United States Indo-Pacific Command
The United States Pacific Command (USPACOM), led by the Commander, Pacific Command (CDRUSPACOM), is the supreme military authority for the various branches of the Armed Forces of the United States serving within its area of responsibility (AOR). Only the President of the United States, who is Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, and the Secretary of Defense advised by the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) have greater authority. It is the oldest and largest of the ten Unified Combatant Commands. Based in Honolulu, Hawai'i on the island of O'ahu, the United States Pacific Command's sphere of control extends from the west coast of the United States mainland to the east coast of Africa (excluding the waters north of 5° S and west of 68° E), encompassing East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Alaska, Madagascar, and Oceania. It also has control over U.S. military operations in the Pacific, including the state of Hawaii, Indian Oceans as well as over forces in Alaska.
The main combat power of USPACOM is formed by U.S. Army Pacific, Marine Forces Pacific, U.S. Pacific Fleet, and Pacific Air Forces, all headquartered in Honolulu with component forces stationed throughout the region.
Area of responsibility
The United States Pacific Command's area of jurisdiction can be quantified as follows: over fifty percent of the world's surface area —approximately 105 million square miles (nearly 272 million square kilometers)—, nearly sixty percent of the world's population, forty-three countries, twenty territories, and ten territories and possessions of the United States.
It is charged with preserving and protecting five out of seven mutual defense treaties signed by the United States with its allies:
- U.S./Republic of the Philippines (Mutual Defense Treaty, 1952)
- U.S./Australia/New Zealand (ANZUS - U.S., 1952)
- U.S./Republic of Korea (Mutual Defense Treaty, 1954)
- U.S./Japan (Mutual Defense Treaty, 1960)
In addition, PACOM's area of responsibility covers Taiwan whose defense relationship with the United States is governed by the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979). Furthermore, while the SEATO organization was disestablished in the late 1970s, SEACDT, the Collective Defense Treaty, still formally binds the U.S., France, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, and the Philippines.
Thirty-five percent of the total trade of the United States globally falls within the watch of the United States Pacific Command, amounting to more than $548 billion in 1998. Five of the world's largest militaries are monitored by the United States Pacific Command: People's Republic of China, India, Russia, North Korea and South Korea.
Headquarters
Offices for the United States Pacific Command are based at the Nimitz-MacArthur Pacific Command Center at Camp H. M. Smith near suburban Salt Lake and Moanalua. The staff comprises over 530 Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marine Corps and Navy officers and enlisted personnel with the support of an additional 110 civilian personnel.
Commander
In the operational chain of command, the Commander of USPACOM reports directly to the Secretary of Defense and the President. In the administrative chain of command, USPACOM reports through the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[1]
Commanders, U.S. Pacific Command/Commanders, U.S. Pacific Fleet
- Admiral John H. Towers (01 Jan 1947 - 28 Feb 1947)
- Admiral Louis E. Denfeld (28 Feb 1947 - 03 Dec 1947)
- Admiral DeWitt C. Ramsey (12 Jan 1948 - 30 Apr 1949)
- Admiral Arthur W. Radford (30 Apr 1949 - 10 Jul 1953)
- Admiral Felix Stump (10 Jul 1953 - 14 Jan 1958)
Commanders, U.S. Pacific Command
- Admiral Felix Stump (14 Jan 1958 - 31 Jul 1958)
- Admiral Harry D. Felt (31 Jul 1958 - 30 Jun 1964)
- Admiral Ulysses S. Grant Sharp (30 Jun 1964 - 31 Jul 1968)
- Admiral John S. McCain, Jr. (31 Jul 1968 - 01 Sep 1972)
- Admiral Noel A.M. Gayler (01 Sep 1972 - 30 Aug 1976)
- Admiral Maurice F. Weisner (30 Aug 1976 - 31 Oct 1979)
- Admiral Robert L.J. Long (31 Oct 1979 - 01 Jul 1983)
