorizations for projects funded through 
both military construction (MILCON) and operation and maintenance (O&M) appropriations. 
Examples of authorized PDI projects under this category include: 
•  Bulk storage tanks at MCAS Iwakuni (FY2023, $85 million, MILCON); 
•  Aircraft parking apron at RAAF Base Darwin, Australia (FY2023, $72.4 million, 
MILCON); 
•  Fuel tanks with pipeline and hydrant system on Tinian, Northern Mariana Islands 
(FY2023, $92 million, MILCON); 
•  Japan vehicle maintenance shop (FY2023, $80 million, MILCON); 
•  Air Force infrastructure improvements (FY2022 and FY2023, $404.3 million and 
$412.4 million, O&M); 
•  Marine Corps FSRM (FY2022 and FY2023, $112.1 million and $127.2 million, 
O&M); 
•  Corrosion control hangar for C-130J at Yokota Air Base (FY2022 and FY2023, 
$67 million and $10 million, MILCON); 
•  Joint Communication Upgrade at Naval Base Guam (FY2022, $84 million, 
MILCON); 
•  Extended runway at JBE-R (FY2022, $79 million, MILCON).106 
 
104 See Section 1251 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 116-283).  
105 See S.Rept. 116-236, p. 3; for more information on PDI, see CRS In Focus IF12303, 
The Pacific Deterrence 
Initiative: A Budgetary Overview. 
106“ Joint Explanatory Statement accompanying James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2023,” p. 302, available at https://rules.house.gov/sites/republicans. rules118. house.gov/files/BILLS-117HR7776EAS-
RCP117-70-JES.pdf#page=302. 
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With respect to PDI generally, some analysts and Members of Congress have contended that 
DOD implementation of PDI priorities has been misaligned with congressional intent.107 In the 
National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAAs) for FY2022 (P.L. 117-81) and FY2023 (P.L. 117-
263), PDI authorizations differed significantly from DOD requests, with Congress redistributing 
or adding billions of dollars in proposed PDI investments. The FY2023 House Appropriations 
Committee report (H.Rept. 117-388) expressed "concern that DOD has failed to provide adequate 
accounting for the funding requested" under PDI, and directed DOD to augment the budgetary 
and programmatic descriptions of PDI activities in its FY2024 budget documentation.  
With respect to infrastructure more specifically, there were also considerable discrepancies 
between: 
•  the FY2023 spending DOD requested under the “Infrastructure Improvements” 
category 
($1.21 billion); 
•  the FY2023 spending INDOPACOM requested under the “Infrastructure, 
Responsiveness, and Resilience” category as part of a congressionally mandated 
report separate from DOD’s formal budget request 
($726 million) and;108 
•  the FY2023 spending Congress authorized for PDI in the FY2023 NDAA 
($1.8 
billion)  
Additionally, the criteria according to which DOD categorizes infrastructure activities in its 
budget requests are unclear. Although there is an “Infrastructure Improvements” category, in its 
FY2023 PDI budget documentation DOD requested funding for infrastructure-related activities 
(i.e., MILCON and FSRM) under four of the six PDI categories.109 As an example, a combined 
$129 million of MILCON funding was requested for bulk fuel storage tanks at Marine Corps Air 
Station Iwakuni and Yokota Air Base under the “Improved Logistics, Maintenance, and 
Prepositioning” category, while $39 million of MILCON funding was requested for missile 
defense infrastructure under the “Modernized and Strengthened Presence” category.  
Congress may consider whether modifications to PDI are desirable to: clarify the purpose and 
intent of activity categories; increase the detail that DOD provides in its congressional 
documentation; and ensure that infrastructure activities are aligned with strategic aims and 
military requirements (especially those created by the implementation of new operational 
concepts). 
 
107 See, for example, Dustin Walker, “Show Me the Money: Boost the Pacific Deterrence Initiative,” 
War on the Rocks, 
June 29, 2022, at https://warontherocks.com/2022/06/show-me-the-money-boost-the-pacific-deterrence-initiative/ and 
the “Joint Explanatory Statement to Accompany the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022,” pp. 
280-281, available at https://rules.house.gov/sites/republicans.rules118.house.gov/files/17S1605-RCP117-21-JES-
U1.pdf . 
108 INDOPACOM report available via 
Defense One at https://www.defenseone.com/policy/2022/05/report-seize-
initiative/366380/.  
109 The categories under which DOD submitted its PDI request differed from those under which Congress authorized 
funding in the enacted NDAA. DOD categories were: 1) Modernized and Strengthened Presence; 2) Improved 
Logistics, Maintenance, and Prepositioning; 3) Exercises, Training, Experimentation, and Innovation; 4) Infrastructure 
Improvements; 5) Building the Defense and Security Capabilities, Capacity and Cooperation of Allies and Partners; 
and 6) Improved Capabilities Available to U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (joint and enabling headquarters capabilities. 
Infrastructure spending was requested under the first four categories.  
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Appendix A. Key Sites and Facilities 
This appendix provides descriptions of key sites and facilities covered by this report, as well as a 
consolidated list of major Indo-Pacific bases (see
 Table A-1 below). 
Alaska 
Fort Wainwright. Fort Wainwright is an Army installation located in Fairbanks, AK. It occupies 
approximately 756,530 acres, and hosts the 1st Infantry Brigade, 11th Airborne Division (an 
infantry brigade combat team) as well as the 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment (an AH-64 
Apache attack reconnaissance battalion) and the 1st Battalion, 52nd Aviation Regiment (a general 
support aviation battalion with UH-60 Blackhawks, CH-47 Chinooks, and UH-60 medevac 
support).110 
Fort Greely. Fort Greely is an Army installation located about 100 miles southeast of Fairbanks, 
AK. It occupies approximately 7,200 acres, and supports midcourse missile defense.111 It hosts 
the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense anti-ballistic missile interception system, the 49th Missile 
Defense Battalion, 100th Missile Defense Brigade (which operates and secures the ground-based 
midcourse defense system), the 59th Signal Battalion (which conducts strategic signal operations 
for missile command), and the Cold Regions Test Center (which tests materiel and equipment in 
cold weather conditions).112 
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER). JBER is a joint Army-Air Force installation located 
near Anchorage, AK. It occupies approximately 73,000 acres, and hosts the Army’s 2nd Infantry 
Brigade, 11th Airborne Division, (an airborne brigade combat team), as well as the Air Force’s 11th 
Air Force and 3rd Wing, which consists of two F-22 fighter squadrons, one E-3 command and 
control squadron, and one mixed C-17/C-12 airlift squadron. In addition, JBER is also home to 
the Alaska Air National Guard’s 176th Wing, which includes three HH-60 and HC-130 rescue 
squadrons and two C-17 airlift squadrons.113 
Eielson Air Force Base. Eielson Air Force Base is an Air Force installation located near 
Fairbanks, Alaska. It occupies approximately 24,900 acres, and hosts the 354th Operations Group, 
which includes two F-35 fighter squadrons and one F-16 squadron.114  
 
110 Note that not all of this acreage may be in active use. “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” Office of the Assistant 
Secretary of Defense for Sustainment, available for download at https://www.acq.osd.mil/eie/BSI/BEI_Library.html. 
“1st Infantry Brigade, 11th Airborne Division,” 11th Airborne Division, at https://11thairbornedivision.army.mil/Units/
1st-Infantry-Brigade/; “1-25 Attack/Reconnaissance Battalion,” U.S. Army Alaska, at https://home.army.mil/alaska/
index.php/USARAK-units/1-25-arb ; and “1-52 General Support Aviation Battalion,” U.S. Army Alaska, at 
https://home.army.mil/alaska/index.php/USARAK-units/1-52d-gsab.  
111 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” Midcourse missile defense refers to the destruction of incoming ballistic missiles 
while they are outside the atmosphere at the highest point in their trajectory (the ‘midcourse’); see “Ground-Based 
Interception,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, at https://missilethreat.csis.org/defsys/gbi/ for more 
information. 
112 “49th Missile Defense Battalion,” U.S. Army Alaska, at https://home.army.mil/alaska/index.php/fort-greely/
unitstenants/49th-missile-defense-battalion ; “59th Signal,” U.S. Army Alaska, at https://home.army.mil/alaska/
index.php/fort-greely/unitstenants/59th-signal-nec; “Cold Regions Test Center,” U.S. Army Test and Evaluation 
Command, at https://www.atec.army.mil/crtc/. 
113 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” “3rd Wing Units,” 3rd Wing, at https://www.jber.jb.mil/Units/3wg/ and “176th 
Wing Units,” 176th Wing, at https://www.176wg.ang.af.mil/Units/.  
114 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “354th Operations Group,” Eielson Air Force Base, at 
https://www.eielson.af.mil/About-Us/Units/354th-Operations-Group/. 
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Clear Space Force Station. Clear Space Force Station is a Space Force installation located about 
75 miles southwest of Fairbanks, AK. It occupies approximately 11,400 acres, and hosts the 13th 
and 213th Space Warning Squadrons, which provide missile warning and defense as well as space 
domain awareness.115 
Other sites. In addition to the five installations detailed above, Alaska is home to the Northern 
Warfare Training Center, an Army training site in Black Rapids, AK that provides training for 
cold weather and mountain environments; the COBRA DANE L-band missile defense radar site 
located in Shemya, AK; and several auxiliary airfields, including Eareckson Air Station in 
Shemya, AK.116 
Washington 
Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM). JBLM is a joint Army-Air Force installation, consisting of 
a main base area, located about nine miles southwest of Tacoma, WA and the Yakima Training 
Center, located near Yakima, WA. The main base area occupies approximately 87,000 acres, 
while the Yakima Training Center occupies approximately 323,000 acres.117 JBLM serves as the 
headquarters for the Army’s I Corps, which encompasses about 44,000 soldiers in the Indo-
Pacific region. Army units based at JBLM include the 7th Infantry Division, the 1st Multi-Domain 
Task Force, and the 5th Security Force Assistance Brigade.118 JBLM also hosts the Air Force’s 
62nd and 446th Airlift Wings (Reserve), which together include six C-17 airlift squadrons, as well 
as the Western Air Defense Sector, a Washington Air National Guard unit responsible for regional 
air defense operations.119 JBLM’s Yakima Training Center provides a large, versatile training area 
in a high desert environment, including 25 separate ranges.120 
Naval Base Kitsap. Naval Base Kitsap is a Navy installation on the Kitsap Peninsula in 
Washington. It occupies approximately 12,000 acres and hosts a wide array of facilities and 
tenant commands.121 Significant units and capabilities at Naval Base Kitsap include: two 
Nimitz-
class aircraft carriers (USS 
Nimitz and USS 
Theodore Roosevelt); three submarine squadrons (two 
ballistic and guided missile squadrons comprised of 
Ohio-class submarines and one development 
 
