Current US-China Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: A Lame Duck-Greenhorn Dance
Part
II: US Unilateralism
Part
III: Geopolitical Dynamics of the Korea Proliferation Crisis
Part
IV: More Geopolitical Dynamics of the Korea Proliferation Crisis
This article appeared in AToL on
September 9, 2006 under
the title:
Proliferation,
imperialism - and the 'China threat'
Japanese Miscalculations Turned a
European War into WWII
To
jointly combat the spread of international communism, Japan and Germany
signed an Anti-Comintern Pact on November 25, 1936. Italy joined the
Pact in 1937. The Tripartite Treaty signed by Nazi Germany, Fascist
Italy and Imperial Japan on September 27, 1940 in Berlin is known as
the Axis Alliance based on the concept of a Rome-Berlin Axis put forth
by Benito Mussolini in 1936. The Alliance was subsequently joined by
Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Bulgaria. The Nationalist government in
China under the Koumintang had been advised by German military experts.
This relationship came to an abrupt end in 1936 after the Axis Alliance
as China and Japan were at war.
In
August 1939, Germany broke the terms of the Anti-Comintern Pact when it
signed the Molotov-Ribbontrop Pact, a non-aggression agreement between
the Soviet Union and Germany. On September 25, 1940, German foreign
minister, Jochim von Ribbentrop, sent a telegram to Soviet Foreign
Minister Vyacheslav Molotov stating that Germany, Italy and Japan were
about to sign a military alliance but claiming that this alliance was
directed not at the Soviet Union but towards potential US hostility.
The telegram read:“Its
exclusive purpose is to bring the elements pressing for America’s entry
into the war to their senses by conclusively demonstrating to them if
they enter the present struggle they will automatically have to deal
with the three great powers as adversaries.” As Germany saw it, the
purpose was deterrence, not aggression, against the US.
The
Anti-Comintern Pact was officially reactivated in 1941 when Germany
launched
Operation Barbarossa against the Soviet Union on June 22 1941. On
November 25, the Pact was renewed
for another five years with Germany, Japan, Italy, Hungary, Spain,
Bulgaria, Croatia, Demark, Finland, Romanian, Slovakia, the puppet
state of Manchukuo, and the puppet Nanjing government of Wang Jingwei
in Japan-occupied China and the
Provincial Government of Free India, a shadow government in
Japan-occupied India led by Subhas Chandra Bose, a militant Indian
nationalist who opposed Gandhi’s passive resistance to British
imperialism. All over Japanese-occupied Southeast Asia, from Indonesia
to Vietnam to the Philippines, all nationalists who resisted Japanese
aggression were communists.
In September 1940 Japan,
as a charter member of the Axis alliance, coerced the Vichy government
of defeated France into turning northern Indochina over to Japan. From
Japan’s perspective, it was a natural demand from a victorious ally to
a defeated adversary. The US, through its special relationship with
British and French imperialism, retaliated against Japanese expansion
into French Southeast Asia by imposing trade sanctions prohibiting the
export of steel, scrap iron, and aviation gasoline to Japan from an
allegedly neutral and free-trading US. In April 1941, Japan signed a
neutrality treaty with the USSR as insurance against possible attack
from the north if it were to come into conflict with British and US
interests while expanding towards Southeast Asia. Similar to the
German-Soviet non-aggression pact, the USSR entered a neutrality treaty
with Japan to avoid being involved in intra-capitalist conflicts and to
neutralize potential British-Japanese convergence against the USSR. The
Japan-USSR neutrality treaty lasted until August 8, 1945 when the USSR
declared war on Japan two days after the US dropped an atomic bomb on
Hiroshima.
Two months after the signing of the Japan-USSR
Neutrality Treaty, when Germany invaded the USSR in June 1941, Japanese
leaders considered breaking the treaty and joining their German ally
from the east. A statement by Ribbentrop on the declaration of
war on the Soviet Union issued in Berlin on June 22, 1941
began with the following paragraphs:
“When
in the Summer of 1939 the Reich Government, motivated by a desire to
achieve adjustment of interests between Germany and the USSR,
approached the Soviet Government, they were aware of the fact that it
was no easy matter to reach an understanding with a State that on one
hand claimed to belong to a community of individual nations with rights
and duties resulting there from, yet on the other hand was ruled by a
party that, as a section of the Comintern, was striving to bring about
world revolution - in other words, the very dissolution of these
individual nations.
