Asia | Less Nimitz, more MacArthur

America recreates a warfighting command in Japan

The threat from China hastens the biggest military transformation in the Pacific in decades

Fully armed aircraft from the 18th Wing conduct an elephant walk during a no-notice exercise at Kadena Air Base, Japan.
Photograph: Hum Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
|TOKYO 

Editor’s note: This article was updated on July 28th.

KADENA AIR BASE in Japan (pictured), America’s largest in the Pacific, is roughly 650km from the coast of China as the missile flies. Jets roar constantly over children’s playgrounds on their way to and from patrols. But American forces there have, in effect, been on a peacetime footing since the end of the Vietnam war. That changed on July 28th, when Lloyd Austin, America’s defence secretary, announced the creation of a new warfighting command to oversee all American forces in Japan.

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