
Strategic Competition > Modern Alliances
Strengthening Indo-Pacific Alliances
Deterring Aggression, Defending Democracy, and Upholding a Free and Open Regional Order

Kennedy chatting with Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe after he delivered a speech to a Joint Session of Congress.
Mark Kennedy has visited U.S. military based in the region including Joint Base Pearl Harbor - Hickam in Hawaii, Anderson AFB in Guam, Kadena AFB, Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Yokosuka Naval Base, and Yokota AFB in Japan, and Camp Humphreys in South Korea.
Strategic Framing
- The Indo-Pacific is the primary theater of 21st-century strategic competition. It is where the contest over maritime freedom, technological leadership, and democratic norms will be decided.
- With over 60% of global GDP, nearly half of humanity, and critical trade arteries like the South China Sea, the Indo-Pacific’s future will determine the shape of the global order.
- China’s growing assertiveness—from military intimidation of Taiwan to coercive island-building and gray zone cyber campaigns—demands a unified, credible, and sustained U.S. response.
- Securing the Indo-Pacific is not about containment—it is about preserving a free, open, and rules-based regional environment where all nations, large and small, can thrive.
Sustaining Deterrence Through Integrated Power
- Forward presence matters. U.S. military posture in the region—including rotational forces in Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Guam—must remain credible and modernized.
- Integrated deterrence means synchronizing military, cyber, space, and informational capabilities across domains and with allies.
- The AUKUS agreement, Quad partnership, and growing U.S.–Philippines cooperation reflect momentum—but require deeper interoperability, shared intelligence, and joint planning.
Economic Security Is Strategic Security
- Advance digital trade frameworks that prioritize openness, data privacy, and democratic standards—countering authoritarian models of digital control.
Defending Sovereignty and Maritime Freedom
- The South and East China Seas must remain open to all nations, not dominated by any one power.
Deepening Alliances and Building New Partnerships
🏛️ Engaging Administration or Congress, 📰 Op-Ed / Article / Quoted 🎙️ Podcast ✍️ Policy Brief 👥 Roundtable / Event 🎤 Speaking 🎥 TV/Video 🌐 Global
🇯🇵 Japan: Cornerstone of Regional Security
The U.S.–Japan alliance remains the foundation of Indo-Pacific stability, anchored in shared values, technological cooperation, and forward-deployed deterrence.

Kennedy conversing with Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida following his address to a Joint Session of Congress.
- 🎤 Speech: New Realities Must Drive Foreign Policy - Address to University of Tokyo Program supported by Daikin - August 25, 2023
- 🎤 🇯🇵 Speech: State of U.S. - Japan Relations - U.S. Embassy in Tokyo - June 7, 2016
- 🎤 🇯🇵 Speech: State of U.S. - Japan Relations - Canon Institute for Global Studies in Tokyo - October 17, 2014
🇰🇷 South Korea: Strategic and Technological Partner
As a leading democracy and innovation hub, South Korea plays a vital role in regional security, supply chain resilience, and trilateral coordination with Japan and the U.S.

Kennedy visiting leadership of U.S. military at Yongsan Garrison in Seoul, South Korea in 2005.
- - "Now that Japan is upgrading both their military capabilities as well as the flexibility with which to use them, the benefits that the alliance gets from being able to act together are greater...So I think to have a long term aspiration that perhaps South Korea could plug greater into that command and control process is an appropriate question to keep at our forefront.”
- - "I think U.S., Japan and Korea, having come together as closely as they have in recent months, is part of what's motivating China to now want to make sure that they're building and in keeping those strong relations with their own neighbors.”
🇦🇺 Australia: Forward-Leaning Security Ally
Through AUKUS, joint exercises, and diplomatic alignment, Australia is deepening its defense and technology collaboration with the United States to counter regional coercion.

The Sydney Opera House (in the background) could double for the symbol of the U.S. - Australian relationship - harmonious. As Australian Prime Minister John Howard once told Kennedy - "We are your strongest ally. We were with you in Vietnam (UK abstained)."
🇮🇳 India: The Quad’s Democratic Balancer
India’s strategic autonomy and rising global profile make it a pivotal partner in building collective capacity across defense, infrastructure, and the Indo-Pacific commons.

Kennedy at the "India Gate in New Delhi, a World War I memorial.
🌏 Southeast Asia: The Front Line of Influence
Nations like the Philippines and Vietnam are increasingly resisting Chinese pressure. U.S. engagement—military, economic, and diplomatic—remains critical to supporting their sovereignty and resilience.

Kennedy at Independence Palance (formerly home of the President of the Republic of Vietnam) in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon).
🇵🇭 Philippines
- 🎙️ U.S. Boosts Military Presence in Philippines to Try to Deter China - KNX Radio Interview - February 2, 2023

Congressional Delegation Embraces Taiwan Following Chinese Military Simulation
NEWSNATION TV INTERVIEW - MAY 27, 2024

Kishida's Address to Congress Makes Case for Japan as America's Closest Ally
WILSON CENTER BLOG POST - APRIL 12, 2024

Raimondo's China Trip Proves That Just Engaging Beijing Isn't Enough
QUOTED IN JOSH ROGIN OP ED - AUGUST 31, 2023
Events and Publications
👉 Related Pages
🔷 Featured Insights
How U.S. and South Korea Optimally Partner in Strategic Competition - VOA Korea Interview together with Elbridge Colby - December 2, 2023