The
German Government, putting aside their serious misgivings occasioned by
this fundamental difference between political aims of Germany and
Soviet Russia and by the sharp contrast between diametrically opposed
conceptions of National Socialism and Bolshevism, made the attempt.
They were
guided by the idea that the elimination of the possibility of war,
which would result from an understanding between Germany and Russia,
and safeguarding of the vital necessities of the two people, between
whom friendly relations had always existed, would offer the best
guarantee against further spreading of the Communist doctrine of
international Jewry over Europe.”
War
against the Spread of Internationalism
Ribbentrop
was invoking the threat of international communism against the
Westphalia order of nation states as a pretext for war. The
same pretext was invoked by the US to launch to Cold War. Yet the
post-Cold War aim of US foreign policy adopts similar expansionist
internationalism to “enlarge democracy” to justify regime changes
around the world, challenging the Westphalia world order of nation
states. Such internationalist approach will again lead to another world
war.
Japan
Chose to Stay out of War in Europe
Making one of the most fateful
decisions of the war if not the 20th
century, Japan chose to stay out of the European war by not attacking
the USSR and instead to intensify its regional push towards the
southeast for much needed strategic material to overcome US sanction.
Japan had calculated that Germany would quickly defeat the USSR without
Japanese help, as it did France, since Japan had defeated Czarist
Russia in Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05. And Japanese occupation of
Eastern coastal China faced more threat from the direction of the
Pacific. Both Germany and Japan underestimated the
positive effect of communist leadership on Russia.
On July
23 Japan occupied southern Indochina. Two days later, the US, Britain,
and the Netherlands, the three financial powers in the West, froze
Japanese assets, making it impossible for Japan to purchase oil, which
would within three months cripple her military as well as her economy.
This act of financial war forced Japan to attack Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941 to try to destroy the US Pacific Fleet to create a
situation with which to hopefully force a compromising peace on the US.
Japan calculated that Germany would be forced by the terms of the Axis
Alliance to declare war on the US and US preoccupation with Europe will
give Japan a free hand in expanding and consolidating its hold on Asia.
That was exactly what happened up until the defeat of Germany. Japan’s
answer to Germany’s call for Japan to contribute to the Axis Alliance
by attacking the USSR was that a Pacific front would achieve the same
result to weaken Allies war efforts in Europe.
Hitler’s
Pro-British Sentiments
Hitler
admired and respected the British and considered them to share many of
the superior Aryan qualities and values possessed by Germanic peoples
as evidenced by the Germanic lineage of the British royalty. In Mein
Kampf
he argued that to achieve its foreign policy objectives, Germany would
have to form an alliance with Aryan Britain. “No sacrifice was too
great if it was a necessary means of gaining England’s friendship,”
Hitler wrote.
As soon
as he gained power, Hitler repeatedly told visiting British
politicians, diplomats and Nazi sympathizers that he appreciated
British understanding that the terms of the Treaty of Versailles were
too harsh for a permanent peace. He was assured by many Britons in high
places that Britain was unlikely to declare war if Germany were to
violate some of the more unreasonable aspects of the treaty. British
conservatives told Hitler that traditional British antagonism against
Russia had been accentuated by the nation’s having come under communism
and the revolution’s regicide of the House of Romanov which was related
by blood to Queen Victoria. Britain and Germany had
a common phobia about a Europe dominated by the USSR in terms of both
geopolitics and ideology.
FDR’s Dilemma
Before
Pearl Harbor, US President Franklin D Roosevelt had declared the US as
neutral in the European conflict. Personally hostile to Hitler’s Nazi
philosophy, FDR was well aware of the strong isolationist sentiments
and the pro-German feelings of a large ethnic German population in the
US. However, Roosevelt did all he could to let Britain receive US
supplies and loans to enable her to continue fighting the war after the
fall of France.
