The United States has quietly sought to strengthen a strategy intended to deter a threat from China by focusing greater attention on Southeast Asia, particularly the South China Sea, Indonesia and Vietnam.
To dissuade China from aggression, the US has begun to position forces that could put at risk China's supply lines through the South China Sea. Over those shipping lanes moves oil and raw materials vital to the surging Chinese economy that, in turn, produces funds to pay for Beijing's rapidly expanding military power.
Central to that plan is Guam, the site of the Andersen airfield on which a 'persistent presence' of B-52 and B-2 bombers and F-15 and F-22 fighters is maintained, as is a base for the newly assigned unmanned Global Hawk long-range surveillance aircraft. Guam has a port for nuclear-powered attack submarines based there and in Hawaii. An aircraft carrier - such as the 99,000-tonne George Washington that recently steamed in nearby waters - adds to the force.
Guam is also the prospective home for 8,000 marines that the US plans to move there from Okinawa.
Politically, the US has been cultivating relations with Indonesia because it is the world's most populous Muslim nation, which the US seeks to enlist in the struggle against terrorism. Moreover, the archipelago is situated along the southern rim and astride several passages into the South China Sea.
Vietnam, which has emerged as an economically stronger nation, harbours several centuries of fear of China next door. Against that backdrop, Vietnam has been receptive to reconciliation with the US despite a bitter war that ended only 35 years ago.