By Dr Rowan Allport, Deputy Director
4 March, 2026
In World War II, the United States built a western Pacific airfield here, another there, and more elsewhere, each intended to bring more Japanese targets into range. Now the abundance of old bases is becoming a resource for resilience: several are being brought back into service as places to disperse aircraft and to maintain operations even as other airfields are knocked out.
Read more in ASPI’s The Strategist by clicking here.
Rowan’s book, War Plan Taiwan: OPLAN 5077 and the U.S. Struggle for the Pacific, is now available.
Image: A U.S. Marine Corps KC-130J Super Hercules aircraft with 1st Marine Air Wing, lands on a newly designated airstrip on the island of Peleliu (Source: U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Hannah Hollerud)
Human Security Centre Human Rights and International Security Research