Hitler
knew that Germany would eventually come into conflict with the United
States. He wanted to complete German control of Europe so that any
future fight with the US would be between equals and not in Europe but
on the American continent. German submarines were ordered to avoid
attacking ships with US passengers crossing the Atlantic to avoid
provoking the US. He also attempted to persuade his Japanese ally to
war against the Soviet Union and not threaten US or British interests
in Asia until after the USSR had been defeated. German attack on the
USSR to oppose international communism would give the US an ideological
incentive not to interfere in Europe.
Hitler Surprised by Pearl Harbor
Hitler
was surprised and flabbergasted by Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor which
prematurely dragged the US into the war in Europe. Hitler, who had
previously called the Japanese “honorary Aryans”, the precursor of
Apartheid’s categorization of Japanese as “honorary Whites”, was
reported to have complained that “this is what happens what your allies
are not Anglo-Saxons”. Hitler was also reported to
have told friendly British diplomats before the war that he would
gladly send a few divisions to the Far East to help Britain contain the
“yellow race”. Racial contradictions in the Axis
Alliance prevented coordinated unity between Germany and Japan. Berlin
was more surprised by Japan’s “surprised attack” on Pearl Harbor than
Washington. Hitler had expected Japan to attack
Singapore not Pearl Harbor.
Fascist
Racism and the Yellow Race
Artur
Silgailis, chief of staff of Inspection General the Latvian Legion, the
Latvian Waffen-SS, in his book "Latvian Legion" (James Bender
Publishing, 1986, pages 348-349) describes a conversation he had with
Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS and the second most powerful man
in Nazi Germany. According to Silgailis, Himmler said: “After the
unification of all the German nations into one family … to include, in
the family, all the Roman nations whose living space is favored by
nature with a milder climate... I am convinced that after the
unification, the Roman nations will be able to persevere as the
Germans...This enlarged family of the White race will then have the
mission to include the Slavic nations into the family also because they
too are of the White race . . . it is only with such a unification of
the White race that the Western culture could be saved from the
Yellow race . . .”
The
composition of the Waffen-SS, an all volunteer ideological military
unit, testified to the popularity of Nazism all over Europe outside of
Germany. Of the one million men who served in the Waffen-SS during the
course of the war, 60% or 600,000 men were non-German volunteers from
other European countries. Non-German volunteers came from the
Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, France, Denmark, Norway, Lithuania,
Latvia, Estonia, the Ukraine, Byelorussia, Spain, Italy, Hungary,
Yugoslavia and even a very small group of British volunteers, known as
the Legion of St. George. The foreign Waffen-SS units were all deployed
on the Eastern Front because they had specifically volunteered to fight
communism; and secondly so that they would never be asked to fight
fellow countrymen in their native countries. All but a few thousand of
the 20,000 French Waffen-SS volunteers, organized into a division
called Legion Charlemagne, were killed in the Battle of Berlin in 1945.
They were die-hard ideologues rather than
opportunists since by 1945 Fascism was visibly a lost cause.
Japanese
Attack Helped Roosevelt Enter the War in Europe
President
Roosevelt declared war on Japan on December 9, 1941, two days after
Pearl Harbor but did not mention Germany in his “Day of Infamy” speech
before Congress. It was still possible for Hitler to postpone the war
with the US but he was forced to preserve the Axis Alliance by honoring
German obligations to Japan. And on December 11, Germany declared war
on the US. It was a major strategic error based on his miscalculation
that the US would deal with Japan first and Europe after.
Roosevelt
had other ideas. Several witnesses have commented on FDR determination
to bring the US into war in Europe before Pearl Harbor. According to US
General Alfred C. Wedermeyer, “Franklin D. Roosevelt, the professed
exponent of democracy, was as successful as any dictator in keeping the
Congress and the public in the dark about his secret commitments in
relation to Great Britain, commitments which scoffed at the wish and
will of the voters, who had re-elected Roosevelt only because he had
assured them that he would keep us out of the war. In fact, there are
few more shameless examples of cynical disregard of the people's will
than those which came to light in Roosevelt's personal correspondence
with Churchill, revealed in Churchill's books. This correspondence and
Churchill's own description of his conversations with Harry Hopkins,
whom he described as ‘mainstay and goader’ of the American
President, prove beyond doubt that Roosevelt, already in January 1941,
had concluded a secret alliance with Great Britain, which pledged
America to war.”