115 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and Senior Master Sgt. Julie Avey,“Alaska welcomes newest Space Force Station 
in Renaming of Clear,” 168th Wing Public Affairs, June 16, 2021, at https://ak.ng.mil/Media/News/Article/2661907/
alaska-welcomes-newest-space-force-station-in-renaming-of-clear/.  
116 “Northern Warfare Training Center,” U.S. Army Alaska, at https://home.army.mil/alaska/index.php/USARAK-
units/USARAK-ASC/NWTC; “Cobra Dane,” CSIS Missile Defense Project, June 7, 2021 at 
https://missilethreat.csis.org/defsys/cobra-dane/; 2nd Lt Andrew Harris, “Tail End of the Chain, Tip of the Sword: 
Eareckson Air Station,” at https://www.jber.jb.mil/News/News-Articles/Article/291929/tail-end-of-the-chain-tip-of-
the-sword-eareckson-as/.  
117 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” “History,” Joint Base Lewis-McChord, at https://home.army.mil/lewis-
mcchord/index.php/about/history. 
118 “I Corps,” U.S. Army, at https://www.army.mil/icorps#org-about . “7th Infantry Division,” U.S. Army, at 
https://www.army.mil/7thid#org-about. Thomas Brading, “1st Multi-Domain Task Force,” U.S. Army News Service, 
February 1, 2021 at https://www.army.mil/article/242849/first_multi_domain_task_force_plans_to_be_centerpiece_
of_army_modernization, and Thomas Brading, “5th SFAB: More missions, fixed Indo-Pacific presence ahead,” 
February 25, 2021 at https://www.army.mil/article/243702/5th_sfab_more_missions_fixed_indo_pacific_presence_
ahead. 
119 “62nd Airlift Wing,” U.S. Air Force, at https://www.mcchord.af.mil/Units/ “446th Airlift Wing,” U.S. Air Force, at 
https://www.446aw.afrc.af.mil/Units/446th-AW-Units/, and “Western Air Defense Sector – About Us,” Western Air 
Defense Sector, at https://www.wads.ang.af.mil/About-Us/.  
120 “Yakima Training Center,” Joint Base Lewis-McChord, at https://home.army.mil/lewis-mcchord/index.php/units-
tenants/yakima-training-center. 
121 “Naval Base Kitsap,” Commander, Navy Region Northwest, at https://cnrnw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/
NAVBASE-Kitsap/. 
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squadron comprised of 
Seawolf-class submarines); one unmanned undersea vehicle (UUV) 
development squadron; the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility 
(a Navy-owned and operated shipyard that maintains, upgrades, and retires naval vessels; the 
shipyard also includes Trident Refit Facility Bangor, which maintains and upgrades Indo-Pacific-
based ballistic missile submarines); Strategic Weapons Facility Pacific (a facility that stores, 
maintains, and upgrades submarine-based nuclear weapons); and Manchester Fuel Depot (the 
largest underground DOD fuel storage facility on the West Coast, with an average annual 
throughput of 2.3 million barrels of fuel).122 
Naval Station Everett. Naval Station Everett is a Navy installation located in Everett, WA. The 
main base occupies approximately 217 acres, but the installation also includes the following 
noncontiguous areas: Naval Radio Station Jim Creek (responsible for communication with 
submarines operating in the Pacific); Naval Facility Pacific Beach (a training facility for naval 
aviators); and Naval Family Support Complex Smokey Point (a facility for family and morale, 
welfare, and recreation activities).123 Naval Station Everett is the homeport for seven 
Arleigh 
Burke-class guided missile destroyers and two Coast Guard vessels (a coastal patrol boat and a 
buoy tender).124  
Naval Air Station Whidbey Island. Naval Air Station Whidbey Island is a Navy installation 
located near Oak Harbor, WA. It occupies approximately 7,200 acres, and hosts thirteen EA-18 
electronic attack squadrons, five P-8 maritime patrol squadrons, two P-3 maritime patrol 
squadrons, and one EP-3 reconnaissance squadron.125
 
Fairchild Air Force Base. Fairchild Air Force Base is an Air Force installation located about 12 
miles west of Spokane, WA. It occupies approximately 4,300 acres, and hosts the Air Force’s 92nd 
Air Refueling Wing and the Washington Air National Guard’s 141st Air Refueling Wing, which 
operate KC-135 refueling aircraft.126 
 
122 Ibid., “Submarine Group 19”, Commander, Submarine Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, at https://www.csp.navy.mil/
css19/; “Submarine Development Squadron 5”, Commander, Submarine Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, at 
https://www.csp.navy.mil/csds5/Submarines/ “Strategic Weapons Facility Pacific,” U.S. Navy, at 
https://www.ssp.navy.mil/about/locations.html “Fleet Logistics Center Puget Sound,” Naval Supply Systems 
Command, at https://www.navsup.navy.mil/NAVSUP-Enterprise/NAVSUP-FLC-Puget-Sound/About-FLC-Puget-
Sound/.  
123 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “Naval Station Everett,” Commander, Navy Region Northwest, at 
https://cnrnw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NS-Everett/About/Installation-Guide/;  
124 “Homeported Ships,” Commander, Navy Region Northwest, at https://cnrnw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NS-Everett/
About/Homeported-Ships/ 
125 “FY 2022 Base Structure Report,” “Patrol and Reconnaissance Wing 10,” Commander, Navy Region Northwest, at 
https://cnrnw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NAS-Whidbey-Island/About/Aviation-Commands/Patrol-And-
Reconnaissance-Wing-10/ and “Electronic Attack Wing,” Commander, Navy Region Northwest, at 
https://cnrnw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NAS-Whidbey-Island/About/Aviation-Commands/Electronic-Attack-Wing/, 
and “P-3C Orion,” Naval Air Systems Command, at https://www.navair.navy.mil/product/P-3C-Orion.  
126 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” “Units,” Fairchild Air Force Base, at https://www.fairchild.af.mil/About/Units/  
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California127 
Naval Air Station Lemoore. Naval Air Station Lemoore is a Navy installation located about 30 
miles south of Fresno, CA. It occupies approximately 40,000 acres, and hosts three F-35 fighter 
squadrons and thirteen F/A-18 fighter squadrons.128  
Naval Base Ventura County. Naval Base Ventura County is a Navy installation located 
approximately 55 miles west of Los Angeles in Ventura County, CA. It is comprised of the three 
operating areas of Point Mugu, Port Hueneme, and San Nicolas Island, which together occupy 
approximately 19,400 acres. Significant units, facilities, and capabilities at Naval Base Ventura 
County include four E-2/D command and control squadrons, the 30th Naval Construction 
Regiment (the Pacific ‘Seabees’), Unmanned Surface Vessel (USV) Division One, and the Point 
Mugu Sea Range (a 36,000 square mile area for testing missiles, free-fall weapons, and electronic 
warfare systems).129 
Naval Base Coronado. Naval Base Coronado is a Navy installation in San Diego, CA. It is 
comprised of eight constituent sites: Naval Air Station North Island, Coronado; Naval 
Amphibious Base, Coronado; Naval Outlying Landing Field, Imperial Beach; Naval Auxiliary 
Landing Field, San Clemente Island; Silver Strand Training Complex-South; Camp Michael 
Monsoor Mountain Warfare Training Center; Camp Morena; and the Remote Training Site, 
Warner Springs. Together, these occupy over 57,000 acres and host a wide array of units and 
tenant commands, including sixteen helicopter squadrons, two fixed-wing squadrons, two 
Nimitz-
class aircraft carriers, four Sea-Air-Land (SEAL) teams, and Commander, Naval Special Warfare 
Command (SPECWAR).130 
Naval Base San Diego. Naval Base San Diego is a Navy installation in San Diego, CA. It 
occupies approximately 1,600 acres, and serves as the homeport for most of the Naval Surface 
Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet (SURFPAC).131 In addition to 56 SURFPAC vessels (including 
destroyers, cruisers, littoral combat ships, amphibious transport docks, and other warships) Naval 
Base San Diego is also the homeport of the hospital ship USNS 
Mercy.  
Naval Base Point Loma. Naval Base Point Loma is a Navy installation in San Diego, CA. It 
occupies approximately 1,100 acres and hosts several significant units and tenant commands. 
These include one submarine squadron (which includes four 
Los Angeles-class attack 
submarines), a floating dry dock (used to service submarines and smaller vessels), Commander 
 
