Guam: Difference between revisions
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{{Image|Orthographic projection centred over Guam.png|right|350px|View of the Earth centred directly above Guam.}} | {{Image|Orthographic projection centred over Guam.png|right|350px|View of the Earth centred directly above Guam.}} | ||
[[Guam]] is a 543-square-kilometre island in the [[Pacific Ocean]]. It is in the geographic [[Marianas Islands]] of Micronesia but is not part of the political [[Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands]]. It is currently an [[unincorporated territory]] of the [[United States]], which acquired the island from [[Spain]] in the [[Treaty of Paris]] after the [[Spanish American War]]. During negotiations with Spain over the island, President McKinley (on the recommendation of the Naval War Board) wanted negotiators to demand the cession of Guam so that it could serve as a [[coaling station]] for U.S. ships bound for the Philippines. It was the only island of the Marianas in which the U.S. was interested and the remainder were sold to Germany in 1899. In spite of the expectation of Guam becoming an important stop on the route to the Philippines, Guam never developed in this way. The U.S. fleet routinely reached Asia by way of the Suez Canal and Indian Ocean in the days before the construction of the [[Panama Canal]]. By the time that the Panama Canal was in operation (1914), oil-fuel ships were common and the strategic importance of Guam fell further.<ref>Earl S. Pomeroy, ''Pacific Outpost: American Strategy in Guam and Micronesia'' (Stanford University Press, 1951).</ref> | [[Guam]] is a 543-square-kilometre island in the [[Pacific Ocean]]. It is in the geographic [[Marianas Islands]] of Micronesia but is not part of the political [[Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands]]. It is currently an [[unincorporated territory]] of the [[United States of America]], which acquired the island from [[Spain]] in the [[Treaty of Paris]] after the [[Spanish American War]]. During negotiations with Spain over the island, President McKinley (on the recommendation of the Naval War Board) wanted negotiators to demand the cession of Guam so that it could serve as a [[coaling station]] for U.S. ships bound for the Philippines. It was the only island of the Marianas in which the U.S. was interested and the remainder were sold to Germany in 1899. In spite of the expectation of Guam becoming an important stop on the route to the Philippines, Guam never developed in this way. The U.S. fleet routinely reached Asia by way of the Suez Canal and Indian Ocean in the days before the construction of the [[Panama Canal]]. By the time that the Panama Canal was in operation (1914), oil-fuel ships were common and the strategic importance of Guam fell further.<ref>Earl S. Pomeroy, ''Pacific Outpost: American Strategy in Guam and Micronesia'' (Stanford University Press, 1951).</ref> | ||
Guam is a major forward deployment base for U.S. military forces, including [[bomber aircraft|heavy bombers normally based in the U.S.]] and [[prepositioning ship]]s for [[U.S. Marine Corps]] and [[U.S. Air Force]] use. The major installation is Anderson Air Force base. | Guam is a major forward deployment base for U.S. military forces, including [[bomber aircraft|heavy bombers normally based in the U.S.]] and [[prepositioning ship]]s for [[U.S. Marine Corps]] and [[U.S. Air Force]] use. The major installation is Anderson Air Force base. |
Revision as of 12:22, 2 February 2023
Guam is a 543-square-kilometre island in the Pacific Ocean. It is in the geographic Marianas Islands of Micronesia but is not part of the political Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands. It is currently an unincorporated territory of the United States of America, which acquired the island from Spain in the Treaty of Paris after the Spanish American War. During negotiations with Spain over the island, President McKinley (on the recommendation of the Naval War Board) wanted negotiators to demand the cession of Guam so that it could serve as a coaling station for U.S. ships bound for the Philippines. It was the only island of the Marianas in which the U.S. was interested and the remainder were sold to Germany in 1899. In spite of the expectation of Guam becoming an important stop on the route to the Philippines, Guam never developed in this way. The U.S. fleet routinely reached Asia by way of the Suez Canal and Indian Ocean in the days before the construction of the Panama Canal. By the time that the Panama Canal was in operation (1914), oil-fuel ships were common and the strategic importance of Guam fell further.[1]
Guam is a major forward deployment base for U.S. military forces, including heavy bombers normally based in the U.S. and prepositioning ships for U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Air Force use. The major installation is Anderson Air Force base.
Location
About three-quarters of the way from Hawaii to the Philippines, at the geographic coordinates: 13 28 N, 144 47 E
Map references: Oceania
Area
Area:
- total: 541.3 sq km
- land: 541.3 sq km
- water: 0 sq km
Area—comparative: three times the size of Washington, DC
References
- ↑ Earl S. Pomeroy, Pacific Outpost: American Strategy in Guam and Micronesia (Stanford University Press, 1951).