P.H. Nicoll, in England's War against Germany,
wrote: “Clare Booth-Luce shocked many people by saying at the
Republican Party Congress in 1944 that Roosevelt ‘had lied us (the USA)
into the war’. However, after this statement proved to be correct, the
Roosevelt followers ceased to deny it, but praised it by claiming he
was ‘forced to lie’ to save his country and then England and ‘the
world’.”
Without a German declaration of war on the US, Roosevelt might still
face an uphill fight in overcoming US isolationism. After
Pearl Harbor, the US would have to retaliate against Japanese attack,
but there was still no compelling reason to get involved in the war in
Europe which would in fact delay punitive retaliation on Japan. German
declaration of war solved the problem for Roosevelt. It linked Pearl
Harbor with the Axis Alliance.
Immediately after Pearl Harbor,
Wedermeyer at the War Plans Department formulated a plan entitled
“Victory Program” which would largely determine how and where US forces
would fight the Second World War. The plan was presented to Roosevelt
in mid December 1941. This policy became known as “Europe First”
despite the fact the Germany did not attack the US.
The
policy of Europe First called for seizing a foothold in Western Europe
by landing a vastly superior force on the shoreline of Western Europe
at the earliest possible date after the Atlantic was cleared of German
U boats. Wedermeyer calculated US troops would have to outnumber the Wehrmacht
by three to one to make the plan a success. His conclusions were at
odds with Britain’s war plans which were focused on defending the
far-flung empire outside of Europe and let the Soviets fight the
Germans on the Eastern Front to soften them up before opening up a
Western Front.
The North
Africa Campaign to Save the British Empire
In
September 1940, as the British feared, Italian forces from Libya
launched an invasion into British-held Egypt to try to capture the Suez
Canal. Unfortunately, or fortunately for Britain, Italian fascism while
vigorous in theory, was less than necessary in efficiency. The Italians
suffered a disastrous defeat from Britain’s Operation Compass
counter-attack. To help her Italian ally in North Africa, Germany sent
the Deutsches Afrikakorps commanded by General Erwin Rommel whom the
defeated British referred to in awe as the Desert Fox.
The North
Africa Campaign did not have anything to do with defending democracy or
freedom. It was to defend British imperialism from Fascist expansion.
The
campaign was a strategic error on the part of the Axis Alliance and
failed to achieve its objective of cutting the British Empire two
disconnected halves. German lost 200,000 precious
troops and materiel in North Africa which could have been better used
against the USSR.
Britain
Jailed Nationalists
Many
African-Arab nationalists, such as Gamal Adel Nasser and Anwar
al-Sadat, were openly sympathetic to the Axis powers as rivals of
British imperialism and were jailed by the British colonial authorities
during the war. Similarly, after WWII, nationalists in all collapsing
European empires around the globe developed sympathy for communism as
the onlyeffective resistance to post-war neo-imperialism.
British
advance failed to drive the Italians out of North Africa, partly
because of a failure to gain full Arab support. As British forces
reached Al Argheila, Churchill ordered the advance halted to divert
troops to try, without success, to defend Greece from German invasion,
giving the German Afrika Korps time to reach Tripoli and launched Operation
Sonnenblume that turned victorious British forces into a rout.
In mid-1942,
the Allies were met with defeat everywhere. In the first half of the
year, German u-boats sank 3.25 million tons of shipping in the Atlantic
carried by 465 freighters. In North Africa, Rommel smashed British
defense, threatening the Suez Canal, only stopping 35 miles from
Alexandria, Egypt, only because of a shortage of supplies. In Russia,
the German 6th Army captured Stalingrad, with plans to head
through the Caucasus for the Middle East oil fields and eventually link
up with the Afrika Korps to cut England off from its empire. The Allies
held Gibraltar, the approach from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean;
Malta, the strategic fortress for the control of the Mediterranean, and
Egypt, with its Suez Canal that links the British Empire. The Axis
controlled France, Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, and most of northern
Africa.