127 Owing to the unique scale and diversity of defense infrastructure in California (and in keeping with the definition of 
the Indo-Pacific region adopted by this report), several major installations that do not directly or specifically support 
operations in the Indo-Pacific region have been excluded from this section (e.g., Edwards Air Force Base, Naval Air 
Weapons Station China Lake). 
128 “Naval Air Station Lemoore,” Commander, Navy Region Southwest, at https://cnrsw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/
NAS-Lemoore/.  
129 “Naval Base Ventura County,” Commander, Navy Region Southwest, at https://cnrsw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/
NAVBASE-Ventura-County/About/; “Navy Cuts Ribbon on Unmanned Vehicle Testing Facilities,” Naval Sea 
Systems Command, at https://www.navsea.navy.mil/Media/News/Article/2872980/navy-cuts-ribbon-on-unmanned-
vehicle-testing-facilities-at-port-hueneme/; “Point Mugu,” Naval Air Systems Command, at 
https://www.navair.navy.mil/PtMugu.  
130 “Naval Base Coronado,” Commander, Navy Region Southwest, at https://cnrsw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/
NAVBASE-Coronado/.  
131 “Naval Base San Diego,” Commander, Navy Region Southwest, at https://cnrsw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/
NAVBASE-San-Diego/. 
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U.S. 3rd Fleet, Naval Information Warfare Systems Command (formerly known as SPAWAR), and 
Naval Mine and Anti-Submarine Warfare Command.132 
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Marine Corps Air Station Miramar is a Marine Corps 
installation in San Diego, CA. It occupies approximately 22,880 acres and hosts the 3rd Marine 
Aircraft Wing’s Marine Aircraft Groups 11 and 16, which together include two F/A-18C fighter 
squadrons, one F-35C fighter squadron, one KC-130 tactical aerial refueling squadron, four V-22 
squadrons, and four CH-53 heavy helicopter squadrons.133  
Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton. Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton is a Marine Corps 
installation located approximately 38 miles north of San Diego, CA. It occupies approximately 
125,000 acres, and serves as the headquarters of I Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF). I MEF 
subordinate commands and units based at Camp Pendleton include the 1st Marine Division, the 1st 
Marine Logistics Group, and the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing’s Marine Aircraft Group 39 (which 
includes four attack helicopter squadrons and two V-22 squadrons).134 
Beale Air Force Base. Beale Air Force Base is an Air Force installation located approximately 45 
miles north of Sacramento, CA. It occupies approximately 22,450 acres, and hosts the 9th 
Reconnaissance Wing (which operates U-2 reconnaissance aircraft and RQ-4 reconnaissance 
unmanned aerial vehicles) and the Air Force Reserve’s 940th Air Refueling Wing (which includes 
a squadron of KC-135R aerial refueling aircraft).135 Beale Air Force Base is also home to the 
Space Force’s 7th Space Warning Squadron, which operates an Upgraded Early Warning Radar 
system to detect and characterize sea-launched or intercontinental ballistic missile launches 
targeting North America.136  
Travis Air Force Base. Travis Air Force Base is an Air Force installation located approximately 
three miles east of Fairfield, CA. It occupies approximately 6,440 acres, and handles more cargo 
and passenger traffic than any other air base in the United States.137 It hosts the 60th Air Mobility 
Wing (which includes one C-17 airlift squadron, one C-5 airlift squadron, and two KC-10 
refueling squadrons) and the Air Force Reserve’s 349th Air Mobility Wing (which includes one C-
17 airlift squadron, one C-5 airlift squadron, and two KC-10 refueling squadrons).138 
Vandenberg Space Force Base. Vandenberg Space Force Base is a Space Force installation 
located in Santa Barbara County, CA. It occupies approximately 99,600 acres, and provides space 
launch and range capabilities for DOD, other U.S. government agencies, and commercial 
partners. Vandenberg Space Force Base is the home of Space Launch Delta 30, which operates 
 
132 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” “History – Naval Base Point Loma,” Commander, Navy Region Southwest , at 
https://cnrsw.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NAVBASE-Point-Loma/About/History/; and https://www.navy.mil/Press-
Office/News-Stories/Article/3134642/css-11-welcomes-peruvian-submarine-to-san-diego/.  
133 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “3rd Marine Aircraft Wing,” 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, at 
https://www.3rdmaw.marines.mil/.  
134 “Introduction,” MCB Camp Pendleton, at https://www.pendleton.marines.mil/Main-Menu/Introduction/; and 
“Marine Aircraft Group 39,” 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, at https://www.3rdmaw.marines.mil/Units/MAG-39/ 
135 “FY2022 Base Structure Report” “Units,” Beale Air Force Base, available at https://www.beale.af.mil/Library/
Units/.  
136 “7th Space Warning Squadron Fact Sheet,” Beale Air Force Base, available at https://www.beale.af.mil/Library/
Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/279997/7th-space-warning-squadron/.  
137 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “Travis Air Force Base,” U.S. Air Force, at https://www.travis.af.mil/
Information/.  
138 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “Travis Air Force Base,” U.S. Air Force, at https://www.travis.af.mil/
Information/; and “349th Air Mobility Wing Fact Sheet,” 349th Air Mobility Wing, at https://www.349amw.afrc.af.mil/
About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/690252/349th-air-mobility-wing-afrc/.  
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sixteen on-site launch facilities and complexes.139 Vandenberg Space Force Base also hosts 
ground-based interceptors to provide midcourse ballistic missile defense for western North 
America.140 
Hawaii 
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam (JBPH-H). JBPH-H is a joint Navy-Air Force installation 
located on Oahu, HI. It occupies approximately 27,000 acres, and serves as the headquarters for 
U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, U.S. Pacific Fleet, U.S. Pacific Air Forces, and Defense Logistics 
Agency-Indo-Pacific.141 JBPH-H is the homeport for approximately 25 Navy vessels (including 
ten destroyers and cruisers and thirteen attack submarines); it also hosts the Air Force’s 15th Wing 
(which includes one C-17 airlift squadron, one C-37 airlift squadron, and one F-22 fighter 
squadron) and the Hawaii Air National Guard’s 154th Wing (which includes one F-22 fighter 
squadron, one KC-135 refueling squadron, and one C-17 airlift squadron).142 Other significant 
facilities and capabilities at JBPH-H include the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate 
Maintenance Facility (a Navy-owned and operated shipyard that maintains, upgrades, and retires 
naval vessels), the 613th Air Operations Center (which provides command and control for Air 
Force operations throughout the Indo-Pacific region), and the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Facility (a large 
underground fuel storage facility which DOD is currently defueling in response to the JBPH-H 
Drinking Water Emergency).143 
Schofield Barracks. Schofield Barracks is an Army installation located in Honolulu, HI. It 
occupies approximately 16,000 acres, and is the home of the Army’s 25th Infantry Division.144  
Fort Shafter. Fort Shafter is an Army installation located in Honolulu, HI. It occupies 
approximately 585 acres, and is the headquarters of U.S. Army Pacific (ARPAC). Other 
significant units and facilities at Fort Shafter include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Pacific 
Ocean Division, the 94th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, and the 8th Theater 
Sustainment Command.145  
Wheeler Army Airfield. Wheeler Army Airfield is an Army installation located in Honolulu, HI. 
It occupies approximately 1,400 acres, and hosts the Army Garrison Hawaii headquarters as well 
as the Hawaii Air National Guard’s 298th Air Defense Group.146  
Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) Barking Sands. PMRF Barking Sands is a Navy 
installation located approximately five miles outside of Kekaha on the island of Hawaii, HI. It 
 
