MILITARY LOGISTICS AND FORCE PROJECTION CAPACITY The U.S. military maintains approximately 800 overseas bases across roughly 70 countries, a legacy structure built during the Cold War when global containment required forward-positioned forces. Modern peer competitors like China operate approximately 2-3 confirmed military facilities abroad, fundamentally altering the cost-calculus of sustained military operations—the U.S. spends roughly 13% of defense budgets on base operations and maintenance globally, compared to competitors' 3-5%. This infrastructure advantage enables rapid response capabilities but creates strategic vulnerabilities: supply line exposure, political dependencies on host nations, and maintenance costs that constrain modernization budgets. Understanding this logistics asymmetry is essential context for analyzing any major power military developments, since force projection capacity—not headline weapons systems—determines actual operational reach.