British
Malta Prevented German Victory in North Africa
Due
to the relatively short range of WWII aircrafts, Malta’s strategic
airfield was crucial to the British holding the Mediterranean, but food
and oil supply by sea had to get past German and Italian bombers. After
Malta was re-stocked with British planes launched from aircraft
carriers of the Royal Navy, the 250,000 Maltese and 20,000 British
defenders were still dependent on imported food and oil and other war
supplies delivered by US freighters and tankers.
In
1942, after fierce sea and air battles with heavy losses on both sides,
the British managed to hang on to Malta with the help of US tankers and
used it as an effective base to disrupt and eventually halt German
re-supply for the Afrika Korps. Rommel’s spectacular offensive was
eventually stopped at the small rail stop of El Alamein, 150 miles from
Cairo. British air attacks from bases in Malta on over-extended German
supply lines forced the Afrika Korps to retreat westwards back towards
Libya and Tunisia. On October
23, British forces newly put under the command of Brigadier General
Bernard Law Montgomery, well-supplied from Alexandra, opened an
offensive against the Afrika Korps at El Alamein. The British 8th Army
under Montgomery with superiority in men of two to one, and an even
greater superiority in materials launched the decisive push against the
Axis forces. After twelve days of violent fighting and heavy losses on
both sides, the British drove toward Libya and eventually Tunisia. The
Africa Campaign was a predictive microcosm of the war, a testimonial to
the doctrine that wars are won by logistics. The US, with its
unthreatened military supply base, would win the war as a matter of
time.
Maltese
Nationalists Jailed by British Colonial Authorities
Many
Maltese nationalists were hostile to British occupation, a fact found
all over the British Empire. When Malta was granted self-government
without independence in 1921, Enrico Mizzi formed the “Partito
Democratico Nazionalista” and was elected to the Legislative Assembly.
In 1924 he became Minister of Agriculture and Posts and in 1932 was
appointed Minister of Industry and Commerce and subsequently Minister
of Education. His patriotism became cause for concern to the British
colonial government during the Second World War and in 1942 he was
interned and deported to Uganda, where he remained for the duration of
the war. As a result, Enrico Mizzi was unable to take his
democratically elected seat in the then Council of Government, making a
mockery of WWII as a war to defend democracy.
Dom Mintoff,
future post-war prime minister of independent Malta, was a product of
elitist Oxford and a friend of Labour Party radicals. But it was
liberal Lord Louis Mountbatten, royal cousin of King George VI, who
advanced Mintoff’s political career. Mintoff’s father, a seaman cook,
ran the pantry at Castille Palace in Valletta, where Mountbatten, then
Flag Officer heading NATO’s Mediterranean fleet had his office and took
a liking to the young Mintoff and recommended him to a Rhodes
scholarship to Oxford to prepare him as a future leader friendly to
Britain. Later, through Mintoff, Mountbatten
promoted a scheme for Malta to seek full integration with Britain, a
political initiative that had parallels with secularized Moslem
Turkey’s fantasy about being a full equal member of the Christian
European Union. The project was eventually abandoned as another of
Mountbatten’s unworkable liberal fantasies, much like the integration
of India and Pakistan as one nation out of British India. The
experience made Mintoff realize that liberal colonialism was still
colonialism, with the result of him leading Malta to the left after the
war.
Under the long and forceful
leadership of Dom Mintoff, the leftist MLP government turned an
independent Malta into a strong adherent of the Non-Aligned Movement in
the Cold War. It strengthened cultural and trade
links with Malta's North African neighbors, notably oil-rich Libya, and
also with the People’s Republic of China and North Korea, shunned as
evil outcasts by the US-dominated West.