139 “Vandenberg Space Force Base,” Vandenberg Space Force Base, at https://www.vandenberg.spaceforce.mil/About-
Us/History/.  
140 “Vandenberg Launches GBI,” Vandenberg Space Force Base, at https://www.afspc.af.mil/News/Photos/igphoto/
2000398793/.  
141 “About,” Commander, Navy Region Hawaii, at https://cnrh.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/JB-Pearl-Harbor-Hickam/
About/.  
142 “Fleet Information,” Commander, Navy Region Hawaii, at https://cnrh.cnic.navy.mil/About/Fleet-Information/; 
“15th Wing Fact Sheet,” 15th Wing, at https://www.15wing.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/376262/15th-
wing/. 
143 “613th Air Operations Center,” Pacific Air Forces, at https://www.pacaf.af.mil/Info/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/
909886/613th-air-operations-center/. 
144 “FY2022 Base Structure Report”, “25th Infantry Division,” U.S. Army Hawaii, at https://home.army.mil/hawaii/
index.php/units-tenants/25thID.  
145 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” “Tenant Units,” U.S. Army Hawaii, at https://home.army.mil/hawaii/index.php. 
146 “Wheeler Field,” State of Hawaii Aviation, at https://aviation.hawaii.gov/airfields-airports/oahu/wheeler-field/. 
“Tenant Units,” U.S. Army Hawaii, at https://home.army.mil/hawaii/index.php. 
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occupies approximately 2,500 acres of land on Hawaii, but the range encompasses over 1,100 
square miles of instrumented ocean and 42,000 square miles of controlled airspace. PMRF 
Barking Sands is the world’s largest instrumented sea range, supporting training and RDT&E 
activities involving surface, undersea, air, and space-based weapons systems.147  
Marine Corps Base Hawaii. Marine Corps Base Hawaii is a Marine Corps installation located 
approximately 12 miles northeast of downtown Honolulu, HI. It occupies approximately 3,200 
acres, and hosts the 3rd Marine Littoral Regiment, 1st Battalion 12th Marines, 3rd Radio Battalion 
III MEF, and Marine Aircraft Group 24 (which includes one light attack helicopter squadron, two 
MV-22 squadrons, and one UAV squadron).148 
Wake Island 
Wake Island Airfield. Wake Island Airfield is an Air Force installation located on Wake Atoll (an 
unincorporated U.S. territory approximately 2,100 nautical miles west of Honolulu, HI). It 
occupies approximately 2,600 acres and hosts 11th Air Force, Detachment 1-Pacific Air Forces 
Regional Support Center. Wake Island Airfield primarily supports trans-pacific military air traffic 
and missile test activities.149  
Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands 
Naval Base Guam. Naval Base Guam is a Navy installation located in Guam. As with other 
DOD sites in Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, Naval Base Guam is managed as part of 
Joint Region Marianas.150 Naval Base Guam encompasses six noncontiguous sites across the 
island: Barrigada, North Finegayan, Ordnance Annex, Orote Point, Polaris Point, and Tenjo and 
Sasa Valley. The installation hosts one submarine squadron (consisting of five 
Los Angeles-class 
attack submarines), two submarine tenders, and Navy Expeditionary Forces Command Pacific 
(CTF-75).151 
Marine Corps Base Camp Blaz. Marine Corps Camp Blaz is a Marine Corps installation located 
in Guam and managed as part of Joint Region Marianas. It is the Marine Corps’ newest 
installation, and will host Marine Corps forces currently stationed at Okinawa beginning in the 
mid-2020s (expected to include a Marine Expeditionary Brigade (MEB) command element, a 
Marine Infantry Regiment, a Combat Logistics Battalion, and an Air Combat Element). Camp 
Blaz currently hosts an Army Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery.152  
Andersen Air Force Base. Andersen Air Force Base is an Air Force installation located in Guam 
and managed as part of Joint Region Marianas. It hosts the 36th Wing, which supports rotational 
 
147 “FY 2022 Base Structure Report.” “PMRF Barking Sands,” Commander, Navy Region Hawaii, at 
https://cnrh.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/PMRF-Barking-Sands/. 
148 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” “Mission,” Marine Corps Base Hawaii, at https://www.mcbhawaii.marines.mil/
Unit-Home/Mission/.  
149 “Wake Island,” 15th Wing, at https://www.15wing.af.mil/Units/11th-AF-Det-1-Wake-Island/. “FY2022 Base 
Structure Report.” 
150 “Joint Region Marianas,” Joint Region Marianas, at https://jrm.cnic.navy.mil/.  
151 “Submarine Squadron 15,” Commander, Submarine Forces, U.S. Pacific Fleet, at https://www.csp.navy.mil/css15/. 
152 Wyatt Olson, “Guam’s THAAD Missile Defense Battery will relocate to new Marine Corps Base,” 
Stars and 
Stripes, May 10, 2022 at https://www.stripes.com/theaters/asia_pacific/2022-05-10/guam-us-army-thaad-missile-
defense-battery-marine-corps-camp-blaz-5952276.html  
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bomber deployments (B-1 and B-52 aircraft) and regional contingency responses, as well as the 
Navy’s Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 25 (consisting of MH-60S helicopters).153 
The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau 
U.S. Army Garrison-Kwajalein Atoll. U.S. Army Garrison-Kwajalein Atoll is an Army 
installation located on Kwajalein Atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Its main site 
occupies approximately 1,360 acres, and hosts the Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test 
Site, a Major Range and Test Base Facility (MRTBF) supporting RDT&E activities for ballistic 
missile defense systems, strategic systems, and space tracking systems.154  
Tactical Mobile Over-the-Horizon Radar (Republic of Palau). The Air Force is constructing a 
site in the Republic of Palau to support the installation of a Tactical Mobile Over-the-Horizon 
Radar system. Construction should conclude in 2026.155 
Japan (Mainland) 
Camp Zama (including Sagami General Depot and Yokohama North Dock). Camp Zama is 
an Army installation located about 25 miles southwest of Tokyo, Japan. It occupies approximately 
578 acres, and serves as the headquarters for U.S. Army Japan, U.S. Army Garrison Japan, I 
Corps (Forward), and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Japan District.156 It also hosts Army 
Aviation Battalion Japan (which operates UH-60L helicopters and UC-35 fixed-wing aircraft), the 
38th Air Defense Artillery Brigade, the 35th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion, the 78th 
Signal Battalion, the 311th Military Intelligence Battalion, the 403rd Logistics Readiness Center, 
and the 836th Transportation Battalion.157 
Shariki and Kyogamisaki Communications Sites. Shariki Communications Site and 
Kyogamisaki Communications Site are Army installations, located respectively in northern and 
western Honshu, Japan. Each hosts an Army Navy Transportable Radar Surveillance and Control 
Model 2 (AN/TPY-2) system, used to detect and track ballistic missile threats to the Indo-Pacific 
and the continental United States.158  
Fleet Activities Yokosuka. Fleet Activities Yokosuka is a Navy installation located about 43 
miles south of Tokyo, Japan. It occupies approximately 568 acres, and hosts a number of surface 
warships, including a 
Nimitz-class aircraft carrier (the USS 
Ronald Reagan, currently the Navy’s 
only forward deployed carrier), a destroyer squadron (consisting of nine 
Arleigh Burke-class 
guided-missile destroyers), and three 
Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruisers.159 The 
 
153 “Units,” Andersen Air Force Base, at https://www.andersen.af.mil/Units/.  
154 “Mission,” U.S. Army Garrison – Kwajalein Atoll, at https://home.army.mil/kwajalein/index.php/about/mission.  
155 See “Contracts for Dec. 28, 2022,” Department of Defense, at https://www.defense.gov/News/Contracts/Contract/
Article/3255710/. 
156 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” 
157 “Honshu,” U.S. Army Japan, at https://www.usarj.army.mil/misc/map_honshu/.  
158 Jason Cutshaw, “Shariki Soldiers Defend Homeland, Allies,” U.S. Army, October 8, 2019, at https://www.army.mil/
article/227673/shariki_soldiers_defend_homeland_allies; Charlie Maib, “Kyogamisaki Communications Site,” U.S. 
Army, March 7, 2022, at https://www.army.mil/article/254485/kyogamisaki_communications_site_knife_edge_of_
freedom.  
159 “Destroyer Squadron 15,” Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, at https://www.surfpac.navy.mil/cds15/; “Ships,” 
Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, at https://www.surfpac.navy.mil/Ships/.  
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installation is also home to the U.S. Naval Ship Repair Facility and Japan Regional Maintenance 
Center.160 
Fleet Activities Sasebo. Fleet Activities Sasebo is a Navy installation located in western Kyushu, 
Japan. It occupies approximately 150 acres, and hosts a number of surface warships, including an 
amphibious squadron (consisting of one 
America-class amphibious assault ship, two 
San Antonio-
class amphibious transport docks, and two 
Whidbey Island-class dock landing ships) and a mine 
countermeasure squadron (consisting of four 
Avenger-class mine countermeasure ships).161 
Naval Air Facility Atsugi. Naval Air Facility Atsugi is a joint U.S. Navy-Japan Maritime Self 
Defense Force installation located about 20 miles southwest of Tokyo, Japan. It occupies 
approximately 1,234 acres, and serves as a support base for certain Carrier Air Wing Five aircraft 
(including a helicopter maritime strike squadron and a helicopter sea combat squadron).162 
Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni. Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni is a Marine Corps 
installation located in southern Honshu, Japan. It occupies approximately 7,100 acres, and hosts 
two F-35 fighter squadrons and one KC-130 aerial refueling squadron. It also serves as a support 
base for most Carrier Air Wing 5 aircraft (including four F/A-18 fighter squadrons, one EA-18 
electronic attack squadron, and one E-2D command and control squadron).163  
Yokota Air Base. Yokota Air Base is a joint U.S. Air Force and Japan Air Self-Defense Force 
installation located in the greater Tokyo metropolitan area, Japan. It occupies approximately 
1,750 acres, and serves as the headquarters for U.S. Forces Japan and the Fifth Air Force.164 
Yokota Air Base also hosts the 374th Airlift Wing, which includes one C-130J squadron and one 
squadron operating UH-1N helicopters and C-12J aircraft.165 
Misawa Air Base. Misawa Air Base is an Air Force installation located in northern Honshu, 
Japan. It occupies approximately 3,860 acres, and hosts the 35th Fighter Wing, which includes two 
F-16 fighter squadrons.166 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Army Garrison Okinawa. Army Garrison Okinawa encompasses a number of noncontiguous 
Army installations on the island of Okinawa, including Torii Station, Fort Buckner, Tengan Pier, 
Kuwae Depot Chimuwan, White Beach Fuel Tank Farms, and Naha Military Port. The garrison 
supports logistical functions (particularly fuel storage and distribution) and can provide regional 
contingency support.167  
 
