Why the U.S. Military Should Worry If the Philippines
Dumps America (And It Involves China)
Back in
March, as Military Times optimistically reported, the US military was planning
to place “permanent logistics facilities”
at five bases in the Philippines. In May, the Philippine presidential election
put a quick end to that. Since then, new President Rodrigo Duterte's bluster on
multiple matters has seemed to rival even the bombast coming from this year’s
presidential election in the United States. His approval ratings are high,
however, and even transcend demographic distinctions. So let’s consider the
issue from a hard-nosed American perspective, drawing on some lessons of
history. How did the nature of the Philippines affect American strategy prior
to the Second World War, and how might a changing relationship with the
Philippines affect materiel planning now?
Signals from the Philippines on this issue
of the alliance have been mixed, but mostly bad. On 11 October, Duterte
announced that he would not actually abrogate the Philippines’ mutual defense
treaty with the United States. At the same time, he asked his own officials, in
a speech at the Malacañan Palace, “do you really think we need it?”
After all, he noted, the United States did nothing about the Russian invasion
of Crimea—though he was brushing past the peninsula’s inaccessibility and
Ukraine's lack of an alliance with anyone. On 20 October, things got worse. In
a press conference in Beijing, Duterte announced his “separation” from the
United States, telling the assembled forum that now “there are three of us against
the world—China, Philippines and Russia.” That’s an
aspiring-but-horrifying statement, though as John McBeth wrote on 25 October
for the ASPI Strategist, “the president has modified his position since
returning to Manila, saying he didn’t intend to sever
relations.”
The specific alignment of the Philippines today seems very important, but in
the United States’ very first round of thinking about war in the Pacific, the
islands weren’t a factor. In 1897, the US Navy wrote its first war plan against
Japan, on the instructions of Assistant Secretary Theodore Roosevelt. The
United States had a coaling station at Pearl Harbor, and possession of small
Christmas (Kiritimati) Island and smaller Midway Island. The Republic (recently
Kingdom) of Hawaii, however, was an independent country. The Navy's plan called
for assisting in Hawaii’s own defense against a (then largely imagined)
Japanese effort at forcible annexation. From the American side, a western
defensive line of sorts was imagined to arc from the Aleutian Islands around to
the Panama Canal. (For an excellent account of all this, see Edward S. Miller’s
War Plan Orange: The US Strategy
to Defeat Japan, 1897–1945, Naval Institute Press, 1991).
Only in the next year did the Philippines
enter the American calculus. At the conclusion of the somewhat accidental 1898
Spanish-American War, the United States took those islands, and Guam. The same
year, the United States annexed Hawaii, at the request of its
not-exactly-representative government. Immediately thereafter, the United
States Army suppressed the First Philippine Republic, in the
Philippine–American War (1899–1902), a fight now mostly forgotten here, but
remembered distinctly there. American military planning then suddenly and
remarkably shifted towards defending the newly acquired islands—again, from
Japanese invasion. The immediate problem was that the Navy considered this
effectively impossible. At the time, Japan was rapidly industrializing, but the
Philippines were as economically lackluster as they remain today. My Timex
watch was made there, but I’m driving a Subaru. That’s a tragic story of
comparative economic development, but it’s what it is.
Thus, the Navy’s plans for massive
dockyards in Manila Bay never amounted to much. The Army, however, really never
came to terms with its exposure in the Philippines. The best it could manage,
as we now remember in the heroic war stories, was a last-ditch defense of the
Bataan Peninsula and the Island of Corregidor, on the western side of
strategically important Manila Bay. But in the 1920s, rather than advising
evacuation and independence for the undefendable, the Army simply demanded
immediate and massive support from the Navy. Until 1939, the (Pacific) Battle
Fleet was mostly based in California, 6300 nautical miles away.
In some early effort at
jointness, the US Navy’s war plans—the several versions of War Plan Orange in
the 1920s—at first imagined a “Through-Ticket to Manila,” a mad dash across the
southwestern Pacific. The fleet’s logistical train would have been remarkably
exposed to Japanese cruisers and submarines, and eventually aircraft, coming
from the north. More sober thinking about the limitations of fighting across
the vast distances of the Pacific led to more deliberate schemes by the late
1930s. From these, the now-famous island-hopping campaign was devised, towards
an eventual economic strangulation of Japan. The American and Philippine
defenders of Bataan, however, would be left to an awful fate. Guam was even
more exposed. At points, the war planning staffs of the Army and the Navy
bitterly debated how-much-how-soon, but the Army never won the argument.
In 1940, after the war had started in
Europe, and particularly after the fall of France and the Netherlands, the Navy
even more sharply shifted in its several Rainbow Plans. The color-coding was
changed to reflect the new American assumption of multiple allies, if imperiled
ones. Those schemes figured that the Japanese could attack the Philippines from
the west using bases in Vichy Indochina. The Royal Netherlands Navy could at
best provide only limited resistance from the south using bases in the Dutch
East Indies. At that point, there was no point in trying to relieve the
Philippines quickly. The defense line was rapidly falling back to Singapore in
the west, and Darwin in the south. In the west, it would yet fall back to
Trincomalee.
For the moment, though, consider how American war plans might have differed had
the government in Washington just let the Philippines go in 1898, rather as it
mostly would with Cuba in 1902. With the US so removed from the western Pacific,
it’s not even clear why the Japanese war cabinet would have attacked the United
States at all in December 1941. The Tojo Government, on the other hand, could
have been expected to treat the Republic of the Philippines as roughly as it
did the Kingdom of Thailand. Either way, today, the Chinese are probably
gleeful. Congratulations, Manila. If today feels like 1937, it’s because you’re
Brussels, having suddenly ditched your alliance with Paris. Don’t presume that
your territory won't be a battleground anyway.
But what does all this mean for how war
might be fought today? Quite specifically, Byron Callan of Capital Alpha
Partners thinks that Philippine neutrality could shift demand from F-35As
to B-21s. Perhaps Duterte’s apparent withdrawal from a close
alliance with the US should affect that change. If the Philippine federal
government declared its bases off-limits in a war between the US and China, the
US Air Force could find itself bereft of any airfields within fighter range of
the South China Sea. Again, think about the problem from the other side. In
1940, the US Navy’s plans changed again when it realized that the Japanese Navy
had purchased relatively modern, long-range bombers. Its carrier-based fighters
could have been outranged during a headlong charge across the islands of the
Japanese Mandate. In that context, perhaps Philippine neutrality should also
shift demand from F-35As to F-35Cs. That would necessitate shifting money from
the Air Force to the Navy, but defense secretaries can get that started with a
memo.
Today, actual Philippine neutrality might
finally stick a fork in the Navy’s fascination with closing the Chinese coast
for a tight blockade. That could have knock-on effects for the Navy’s fleet
structure as well. Would the Chinese South Fleet attempt a breakout into the
central Pacific through the Philippines? Would American submarines lay traps
for them in the Surigao Strait? To affect such a strategy, would the Navy need
more submarines? Would it also want more F-35Bs for the smaller carriers of the
Wasp and America classes? As Deputy Secretary Work is possibly directing even
now, there's a vast amount of wargaming needed to figure out what this might
mean. The war colleges will get on
that. The contractors might too, if they want to get ahead of what’s
next.
James Hasík is a senior fellow at the
Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, where this first
appeared.
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