On assuming office in
1971, Mintoff renegotiated British/NATO agreements to dismantled its
military base within 7 years on condition that the base cannot be used
against Arab states. Mintoff also negotiated a treaty of friendship and
close economic cooperation with Prime Minister Zhou Enlai in China in
April 1972, making Malta a member of the Non-Aligned Movement.
El Alamein –
the End of the Beginning
The
German strategic goal of capturing the Suez Canal to sever
communication between the British Isles and the British Empire in the
Far East and to link up German forces thrusting south from Southern
Russia with those in North Africa was thawed by the defeat at El
Alamein, the first victorious battle in the war by a British-led force
over the German Wehrmacht. Germany lost 200,000 of its best
troops in North Africa and achieved no strategic advantage.
Those
troops would have been better used in defending Italy. Winston
Churchill used El Alamein to boost sagging British morale with his
mastery of language: “Now this is not the end, it is not even the
beginning of the end. But it is however, the end of the beginng.”
Whatever
it was, it was not the end of British colonialism, not even the
beginning of the end, and perhaps the end of the beginning of
neo-imperialism. In a since-released secret postwar report to Labour
Prime Minister Clement Attlee who replaced Conservative Churchill by
popular vote immediately after VE Day, Montgomery, as Chief of the
Imperial Defense Staff (1946-1948), Britain’s heroic soldier in defense
of democracy, opposed British Labour policy of encouraging
self-government in black Africa. The African, he concluded after a
two-month fact-finding tour of eleven African countries in late 1947,
“is a complete savage and is quite incapable of developing the country
himself.” He did not elaborate on why after a century of British
colonial rule, the African remained a “complete savage”. He recommended
a sweeping plan to turn much of sub-Saharan Africa into a
British-controlled bulwark against Communism that would be aligned with
white-ruled South Africa, which at that time was still dominated by
Britain. Montgomery and Rommel, heroes of colonialism and fascism, had
two things in common: both were congenital racists and pathological
anti-communists.
US Needed
the USSR to Defeat Germany
In
WWII, the US even with twice the population of Germany, had difficulty
assembling and training the necessary military force, estimated to be
up to 9 million troops, to prevail over the German Wehrmacht
and also to simultaneously fight a major war against the Japanese. Thus
Soviet resistance to German expansion in Europe was as vital as keeping
Britain from capitulating to Nazi might. It is another geopolitical
peculiarity that the US-Soviet alliance permitted the continuation of
Japan-Soviet neutrality all through the war despite the fact that US
entrance into the war was precipitated by Japanese attack on the US.
Prior to the successful testing of the atomic bomb, the US was looking
to the Soviets to fight Japan to again reduce anticipated US casualty
in Asia as it did in Europe. The strategy of “Europe First” was based
on the view that once Germany consolidated its hold on Europe, the US
alone might not be able to win the war against Germany as a superpower.
German diplomatic inroads into Central and South American, where strong
anti-US feelings had been smoldering for more than a century, could
lead to future German bases from whence attacks on the US could be
launched.
In the summer of 1940 when
Britain was facing Germany alone, Roosevelt demanded assurances from
Churchill that if the British government should seek peace with
Germany, the Royal Navy would be sent to Canada to prevent it from
falling into German hands to threaten US control of the Atlantic.
Churchill refused, using the Vichy France argument that he had rejected
only weeks earlier, that the British navy would be a crucial pawn in
any peace negotiations with Germany. The real purpose of Churchill’s
hard-line position was to deprive the US of the option of abandoning
Britain, the penalty of which would be the loss of US command of the
Atlantic, let alone Europe.
On August 14, 1941, some
fours months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the United
States, not yet at war, issued jointly with a Britain already at war
with Germany the Atlantic Charter, which set out a postwar world vision
as an unspoken condition for a pending US alliance with Britain. Among
other provisions, the Atlantic Charter emphasized British commitment to
postwar international cooperation, including support for US efforts to
form a United Nations based on the principle of self-determination for
former colonies. Six months later, in February 1942, barely two months
after the Pearl Harbor attack, under the Lend-Lease Agreement, Britain
agreed to a postwar multilateral payments system based on the dollar in
exchange for US commitment to help Britain financially during and after
the war. After the war, under Truman, self-determination was preempted
by anti-communism.