160 “U.S. Naval Ship Repair Facility and Japan Regional Maintenance Center,” U.S. Navy, at https://www.srf.navy.mil/.  
161 “History,” Commander, Fleet Activities Sasebo, at https://cnrj.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/CFA-Sasebo/About/
History/. 
162 “FY2022 Base Structure Report”, and “Carrier Air Wing 5 – Squadrons,” Naval Air Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet at 
https://www.airpac.navy.mil/Organization/Carrier-Air-Wing-CVW-5/Squadrons/.  
163 “History of the Iwakuni Air Station,” U.S. Marine Corps, p. 2, at https://www.mcasiwakuni.marines.mil/Portals/112/
Docs/about/About_Iwakuni.pdf?ver=2020-03-04-205157-940. Note that the acreage given on the official MCAS 
Iwakuni website differs from that given by the “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” which lists 7,110.64 acres for the 
installation. A number of other sources agree with a figure of 1,300-1,400 acres (including 
Military One Source at 
https://installations.militaryonesource.mil/in-depth-overview/marine-corps-air-station-iwakuni). 
164 “FY2022 Base Structure Report.” 
165 “Units,” Yokota Air Base, at https://www.yokota.af.mil/About-Us/Units/.  
166 “FY2022 Base Structure Report”. “35th Fighter Wing,” Misawa Air Base, at https://www.misawa.af.mil/About-Us/
Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/773149/35th-fighter-wing/.  
167 “History,” U.S. Army Garrison Okinawa, at https://home.army.mil/okinawa/index.php/about/history. 
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Marine Corps Base Camp Butler. Marine Corps Base (MCB) Camp Butler encompasses 
contiguous and noncontiguous Marine Corps installations (including Camps Foster, Lester, 
Courtney, McTureous, Kinser, Hansen, Schwab, and Gonsalves) that together occupy 
approximately 40,000 acres on the island of Okinawa.168 MCB Camp Butler hosts the III Marine 
Expeditionary Force (III MEF), a Marine Air-Ground Task Force and the only permanently 
forward-deployed Marine Expeditionary Force. Subordinate units of III MEF stationed at MCB 
Camp Butler include the 3rd Marine Division, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, 3rd Marine Logistics 
Group, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit and III MEF 
Information Group. Other significant facilities and capabilities located at MCB Camp Butler 
include the Jungle Warfare Training Center and other training areas and live fire ranges.169  
Marine Corps Air Station Futenma. Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Futenma is a Marine 
Corps installation located in southern Okinawa. It occupies approximately 1,200 acres, and hosts 
two medium tilt-rotary squadrons (operating CH-53E heavy-lift helicopters, AH-1Z Viper attack 
helicopters, and UH-1Y utility helicopters as well as MV-22 tiltrotor aircraft) and support from 
Marine Aircraft Group 36.170  
Kadena Air Base. Kadena Air Base is an Air Force installation located near Okinawa City, 
Okinawa, Japan. It occupies approximately 4,900 acres, and hosts the 18th Wing, subordinate 
units of which include a KC-135 refueling squadron, an E-3 AWACS airborne air control 
squadron, and an HH-60 rescue squadron.171 Until November 2022, Kadena also hosted two F-
15D/D fighter squadrons; as of this writing, the Air Force is rotationally deploying F-22 fighter 
aircraft from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska.172  
Republic of Korea 
Camp Humphreys. Camp Humphreys is an Army installation located in Pyeongtaek, South 
Korea (about 40 miles south of Seoul). Camp Humphreys occupies approximately 3,500 acres, 
and serves as the headquarters for U.S. Forces Korea, the Eighth Army, and U.S. Marine Corps 
Forces Korea. 173 Camp Humphreys also hosts the 2nd Infantry Division/Republic of Korea-U.S. 
Combined Division, the Army’s only permanently forward-stationed division (major units include 
a rotational armored brigade combat team, two field artillery brigades, and a combat aviation 
brigade).174 
U.S. Army Garrison Daegu (Camps Henry, Walker, George and Carroll; Busan Pier 8). U.S. 
Army Garrison Daegu encompasses five significant Army installations in eastern South Korea: 
Camps Henry, Walker, and George (located in the Daegu metropolitan area); Camp Carroll 
(located in North Gyeongsan province); and Busan Pier 8 (located in the Busan metropolitan 
 
168 “Introduction – Marine Corps Base Camp Butler,” DOD Environment, Safety & Occupational Health Network and 
Information Exchange, at https://www.denix.osd.mil/awards/denix-files/sites/12/2018/03/CRM-LI-USMC-Butler-
Narrative-508C.pdf. Note that the FY2022 Base Structure Report does not provide information for the entire MCB 
Camp Butler site. 
169 “Marine Corps Camp Butler,” Marine Corps Camp Butler, at https://www.mcbbutler.marines.mil/. 
170 “About,” 1st Marine Air Wing, at https://www.1stmaw.marines.mil/Unit-Home/About/.  
171 “FY2022 Base Structure Report”, and “18th Wing Fact Sheet,” U.S. Air Force, at https://www.5af.pacaf.af.mil/
About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/1483830/18th-wing/.  
172 https://www.stripes.com/branches/air_force/2022-11-22/air-force-kadena-f22-raptor-rotations-8144899.html 
173 “History, Camp Humphreys, at https://home.army.mil/humphreys/index.php/about/history. 
174 “2nd Infantry Division (2ID)-Korea,” 2nd Infantry Division, at https://www.2id.korea.army.mil/.  
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area). Significant units and capabilities include the 19th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary), 
the 403rd Army Field Support Brigade-Korea, and Material Supply Center-Korea.175 
U.S. Army Garrison Yongsan-Casey (K-16, Yongsan Garrison, and Camp Casey). U.S. Army 
Garrison Yongsan-Casey encompasses installations in the Seoul metropolitan area of South 
Korea: the K-16 airfield, Yongsan Garrison, and Camp Casey. In accordance with the terms of 
two bilateral agreements, DOD is gradually returning these sites to the South Korean government, 
with many former functions and units moving to Camp Humphreys.176  
Fleet Activities Chinhae. Fleet Activities Chinhae is a Navy installation in Changwon City, 
South Korea. The only Navy installation in Korea, Fleet Activities Chinhae hosts U.S. Naval 
Forces, Detachment Chinhae, a small detachment of approximately 300 sailors which coordinates 
operations, exercises, and other institutional cooperation between the U.S. and ROK Navies.177  
Marine Corps Installation Camp Mujuk. Marine Corps Installation Camp Mujuk is a Marine 
Corps installation located in Pohang, South Korea. The only Marine Corps installation in Korea, 
Camp Mujuk supports rotational Marine Corps units and combined U.S.-ROK training 
exercises.178 
Osan Air Base. Osan Air Base is an Air Force installation located about 20 miles south of Seoul, 
South Korea. It occupies approximately 1,500 acres, and serves as the headquarters of the 
Seventh Air Force. Osan Air Base also hosts the 51st Fighter Wing (which includes one A-10 
attack squadron and one F-16 fighter squadron) and one U-2 reconnaissance squadron from the 
9th Reconnaissance Wing.179 
Kunsan Air Base. Kunsan Air Base is an Air Force installation located about 7 miles west of 
Gunsan City. It occupies approximately 2,549 acres, and hosts the 8th Fighter Wing (which 
includes two F-16 fighter squadrons).180 
The Philippines 
Nine Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) Sites. Under the Enhanced Defense 
Cooperation Agreement, the U.S. military has rotational access to nine defense sites across the 
Philippines. Five of these installations were agreed upon in 2014 (Antonio Bautista Air Base in 
Palawan, Basa Air Base in Pampanga, Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija, Lumbia Airport in 
Cagayan de Oro, Benito Ebuen Air Base in Cebu), while the remaining four were agreed upon in 
2023 (Naval Base Camilo Osias in Sta Ana, Cagayan; Lal-lo Airport in Lal-lo, Cagayan; Camp 
Melchor Dela Cruz in Gamu, Isabela and Balabac Island in Palawan).181  
 
175 “About,” U.S. Army Garrison Gaegu, at https://www.army.mil/daegu#org-about  
176 These agreements are the 2002 Land Partnership Plan (available at https://2001-2009.state.gov/documents/
organization/98126.pdf) and the 2004 Yongsan Relocation Plan (available at https://2001-2009.state.gov/documents/
organization/95894.pdf).  
177 “Commander, Fleet Activities Chinhae” Commander, Navy Region Korea, at https://cnrk.cnic.navy.mil/
Installations/CFA-Chinhae/.  
178 “MCI Camp Mujuk,” Marine Corps, at https://www.mcipac.marines.mil/Installations/Camp-Mujuk.  
179 “Osan Air Base,” Pacific Air Forces, https://www.pacaf.af.mil/Info/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/909898/osan-air-
base/  
180 “FY2022 Base Structure Report,” and “8th Fighter Wing,” Kunsan Air Base, available at kunsan.af.mil/About-Us/
Fact-Sheets/Article/412731/8th-fighter-wing/. 
181 “U.S., Philippines Cut the Ribbon on Enhanced Defense Cooperation Project,” U.S. Embassy in the Philippines, at 
https://www.pacom.mil/Media/News/News-Article-View/Article/1744271/us-philippines-cut-the-ribbon-on-enhanced-
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Singapore 
Navy Region Center Singapore. The U.S. Navy maintains a presence in Singapore primarily to 
manage and provide logistical support for visiting surface warships (mainly at Changi Naval Base 
and Sembawang shipyard). In addition, Paya Lebar Air Base hosts rotational Air Force personnel 
and aircraft. Other DOD activities present in Singapore and managed through Navy Region 
Center Singapore include Logistics Group Western Pacific, Naval Supply Systems Command 
Fleet Logistics Center Yokosuka Site Singapore, Military Sealift Command Far East, and Defense 
Contract Management Agency Singapore.182 
Australia 
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Base Darwin and Robertson Barracks. RAAF Base 
Darwin and Robertson Barracks are two Australian military installations located in the Northern 
Territory. Since 2011, they have hosted a rotational U.S. Marine Air Ground Task Force known as 
Marine Rotational Force-Darwin (MRF-D). MRF-D rotations are typically six months and 
involve combined exercises and training with the Australian military and other regional 
partners.183  
RAAF Base Tindal. RAAF Base Tindal is an RAAF installation in Australia’s Northern Territory 
that hosts rotational deployments of U.S. aircraft and personnel and supports the Enhanced Air 
Cooperation (EAC) initiative between the RAAF and U.S. Air Force. To support its usage of the 
base (which includes the rotational deployment of B-52 bomber aircraft), the United States is 
currently funding construction of a new bulk fuel facility.184  
Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt. Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt 
is a naval installation jointly operated by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) and the U.S. Navy. 
 
