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Navy eyes return to Adak amid Arctic security concerns

Cover image for article: Navy eyes return to Adak amid Arctic security concerns

Frame from "JASC-260508-0800" · Source

Navy eyes return to Adak amid Arctic security concerns

by Alaska News·May 11, 2026(1mo ago)
4 min read6 viewsJuneau, AlaskaAI
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The U.S. Navy is looking at bringing operations back to Adak Island as China and Russia increase military activity near Alaska, a senior Navy official told state lawmakers.

Rear Admiral John Townsend said the Navy has gathered information to assess operations from Adak, though no formal decisions have been made. The assessment comes as the Department of Defense identifies the Arctic region as its top homeland defense priority.

"There are ongoing high-level discussions with military leadership across the Department of Defense about reestablishing a presence on Adak," Townsend said during a Joint Armed Services Committee hearing in Juneau. "As far as I know, no formal decisions have been made yet, but the Navy has gathered information to assess the idea of potentially conducting a more specific series of operations from Adak."

Adak hosted a major Naval Air Facility during the Cold War before the base closed in the 1990s. Its strategic location has drawn renewed attention as joint Russian-Chinese military aircraft and vessels have entered the U.S. Arctic Air Defense Identification Zone near Alaska dozens of times in recent months, according to Sen. Dan Sullivan. The Senate Commerce subcommittee recently secured $25 billion in Coast Guard funding that includes Arctic icebreakers and Nome port infrastructure.

The Navy's renewed interest in Adak follows years of military statements and exercises focused on Arctic defense. U.S. Northern Command in 2019 highlighted Russian submarines with cruise missiles as Arctic security threats, calling for enhanced regional exercises and capabilities. The military has since conducted large-scale Northern Edge and Arctic Edge exercises across Alaska sites including Nome and Dutch Harbor to counter threats from Russia and China.

Brigadier General Matthew Komatsu told lawmakers that while Russia continues Cold War patterns of activity, China's arrival in the Alaska Theater of Operations represents a new development.

"What has been most worrisome in addition to that is the arrival of the Chinese adversary activity within the AKTO," Komatsu said. "It's our job to make sure that we tell them that that is not okay."

The Navy maintains a small but significant presence in Alaska through Reserve Centers, personnel at Joint Alaska Command, training operations at Kodiak and in the Gulf of Alaska, and the Southeast Alaska Acoustic Measurement Facility near Ketchikan. Townsend said the Navy regularly visits Alaska for training activities and participates in the biennial Northern Edge exercise, next scheduled for 2027.

Townsend said the Navy also has site restoration and cleanup work occurring at several former Navy sites in Alaska.

Townsend highlighted the Navy's community engagement efforts in Alaska, including participation in symposiums and conventions such as the Alaska Forum on the Environment, Alaska Marine Science Symposium, KOMFISH Alaska, Alaska Federation of Natives Convention, Cordova Sobriety Celebration and the Juneau Maritime Festival. The Navy Band Northwest will perform at this year's maritime festival.

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The Navy recently issued formal apologies to Alaska Native clans for wrongful military actions against the Tlingit villages of Kake in 1869 and Angoon in 1882. Ceremonies were held at Kake in September 2024 and Angoon in October 2024.

"The Navy acknowledges these tragic incidents resulted in loss of life, loss of resources, and intergenerational trauma for the communities," Townsend said. "We are committed to supporting long-term community healing in Kake and Angoon, and my staff remains in regular communication with the tribes."

The Navy is preparing to commission two ships named after notable Alaskans. The USS Ted Stevens, a guided missile destroyer named after the late senator, is expected to be commissioned in Whittier sometime this year. The USNS Solomon Atkinson, a Navajo-class towing, salvage and rescue ship named after a trailblazing Alaska Native who was one of the first U.S. Navy SEALs, was christened on May 2.

Representative Garret Nelson asked whether the Navy's Arctic focus represents a policy shift or preparation for future threats. Townsend said the commitment reflects both an acknowledgment of the need to invest in the future and addresses the existential threat in the Arctic region.

"Our government has recognized that the Arctic region is critical to national security," Townsend said. "I think that the money that is in the current NDAA for investment in the Arctic region, and specifically as we talked about in the statement there with Adak, I think it's a little of both."

The Navy's assessment of Adak operations comes as the Coast Guard expands its Arctic presence. Rear Admiral Bob Little told lawmakers the service commissioned the Coast Guard Cutter Storis in Juneau and welcomed three fast response cutters to Kodiak in the past year. Congress recently approved nearly $25 billion for Coast Guard modernization, including $9 billion for ice-capable cutters and $300 million to begin work on Storis's homeport in Juneau.

Komatsu said military leadership has taken on greater responsibility for synchronizing military effects across services in the Alaska Theater of Operations. He described the shift as part of Alaskan Command's effort to integrate and work better with partners to achieve what the military calls integrated effects on the campaigning side.

Komatsu pointed to the 2023 spy balloon incident as a critical moment that helped propel organizational change.

"That was a critical moment in order to help people understand what it meant to do homeland defense in the state of Alaska," Komatsu said. "It made what had previously been sort of doctrinal and academic discussions real."

Any return to Adak would require significant infrastructure investment, alongside environmental cleanup at the former base site.

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