Yet at the insistence of the US financial
elite, US aid was only granted in return for the surrender of British
bases in the western hemisphere to US control, on the sale at reduced
prices of British-owned companies and investments in the US, Canada and
Latin America, the virtual seizure of South African gold production by
US warships, restrictions on British exports and finally the removal of
the pound-sterling as a reserve currency and the lifting of empire-wide
trade controls which could have been used to rebuild the British
pre-war economic empire after the war. Britain was saved from having to
sue for peace with Hitler by US intervention. After Dunkirk, Britain
had the choice to losing the war to Germany or to the US. Since
then, Britain has been forced to play the role of a subservient ally,
but one that subtly turned the US into a post-war reincarnation of the
British Empire with a greatly eclipsed Britain as top water boy for the
US-led neo-imperialist team.
Japan-Soviet
Neutrality a Geopolitical Peculiarity
In
WWII, a glaring geopolitical peculiarity was that Japan, a founding
member of the alliance of Axis powers, maintained a neutrality treaty
with the major enemy of the Axis alliance all through the war. Had
Japan attacked the USSR through Siberia instead of attacking the US at
Pearl Harbor, FDR might not have been able to go to war in Europe, as
US public opinion at the time was quite divided about getting involved
in another foreign war in Europe only two decades after WWI. War with
Japan was a total surprise to the US population even if it was not with
the US government.
Conservatives in the
US, with Churchill’s blessing, might even force the US government to
lift US sanction against Japan if Japan had moved against the USSR in
the name of anti-communism instead of threatening British/US
imperialist interests in Southeast Asia in an intra-imperialist
conflict. After all, Japanese imperialism, modeled
after British imperialism, while having begun in China, came into
conflict with Western imperialism in Asia first by defeating Czarist
Russia in 1904.
The Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05, which began
with Japanese naval attack on Port Arthur, was the result of Japanese
and Russian competition to develop “spheres of influence” in East Asia
in the age of imperialism, mainly at the expense of China. Japan had
won a war against the crumbling Chinese Empire in 1894-95 and imposed
an unequal treaty on the Qing dynastic government, demanding from China
heavy war indemnities, the island of Formosa, and Port Arthur with its
hinterland. Port Arthur was named after William C. Arthur of the
British navy. It is known in Chinese as Lushunkou, situated in the
southern tip of the City of Dalian in Liaoning province. The European
powers, while having no objection to the principle of war indemnities,
sided with Russian interest in Port Arthur to win Russian concession in
Europe. Germany and France applied diplomatic pressure on Japan, with
the result that Japan was obliged to relinquish Port Arthur in favor of
Russia. Two years later, China was coerced into leasing Port Arthur to
Russia, together with the entire Liaodong Peninsula for an ice-free
Russian naval base in the Far East to supplement Vladivostok.
The
Boxers Uprising of 1900, the Chinese name for which is (Righteous
Harmony Brigade), was an extremist xenophobic movement against Western
imperialism. The decrepit court of the Qing Dynasty, dominated by the
self-indulging, reactionary Dowager Empress (Cixi Taihou, 1838-1908)
encouraged it as an alternative chauvinistic instrument to relieve
pressure for modernization and reform in domestic politics.
Yihetuan,
promoted personally by the Empress, was a populist counterweight to
abort the budding “100 Days” elitist reform movement of 1898, led by
conservative reformist Kang Youwei (1858-1927) around the young
monarch, the weak Emperor Guangxu (reigned 1875-1908). The
reform movement was a belated and defensive attempt to resist foreign
aggression through modernization. The model for reform was the Meiji
Reform of Japan of 30 years earlier.
The members of Yihetuan,
in a burst of chauvinistic frenzy, rejected the use of modern and
therefore foreign firearms in favor of traditional broadswords. They
relied on protection against enemy bullets from Daoist amulets, their
faith in which would remain unshaken in the face of undeniable
empirical evidence provided by hundreds of thousands of falling
comrades shot by Western gunfire. The term Boxer, for unarmed fighters,
would be coined by bewildered Europeans whose modern pragmatism would
fill them with a superficial superiority complex, justified on narrow
grounds, over an ancient culture that stubbornly clung to the
irrational power of faith in defiance of reason.