defense-cooperation-agreement-project/, “Philippines, U.S. Announce Four New EDCA Sites,” Department of 
Defense, February 1, 2023, ar https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/3285566/philippines-us-
announce-four-new-edca-sites/, and “4 Additional EDCA Sites,” Presidential Communications Office, April 2, 2023 at 
https://pco.gov.ph/news_releases/palace-4-additional-edca-sites-to-boost-ph-humanitarian-relief-operations-in-
disasters/ 
182 “Tenant Commands,” Commander, Navy Region Japan, at https://cnrj.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/Singapore-Area-
Coordinator/About/Tenant-Commands/.  
183 See Capt. Joseph DiPietro, “Marine Rotational Force-Darwin 22 Arrives in Darwin,” U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, 
March 17, 2022 at https://www.pacom.mil/Media/News/News-Article-View/Article/2970258/marine-rotational-force-
darwin-22-arrives-in-darwin/. 
184 See Seth Robson, “U.S. military’s footprint is expanding in northern Australia to meet a rising 
China,” 
Stars and Stripes, September 8, 2022, at 
https://www.stripes.com/theaters/asia_pacific/2022-09-08/australia-military-construction-
projects-china-7251762.html and t
he “Congress funds the establishment and sustainment of 
defense infrastructure through the Military Construction and Operation and Maintenance 
appropriations titles. In addition, beginning in FY2021, Congress has authorized a particular set 
of Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure appropriations as part of the Pacific Deterrence Initiative 
(PDI), a group of regionally-focused defense investments and activities typically included as part 
of the annual National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).  
Military Construction” subheading within the 
“Issues for Congress” section of this report. 
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The site occupies approximately 5,100 acres, and broadcasts communications to Australian and 
U.S. submarines using Very Low Frequency (VLF) communications.185 
Other Sites. As part of the Australia-United Kingdom-U.S. (AUKUS) pact, the Royal Australian 
Navy’s (RAN) HMAS Stirling naval base (located in Perth, Western Australia) will host 
rotational deployments of U.S. and U.K. nuclear-powered submarines beginning in 2027. U.S. 
submarines will also increase the frequency of visits to HMAS Stirling beginning in 2023.186 
British Indian Ocean Territory (Diego Garcia) 
Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia. Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia is a Navy 
installation located on Diego Garcia, an atoll in the British Indian Ocean Territory. It occupies 
approximately 6,200 acres, and its primary function is to provide logistical support for forces 
operating in and around the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. Significant units and capabilities 
based at Diego Garcia include a maritime pre-positioning squadron and detachments from the 
U.S. Fleet and Industrial Supply Center, Air Mobility Command, Pacific Air Force, and the 21st 
and 22nd Space Operations Squadrons (providing space domain awareness and satellite control, 
respectively).187 
Table A-1. U.S. Defense Sites in the Indo-Pacific 
U.S.-owned, -operated, or -utilized sites included in this report 
U.S. 
DOD-
No. 
Site Name 
Location 
Service 
territory? 
operated? 
1 
Fort Wainwright 
Alaska 
Army 
Yes 
Yes 
2 
Fort Greely 
Alaska 
Army 
Yes 
Yes 
3 
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson 
Alaska 
Joint (Army and 
Yes 
Yes 
Air Force) 
4 
Eielson Air Force Base 
Alaska 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
5 
Eareckson Air Station  
Alaska 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
6 
Clear Space Force Station 
Alaska 
Space Force 
Yes 
Yes 
7 
Joint Base Lewis-McChord 
Washington 
Joint (Army and 
Yes 
Yes 
Air Force) 
8 
Naval Base Kitsap 
Washington 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
9 
Naval Station Everett 
Washington 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
10 
Naval Air Station Whidbey Island 
Washington 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
11 
Fairchild Air Force Base 
Washington 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
12 
Naval Base Ventura County 
California 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
13 
Naval Base Coronado 
California 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
 
185 “FY2022 Base Structure Report”; ‘open-source’ information about NCS Harold E Holt is not widely available, but 
for a basic overview, see “Raytheon Australia Commences Operations at the Naval Communications Station, Harold E. 
Holt,” Raytheon Australia, November 4, 2011 https://raytheon.au.mediaroom.com/news-release-archive? item=78. 
186 David Weber, “AUKUS deal: Jim Chalmers announces $8 billion HMAS Stirling naval base expansion,” 
Australian 
Broadcasting Corporation, March 14, 2023 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-03-14/aukus-deal-jim-chalmers-hmas-
stirling-expansion-perth-wa/102092058 . 
187 “About Diego Garcia,” Commander, Navy Region Japan, at https://cnrj.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NSF-Diego-
Garcia/About/About-Diego-Garcia/. 
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U.S. 
DOD-
No. 
Site Name 
Location 
Service 
territory? 
operated? 
14 
Naval Base San Diego 
California 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
15 
Naval Base Point Loma 
California 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
16 
Marine Corps Air Station 
California 
Marine Corps 
Yes 
Yes 
Miramar 
17 
Marine Corps Base Camp 
California 
Marine Corps 
Yes 
Yes 
Pendleton 
18 
Beale Air Force Base 
California 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
19 
Travis Air Force Base 
California 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
20 
Vandenberg Space Force Base 
California 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
21 
Schofield Barracks 
Hawaii 
Army 
Yes 
Yes 
22 
Fort Shafter 
Hawaii 
Army 
Yes 
Yes 
23 
Wheeler Army Airfield 
Hawaii 
Army 
Yes 
Yes 
24 
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam 
Hawaii 
Joint (Navy and 
Yes 
Yes 
Air Force) 
25 
Pacific Missile Range Facility, 
Hawaii 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
Barking Sands 
26 
Marine Corps Base Hawaii 
Hawaii 
Marine Corps 
Yes 
Yes 
27 
Wake Island Airfield 
Wake Island 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
28 
Naval Base Guam 
Guam 
Navy 
Yes 
Yes 
29 
Marine Corps Base Camp Blaz 
Guam 
Marine Corps 
Yes 
Yes 
30 
Andersen Air Force Base 
Guam 
Air Force 
Yes 
Yes 
31 
Army Garrison-Kwajalein Atol  
Republic of the 
Army 
No 
Yes 
Marshall Islands 
32 
Camp Zama 
Japan (Mainland) 
Army 
No 
Yes 
33 
Shariki Communications Site 
Japan (Mainland) 
Army 
No 
Yes 
34 
Kyogamisaki Communications 
Japan (Mainland) 
Army 
No 
Yes 
Site 
35 
Fleet Activities Yokosuka 
Japan (Mainland) 
Navy 
No 
Yes 
36 
Fleet Activities Sasebo 
Japan (Mainland) 
Navy 
No 
Yes 
37 
Naval Air Facility Atsugi 
Japan (Mainland) 
Navy 
No 
Yes 
38 
Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni  Japan (Mainland) 
Marine Corps 
No 
Yes 
39 
Yokota Air Base 
Japan (Mainland) 
Air Force 
No 
Yes 
40 
Misawa Air Base 
Japan (Mainland) 
Air Force 
No 
Yes 
41 
Army Garrison Okinawa 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Army 
No 
Yes 
42 
Marine Corps Base Camp Butler 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Marine Corps 
No 
Yes 
43 
Marine Corps Air Station 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Marine Corps 
No 
Yes 
Futenma 
44 
Kadena Air Base 
Japan (Okinawa) 
Air Force 
No 
Yes 
45 
Camp Humphreys 
Republic of Korea 
Army 
No 
Yes 
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U.S. 
DOD-
No. 
Site Name 
Location 
Service 
territory? 
operated? 
46 
Army Garrison Daegu 
Republic of Korea 
Army 
No 
Yes 
47 
Army Garrison Yongsan-Casey 
Republic of Korea 
Army 
No 
Yes 
48 
Fleet Activities Chinhae 
Republic of Korea 
Navy 
No 
Yes 
49 
Marine Corps Installation Camp 
Republic of Korea 
Marine Corps 
No 
Yes 
Mujuk 
50 
Osan Air Base 
Republic of Korea 
Air Force 
No 
Yes 
51 
Kunsan Air Base 
Republic of Korea 
Air Force 
No 
Yes 
52 
Antonio Bautista Air Base 
The Philippines  
N/A 
No 
No 
53 
Basa Air Base 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
54 
Fort Magsaysay 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
55 
Lumbia Airport 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
56 
Benito Ebuen Air Base 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
57 
Naval Base Camilo Osias 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
58 
Lal-lo Airport 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
59 
Camp Melchor Dela 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
60 
Balabac Island 
The Philippines 
N/A 
No 
No 
61 
Navy Region Center Singapore 
Singapore 
Navy 
No 
No 
62 
Royal Australian Air Force Base 
Australia 
N/A 
No 
No 
Darwin 
63 
Robertson Barracks 
Australia 
N/A 
No 
No 
64 
Royal Australian Air Force Base 
Australia 
N/A 
No 
No 
Tindal 
65 
Naval Communications Station 
Australia 
Navy 
No 
Yes (jointly 
Harold E. Holt 
w/ RAN) 
66 
Naval Support Facility Diego 
British Indian 
Navy 
No 
Yes 
Garcia 
Ocean Territory 
(Diego Garcia) 
Source: CRS analysis of DOD information. 
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Appendix B. Historical Overview of Indo-Pacific 
Defense Infrastructure 
U.S. defense infrastructure in what is now termed the Indo-Pacific region dates to the early 19th 
century. Although only in use for four months, Fort Clatsop, the winter encampment established 
by the U.S. Army’s Corps of Discovery in 1805, was the first U.S. defense facility on North 
America’s Pacific coast.188 As U.S. expansion and settlement accelerated, the Army established a 
number of permanent outposts in what are now the states of Oregon, Washington, and California 
beginning in the 1840s and 1850s.189 The U.S. Navy also began to operate in the Pacific during 
this period, although the lack of development in coastal areas (particularly prior to the 1848 
acquisition of California) meant that American vessels relied mainly on foreign ports for 
provisioning and repair.190  
Between the end of the Mexican-American War (1848) and the Spanish-American War (1898), 
the U.S. purchased Alaska (1867) and took possession of Midway Atoll (1867).191 In 1898, 
expansionist sentiment and victory over Spain led to the U.S. annexation of the Republic of 
Hawaii and the formerly Spanish territories of the Philippines and Guam. From an infrastructure 
perspective, each of these areas quickly acquired significance. A major rationale for the 
annexation of Hawaii was its importance as a refueling and supply stop for vessels transiting the 
Pacific, and in 1899 the Navy established a naval station at Pearl Harbor.192 In the Philippines, the 
U.S. military built or expanded a wide array of installations, including a naval base and coastal 
fortifications at Subic Bay and a number of Army outposts throughout the territory.193 In Guam, 
the Department of the Navy established a naval station and a Marine barracks.194 
 
