The Arctic, a landscape so vast and unforgiving, now finds itself at the center of the world’s strategic gaze, where snowdrifts and ice floes hide not just the cold but growing military ambitions. Into this wilderness, U.S. forces have quietly placed their shoes….. a contingent of 130 soldiers and mobile rocket systems settling onto the windswept Shemya Island, tucked some 1,200 miles from Anchorage. The whispers of Russian and Chinese naval maneuvers near Alaska seem to echo more prominent these days, and the frozen quietness of the Arctic is pierced by the steady hum of military unstability.
Tonight at 7:18 p.m. from ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Pentagon has moved about 130 soldiers along with mobile rocket launchers to a desolate island in the Aleutian chain of western Alaska amid a recent increase in Russian military planes and vessels approaching American territory. pic.twitter.com/TCuunBjN4u
— 🇺🇸ProudArmyBrat (@leslibless) September 18, 2024
In the span of a week, Russian planes— shadowed by the creak of submarines below the surface—edged closer to U.S. territory. While the official line from NORAD is calm, stating that these incursions remained in international waters, the pattern of activity sends ripples across the geopolitical landscape. Eight planes, four naval vessels—each sighting adds to the weight of concern.
General Pat Ryder at the Pentagon comments on it and speak of stabilizing the situation, reminding us that such encounters have happened before, that the U.S. is vigilant and ready. Yet the Arctic, once a backdrop to quiet observation, is now stirring— a cold frontier teeming with quiet, uneasy motions, as if the world is keeping an eye on what might follow.
Senator Dan Sullivan, voice of Alaska’s interests, speaks of the region not as a distant outpost but as the emerging theater of power struggles. He pushes for more—more presence, more military readiness—citing Russia’s expanding footprint and China’s growing involvement as evidence that the U.S. cannot afford to blink. His call to reopen the long-dormant Adak Naval Base, closed since 1997, signals his desire to meet the rising challenge head-on, knowing that this Arctic chessboard holds far more than snow and ice.
The U.S. forces at Shemya have brought HIMARS with them—mobile rocket launchers that have earned their stripes in battlefields far from here, now poised to watch over a different kind of terrain. A guided missile destroyer cuts through frigid waters alongside a Coast Guard vessel, their presence a silent but firm declaration that these frozen waters are no longer forgotten, no longer a far-off concern.
US Soldiers Deployed To Alaskan Island Near Russia In Response To Increased Russian, and Chinese Military Activity Around #Alaska:
Read Article:🡻https://t.co/dR8LDkAAtH pic.twitter.com/ncd6FSfD5i
— The Standeford Journal (@StandefordSJ) September 17, 2024
In the skies, NORAD watches. Planes slip in and out of the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone, a boundary that is invisible and holds significance far greater than lines on a map. Twenty-five Russian planes this year alone—up from previous years—each one knocks on a strategy that the Arctic’s quiet is not what it used to be.
And as Russia flexes its Arctic muscles, unveiling new nuclear submarines and cementing its partnership with China, the once-silent, snow-covered region now hums with strategic posturing. The Arctic has always been cold, but now the stakes— rising like the high and distant peaks of snowy mountains— are getting warmer.
In this frozen expanse, the chess pieces are moving. The ice may seem eternal, but beneath it, the world’s great powers are quietly, steadily, pushing toward a future where the Arctic is no longer a mere frontier but a battleground for influence, dominance, and control. So the frost does not hide things qhich are chilling and beautiful….. rather it hides a simmering conflict waiting to unfold.
Major Points
- U.S. forces have quietly deployed to Shemya Island, positioning 130 soldiers and mobile rocket systems amid rising Arctic tensions.
- Russian and Chinese naval movements near Alaska signal growing military presence, with Russian planes and submarines nearing U.S. territory.
- Senator Dan Sullivan advocates reopening Alaska’s Adak Naval Base, citing Russia’s expanding Arctic footprint and China’s increasing involvement.
- U.S. military assets, including HIMARS rocket systems and guided missile destroyers, now patrol the Arctic, emphasizing heightened vigilance.
- The Arctic, once a quiet landscape, is becoming a critical battleground for influence and power as geopolitical stakes continue to rise.
Susan Guglielmo – Reprinted with permission of Whatfinger News