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In Southeast Asia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia have all been at loggerheads with China over a number of tiny islands in the South China Sea. China believes the Spratly and Paracel islands may sit astride large deposits of oil and gas
-- though others are doubtful -- and has moved assertively to underscore its claims in the area since 2009. The United States began to push back following U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's implicit criticism of China's behavior at a regional security forum in Vietnam in July 2010. It stepped up cooperation with regional allies and even began building a new security relationship with old enemy Vietnam. In June of this year, then U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said littoral combat ships, small vessels designed to operate close to shore, would be deployed to Singapore. The prosperous city-state sits astride the Straits of Malacca, the strategic waterway through which the majority of Asia's oil imports pass, including those to China and Japan.
In the longer term, America's soaring government budget deficits could influence its deployments in the region, with Pentagon cutbacks expected to total some $450 billion over the next decade
-- roughly the size of annual U.S. defense expenditures not including Afghanistan and Iraq. But U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, visiting Japan and Indonesia last month, dismissed speculation that the cuts would force America to trim its Asian profile. "We will ... not only maintain but strengthen our presence in this part of the world," he said. "We are a Pacific nation, we'll have a Pacific presence." China could also face limits on its defense spending. If it can't sustain its high economic growth rates, that could undermine its ability to compete with the U.S. militarily. "Of course if China keeps growing rapidly for two decades and America does not, then the balance of economic and military power will eventually shift," said Lee, the University of Sydney specialist But "there are strong reasons to believe that China cannot keep growing at this rate with its current model."
[Associated
Press;
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