188 Fort Clatsop was established at the mouth of the Columbia River, close to what is now Astoria, OR. See “Fort 
Clatsop,” National Park Service, at https://www.nps.gov/places/fort-clatsop-or.htm. 
189 Examples include Camp Vancouver/Vancouver Barracks in what is now Washington and Fortress Alacatraz in what 
is now California. See “Vancouver Barracks,” National Park Service, at 
https://www.nps.gov/fova/learn/historyculture/vb.htm and “Fortress Alcatraz,” National Park Service
, at 
https://www.nps.gov/alca/learn/historyculture/fortress-alcatraz.htm.  
190 This led to U.S. policy commitments such as the Tyler Doctrine (1842), which expanded the Monroe Doctrine to 
cover the then-independent Kingdom of Hawai’i in part due to its importance for “the refitment and provisioning of 
American vessels”. See Michael Green, 
By More Than Providence: Grand Strategy and American Power in the Asia-
Pacific since 1783 (New York: Columbia University Press, 2017), p. 31. 
191 The Army operated a number of small forts along Alaska’s southern coast, while an initial attempt to build a coaling 
station on Midway was abandoned by 1870. See Captain Richard Packer, “150 years of the Army in Alaska” 
Defense 
Visual Information Distribution Service (DVIDS), October 31, 2017, https://www.dvidshub.net/news/253683/150-
years-army-alaska; and “A Brief History of Midway Atoll,” Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument
, 
https://www.papahanaumokuakea.gov/maritime/midway.html. 
192 As one Senator put it during the annexation debate, “the Pacific is so wide that battleships cannot cross it from any 
foreign naval station to the Pacific coast without recoaling, and there is no place to recoal except Hawaii.” Quoted in 
Green, 
By More than Providence, p. 88. See also “Development of the Naval Establishment in Hawaii,” Naval History 
and Heritage Command, at https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-
alphabetically/u/the-us-navy-and-hawaii-a-historical-summary/development-of-the-naval-establishment-in-hawaii.html  
193 Early U.S. installations in the Philippines included Fort Stotsenburg (which would become Clark Air Base) and Fort 
Santiago, the headquarters of the Army’s Philippine Department. See David L. Rosmer, 
An Annotated Pictorial History 
of Clark Air Base (Washington, D.C.: Thirteenth Air Force Office of History, 1986), p. 38.  
194 “History – Naval Base Guam,” Joint Region Marianas, at https://jrm.cnic.navy.mil/Installations/NAVBASE-
Guam/About/History/.  
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Given the centrality of the European theater to World War I (1914-18), the role played by U.S. 
Indo-Pacific defense infrastructure was minimal.195 However, many of the war’s military 
innovations and geopolitical consequences influenced regional infrastructure developments in the 
1920s and 30s.196 For U.S. planners, Pacific defense sites during the interwar period played two 
major roles: they enabled the Navy to operate in the region; and they offered a degree of 
protection to U.S. territories and commercial interests. As conflict with Japan became more 
plausible in the late 1930s and early 1940s, the U.S. military increased the resources and attention 
devoted to Pacific defense infrastructure, constructing new air and naval facilities at Midway 
Atoll and Wake Island.197 
Japan’s surprise attacks on the United States in December 1941 targeted Pearl Harbor as well as 
other key regional defense sites, including bases on the Philippines and Wake Island. Allied 
prosecution of the ensuing Pacific War relied heavily on both the existing infrastructure and 
significant new construction. Military bases, training areas, depots, arsenals, and port facilities 
along the West Coast and in Hawaii played important roles in staging and sustaining the 
projection of U.S. military forces westward into the Pacific. Dozens of West Coast shipyards—
primarily located in the Puget Sound, Portland, San Francisco Bay, and Los Angeles areas—built 
warships and cargo vessels for the U.S. Navy and merchant marine, and Southern California 
became one of the country’s major centers of aircraft manufacturing.198 In the Pacific theater 
itself, military engineers—particularly naval construction battalions (known as ‘Seabees’)—made 
possible operations in remote and austere environments by building dozens of advance bases to 
support naval vessels, aircraft, and ground forces.199  
By 1945, the United States oversaw a vast infrastructure network spanning from the West Coast 
to mainland Asia. In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the U.S. military requisitioned and 
built installations in Japan (and its former territories in Korea and Micronesia) to support postwar 
occupation and reconstruction activities.200 As tensions with the Soviet Union intensified, U.S. 
planners shifted their focus, reorienting America’s regional basing posture around deterring 
communist attacks on U.S.-aligned governments, enabling the rapid buildup and supply of forces 
 
195 However, the first engagement between U.S. and German forces occurred in Apra Harbor, Guam, where a German 
commerce raider was in port when the United States entered the war. See “History,” Joint Region Marianas/Department 
of the Navy, at https://jrm.cnic.navy.mil/About/History/.  
196 The newly demonstrated effectiveness of airpower, for instance, led the Army and Navy to build a number of 
airfields, while U.S. ratification of the postwar Washington Naval Treaty precluded the construction of new defensive 
fortifications in the Pacific until the agreement lapsed in 1936. See Green, 
By More than Providence, pp. 140-142. 
197 Construction of a naval air station and submarine base on Wake Island began in early 1941, while Naval Air Station 
Midway Islands was established in August 1941. See “Wake Island,” Naval History and Heritage Command, available 
at https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/w/wake-island.html, and Charity Roberts, “The 
‘Other’ Battle of Midway,” National Museum of the Pacific War, October 11, 2022 at 
https://www.pacificwarmuseum.org/about/news/the-pacific-medals-of-honor-the-other-battle-of-midway-first-
lieutenant-george-h-cannon-u-s-marine-corps. 
198 See Arthur Herman, 
Freedom’s Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II (New York: 
Random House, 2012) pp. 130-144 and 176-191 and Jacob Vander Meulen, “West Coast Labor and the Military 
Aircraft Industry, 1935-1941” 
Pacific Northwest Quarterly, Vol. 88, No. 2 (Spring, 1997), available at 
https://www.jstor.org/stable/40492294.  
199 “The Logistics of Advance Bases,” Naval History and Heritage Command, available at 
https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/l/the-logistics-of-advance-
bases.html. 
200 In addition to facilities for occupying forces, the military carried out $400 million worth of civilian infrastructure 
projects to aid Japan’s postwar reconstruction. See “Military Reconstruction in Japan,” 
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, updated March 2021. Available at https://www.usace.army.mil/About/History/Historical-Vignettes/Military-
Construction-Combat/074-Military-Reconstruction/ 
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in the event of a crisis, and signaling to both allies and potential adversaries that the United States 
was committed to the region.  
Beginning with the Truman administration, the geographical anchor of America’s Pacific strategy 
was held to be a “defensive perimeter” running from the Aleutians through Japan, the Ryukyu 
Islands (Okinawa), and the Philippines.201 The outbreak of the Korean War in 1950 led to the 
explicit inclusion of South Korea within this perimeter. The U.S. war effort itself relied heavily 
on logistical support from existing and newly developed defense sites—particularly logistical 
hubs in Japan.202 By the mid-1950s, DOD’s infrastructure footprint in Northeast Asia had 
expanded to encompass dozens of major installations in South Korea, mainland Japan, and 
Okinawa. 
Elsewhere in the Indo-Pacific, the United States maintained large bases in the Philippines (which 
gained independence in 1946, but continued to allow U.S. basing), Guam, and Hawaii. This 
basing posture was informed by what became known as the ‘island chain strategy,’ a framework 
for containing communist expansion by “mak[ing] safe the offshore island chain which swings 
south through Japan, the Ryukyus, the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand” (in addition to 
this ‘First Island Chain,’ later strategists would refer to a ‘Second Island Chain’ stretching from 
Japan to the Marianas and Palau, as well as a ‘Third Island Chain’ centered on the Hawaiian 
Islands). 203 
Beginning in the early 1960s, escalating U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War began to place new 
and increased demands on Pacific defense sites. By 1969, the United States had built a large 
defense infrastructure network in South Vietnam, encompassing 26 “major base camps” spread 
throughout the country.204 Installations outside South Vietnam also supported U.S. combat 
operations—hundreds of thousands of personnel and millions of tons of materiel passed through 
mainland Japan or Okinawa on their way to Vietnam, for instance, while bases in the Philippines 
provided logistical support and staging for aircraft and troops.205 
With the end of the Vietnam War, the onset of U.S.-Soviet detente, and the opening of relations 
between the U.S. and the PRC, the strategic importance of Pacific defense infrastructure appeared 
to diminish.206 In the late 1970s, the United States ended its military presence in Taiwan pursuant 
to commitments made as part of the normalization of U.S.-PRC ties, and the Carter 
 