- Admiral William J. Crowe, Jr. (01 Jul 1983 - 18 Sep 1985)
- Admiral Ronald J. Hays (18 Sep 1985 - 30 Sep 1988)
- Admiral Huntington Hardisty (30 Sep 1988 - 01 Mar 1991)
- Admiral Charles R. Larson (01 Mar 1991 - 11 Jul 1994)
- Lt-General Harold T. Fields (11 Jul 1994 - 19 Jul 1994) (Acting)
- Admiral Richard C. Macke (19 Jul 1994 - 31 Jan 1996)
- Admiral Joseph W. Prueher (31 Jan 1996 - 20 Feb 1999)
- Admiral Dennis C. Blair (20 Feb 1999 - 2 May 2002)
- Admiral Thomas B. Fargo (2 May 2002 - 26 Feb 2005)
- Admiral William J. Fallon (26 Feb 2005 - 3 Mar 2007)
- Lt-General Daniel P. Leaf (3 Mar 2007 - 23 Mar 2007) (Acting)
- Admiral Timothy J. Keating (23 Mar 2007 -
Establishment
The United States Pacific Command was established on January 1, 1947 by President Harry Truman and was originally headquartered in the Salt Lake subdivision of Honolulu. It took control over all Armed Forces of the United States in what was once called the Pacific Theater during World War II. In 1972, the United States Pacific Command's responsibilities were greatly expanded to include the Indian Ocean, Southern Asia, and the Arctic. In 1976, it was again expanded to include parts of Africa. President Ronald Reagan expanded it again with the inclusion of the People's Republic of China, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Mongolia and Madagascar. In 1989, actions were taken to clarify the extent of authority given to the Commander, Pacific Command.
Name change
Prior to 2002, the office of the Commander had held the title of Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Command (CINCPAC). On October 24, 2002, the Commander was given the new title Commander, U.S. Pacific Command (CDRUSPACOM) along with some organizational changes. Note: CINCPAC is not to be confused with CINCPACFLT, the former name (and subordinate command of CINCPAC) of the Commander of the US Pacific Fleet (COMPACFLT).[2]
Force structure
USPACOM is a unified command which includes about 300,000 military personnel from the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps (about 20 percent of all active duty U.S. military forces). These forces are in three categories: Forward-Deployed (about 100,000), Forward-Based, and Continental U.S. (CONUS)-Based which comprise the remainder.[3]
Service components
- U.S. Army Pacific Command:
- Headquarters, I Corps (Washington State)
- 25th Infantry Division (Light)/U.S. Army, Hawaii (States of Hawaii and Washington)
- 94th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, (Hawaii and Kadena Air Base, Okinawa Japan)
- U.S. Army, Japan/9th Theater Army Area Command (Japan)
- U.S. Army Chemical Activity Pacific (Johnston Island)
- 172nd Separate Infantry Brigade/U.S. Army, Alaska (Alaska)
- 9th Regional Support Command (USAR)
- Commander U.S. Pacific Fleet:
- Third Fleet (California)
- Seventh Fleet (Japan)
- U.S. Marine Forces Pacific:
- 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (California)
- 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force (Japan)
- U.S. Pacific Air Forces:
- Fifth Air Force (Japan)
- Seventh Air Force (Korea)
- Eleventh Air Force (Alaska)
- Thirteenth Air Force (Hawaii)
Subordinate unified commands
- U.S. Special Operations Command Pacific (SOCPAC), Camp H. M. Smith, Oahu (Hawaii)
- Joint Task Force 510
- Joint Special Operation Task Force - Philippines
- 1st Special Forces Group
- 353rd Special Operations Group
- U.S. Forces, Japan (Yokota AB, near Tokyo)
- U.S. Forces, Korea (Yongsan Army Garrison, Seoul)
- Eighth U.S. Army (Yongsan Army Garrison, Seoul)
- Special Operations Command Pacific (Camp H.M. Smith, Hawaii)
- Alaskan Command (Elmendorf AFB, Anchorage)
Standing joint task forces
- Joint Interagency Task Force West (Camp H. M. Smith, Hawaii.)
- Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (Hickam AFB, Hawaii)
Additional supporting units
- Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies (Honolulu, Hawaii)
- Joint Intelligence Operations Center (Pearl Harbor, Hawaii)
- Center of Excellence in Disaster Management & Humanitarian Assistance Studies (Tripler Army Medical Center, Hawaii)
- Pacific Disaster Center for Disaster Recovery (DEM) Humanitarian Aide