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The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the Libya airstrikes aren't the only major U.S. military involvements right now. Some 14 Navy ships and their aircraft
-- and 17,000 American sailors and Marines -- are deployed off the coast of Japan as part of relief efforts. Whether rushing food and supplies to Japanese earthquake-tsunami victims or taking the lead in air strikes in Libya, the U.S. long has been looked to by its Western allies as the undisputed, essential leader for international military operations. After all, the U.S. has what the Pentagon calls "unique capabilities" to operate globally as the world's remaining military superpower, with annual defense spending 10 times that of next-place China. No other country has the bombers, cruise missiles, aircraft carriers, refueling aircraft and command and control facilities that the United States does. Thus, Obama confidently took the lead in launching this past week's rain of airstrikes on Libya, some from a stealth bomber that flew from as far away as an Air Force base in Missouri. But he made clear he wanted to pass the reins quickly. It may turn out to be not so simple to claim a back seat. Being the indispensable world military power can have its liabilities. Not wanting to follow the go-it-alone course that predecessor President George W. Bush projected, Obama set two hard-and-fast rules for American engagement in Libya: no U.S. troops on the ground and no involvement without other nations going along. "It underscores these actions are international in nature," Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said. The U.S. has had a hard time persuading NATO to contribute more forces in the past in Afghanistan. Obama has lately emphasized that the mission in Libya is intended to protect Libyan civilians from Gadhafi's wrath
-- and not to remove the autocrat of 42 years from power. Yet these recent statements seem hard to square with the president's parallel insistence that Gadhafi must go. Regardless of what role NATO or others eventually assume, "the U.S. is exercising de facto command because it has the special intelligence, targeting and command and control assets needed to coordinate the effort," said Anthony Cordesman, a national security analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
[Associated
Press;
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