201 Dean Acheson, “Remarks by Dean Acheson before the National Press Club,” January 12, 1950. Available at 
https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/library/research-files/remarks-dean-acheson-national-press-club.  
202 See Terence Gough, 
U.S. Army Mobilization and Logistics in the Korean War (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army 
Center of Military History, 1987), especially pp. 115-120. Available online at 
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GOVPUB-D114-PURL-gpo126559/pdf/GOVPUB-D114-PURL-gpo126559.pdf. 
203 The ‘island chain strategy’ was first articulated by future Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in the early 1950s. 
See John Foster Dulles, “Security in the Pacific,” 
Foreign Affairs, January 1952, available at 
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/1952-01-01/security-pacific?check_logged_in=1. For later usage, 
see, for example, Wilson Vorndick, “China’s Reach has grown; so should the Island Chains,” Center for Strategic and 
International Studies, October 22, 2018 at https://amti.csis.org/chinas-reach-grown-island-chains/ and Derek Grossman, 
“America is Betting Big on the Second Island Chain,” 
The Diplomat, September 5, 2020 at 
https://thediplomat.com/2020/09/america-is-betting-big-on-the-second-island-chain/. 
204 Carroll Dunn, 
Base Development in South Vietnam, 1965-1970 (Washington, D.C.: Department of the Army, 1991), 
p. 135. Available online at https://history.army.mil/html/books/090/90-6/CMH_Pub_90-6.pdf. 
205 Thomas Havens, 
Fire across the Sea: The Vietnam War and Japan 1965-70 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University 
Press, 1987), pp. 84-88, 159.  
206 One example of this trend was the adoption in 1969 of the Nixon Doctrine (sometimes called the Guam Doctrine), 
which sought to avoid Vietnam-like entanglements by encouraging its allies to handle “problems of military defense” 
themselves. See 
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, Volume I, U.S. Department of State at 
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v01/d29.  
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administration unsuccessfully sought to withdraw all U.S. ground forces from South Korea.207 
Strategic thinking around regional defense infrastructure shifted again in the early 1980s, when 
the Reagan administration adopted a global posture that placed more emphasis on regional 
forward presence and initiated a major military buildup.208  
The end of the Cold War brought another reassessment of the U.S. defense role in the Indo-
Pacific. In its 1990 and 1992 Pacific strategies, DOD outlined a vision of successive regional 
force and infrastructure reductions in response to the changed geopolitical environment.209 In 
1991, a combination of natural disaster and diplomatic impasse led the U.S. to evacuate its 
Philippine bases and end almost a century of military presence in the country. In 1995, however, 
the U.S. Security Strategy for the East Asia-Pacific (sometimes referred to as the Nye Report) 
avoided further reductions, instead committing the military to “maintain a stable forward 
presence in the region, at the existing level of about 100,000 troops, for the foreseeable future.”210 
Further adjustments to U.S. basing posture occurred in South Korea, where the U.S. and Republic 
of Korea (ROK) governments in 2004 agreed to consolidate U.S. forces in installations centered 
on two regional “hub” areas south of Seoul.211 
U.S. security strategy in the Indo-Pacific during the 1990s and early 2000s focused on managing 
sources of regional instability, especially tensions between North and South Korea and between 
the PRC and Taiwan. After the commencement of the Global War on Terror (GWOT) in 2001, 
Indo-Pacific locations like Diego Garcia also provided significant logistical support for combat 
operations in the greater Middle East, especially following the 2003 invasion of Iraq.212 Defense 
infrastructure also supported humanitarian operations in the aftermath of natural disasters, 
including the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and the 2011 earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster 
in Japan.213  
Under President Barack Obama, the U.S. military began to shift its focus from GWOT operations 
to great power competition with the PRC. In 2011, the Obama administration announced a “pivot 
 
207 In Taiwan, the United States completed the withdrawal of its approximately 10,000 troops by 1979, while President 
Carter ultimately withdrew 3,400 of the approximately 40,000 U.S. military personnel who had been stationed in Korea 
at the start of his term. See Green, 
By More Than Providence, p. 353; Jay Mathews, “U.S. Trims Military Forces on 
Taiwan,” 
The Washington Post, November 7, 1978; and Terence Roehrig, “South Korea: An Alliance in Transition,” in 
Carnes Lord and Andrew S. Erickson (editors), 
Rebalancing U.S. Forces: Basing and Forward Presence in the Asia-
Pacific (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2014), pp.70-71. 
 
208 For an assessment of Reagan-era defense spending that includes trends in military construction appropriations, see 
Katherine Blakeley, “Defense Spending in a Historical Context: A New Reagan-esque Buildup?” Center for Strategic 
and Budgetary Assessments, November 8, 2017, at https://csbaonline.org/reports/defense-spending-in-historical-
context.  
209 These included reducing troop levels in Korea and Japan, returning “excess facilities” to host governments, and 
obtaining increases to allies’ financial and military contributions to collective security. See “A Strategic Framework for 
the Asian Pacific Rim,” Department of Defense, April 1990, pp.7-13. 
210 See “United States Security Strategy for the East Asia-Pacific Region,” Department of Defense, February 1995. 
Available at https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA298441.pdf. 
211 The first hub centers on the city of Pyeongtaek and includes Camp Humphreys and Osan Air Base; the second 
centers on Daegu and includes USAG-Daegu, Fleet Activities Chinhae, and MCI Camp Mujuk. See Terence Roehrig, 
“South Korea: An Alliance in Transition,” in Lord and Erickson (ed.) 
Rebalancing U.S. Forces, pp.74-75. 
212 The U.S. first gained access to Diego Garcia, a British overseas territory, in 1966, and initially used the location as a 
communications facility and a base for reconnaissance flights. In the 1980s, the U.S. and U.K. governments 
significantly expanded Diego Garcia’s naval and air facilities. See Walter Ladwig, Andrew Erickson, and Justin 
Mikolay, “Diego Garcia and American Security in the Indian Ocean,” in Lord and Erickson (ed.) 
Rebalancing U.S. 
Forces, pp. 139-142. 
213 See CRS Report R41690, 
Japan 2011 Earthquake: U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) Response, by Andrew 
Feickert and Emma Chanlett-Avery.  
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U.S. Defense Infrastructure in the Indo-Pacific: Background and Issues for Congress 
 
to Asia” to bolster and expand the U.S. role in the region. To that end, DOD shifted more forces 
(especially naval) to the Indo-Pacific and negotiated rotational access to additional military bases 
in countries like Australia and the Philippines.214 The focus on strategic competition with China 
expanded under the Trump administration, which prioritized infrastructure investments in 
locations such as Guam and Micronesia while also seeking larger contributions from Indo-Pacific 
allies to support U.S. basing costs.215 In 2020, Congress established the Pacific Deterrence 
Initiative, a set of regionally focused defense investments that includes infrastructure as a major 
activity category (Section 1251 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, P.L. 116-283). 
 
 
 
 
 
Author Information 
 Luke A. Nicastro 
   
Analyst in U.S. Defense Infrastructure Policy     
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in 
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or 
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to 
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
 
214 See “FACT SHEET: Advancing the Rebalance to Asia and the Pacific,” White House Office of the Press Secretary, 
November 16, 2015. Available at https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2015/11/16/fact-sheet-
advancing-rebalance-asia-and-pacific.  
215 “A Free and Open Indo-Pacific,” Department of State, November 4, 2019. Available at https://www.state.gov/wp-
content/uploads/2019/11/Free-and-Open-Indo-Pacific-4Nov2019.pdf  
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