The
Boxer Uprising led a coalition of 8 Europe powers that included Japan
to send an expeditionary coalition force to punish Chinese “barbarism”.
When the fighting ended, Russian troops had occupied Manchuria with
promise to withdraw by 1903, but failed to do so, wishing to hold on to
Manchuria as a springboard for further expansion into China. Japan and
Russia clashed over competing interests in Korea which led to Japan
forming an alliance with Britain. The terms stated that if Japan went
to war in the Far East, and a third power entered the fight against
Japan, then Britain would come to the aide of the Japanese. If this
treaty had held at the time of Pearl Harbor, Britain would have been
drawn into war with the US.
Russia and Britain were hostile
competitors in the Great Game in Central Asia and in Tibet. The
Russo-Japanese War marked the first time in modern history that a major
European power was defeated by an Asian nation whose navy was trained
by Britain and whose army by Germany. The Russo-Japanese War greatly
damaged the prestige of the Russian imperial house and set the stage
for the Russian Revolution.
British
Neutrality in Sino-Japanese War
Up
till Japanese expansion into South East Asia, Britain tried to maintain
cordial relations with Japan. It disallowed anti-Japanese agitation by
Chinese nationalists in the British colony of Hong Kong where the
British ruled with an iron fist adjacent to Japanese-occupied south
China. It also forbade aid shipments funded by overseas Chinese to
China through Hong Kong. The European War did not
change British policy on Japan hoping that Japan would invade the
Soviet Union.
Without
Pearl Harbor, there would have been no US intervention in Europe, then
there would have been no landing in Normandy and no Western Front for
Germany. The USSR might not have been able to
survive a two-front war with both Germany and Japan. A
Germany with a single-front Wehrmacht
and a formidable Japanese army supplied from occupied China would be
highly problematic for the USSR. If Germany had defeated the USSR,
Britain will most likely capitulate and Germany would become the
superpower of all Europe. In an ironic twist of events, the USSR, and
world communism, was saved by a strategic error on the part of fascist
Japan. Mao Zedong reportedly said to Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei
Tanaka in their first meeting in 1973 that if Japan had not invaded
China and Southeast Asia, communism might not have prevailed in China.
The Cairo
Declaration
The
Cairo Declaration issued by China, the United States and Great Britain
on December 1, 1943 stated: “It is the purpose of the three great
Allies [USSR was not yet a war with Japan] that Japan shall be stripped
of all the islands in the Pacific which she has seized or occupied
since the beginning of the First World War in 1914, and that all the
territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Manchuria,
Formosa [Taiwan] and the Pescadores [Penghu], shall be restored to
China.” The Potsdam Proclamation signed by China, the United States and
Great Britain on 26 July 1945 (subsequently adhered to by the Soviet
Union) reiterated: “The terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried
out.”
On August 15 of the same year, Japan declared
unconditional surrender. The instrument of Japan’s surrender stipulated
that “Japan hereby accepts the provisions in the declaration issued by
the heads of the Governments of the United States, China and Great
Britain on July 26, 1945 at Potsdam, and subsequently adhered to by the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.” Potsdam defined Allied occupation
of the Japanese Empire as the USSR being responsible for North Korea,
Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, while the US and the British Empire
would have the responsibility for Japan, South Korea and Japan’s
remaining possessions in Oceania. Only the lack of a Soviet Pacific
Fleet prevented Soviet troops from landing in Japan to partition it
into two states, a communist North and a capitalist South, as in the
case of Germany, Korea and Vietnam.
After
WWII, the Soviet Union refused to send a delegation to San Francisco to
sign the peace treaty with Japan while the Korean conflict was still in
progress. As a result, the USSR and Japan, the two nations that did not
actually fight, remained in a state of war that began less than a month
before WWII ended and without diplomatic relations until the USSR and
Japan began working on a draft peace agreement and the restoration of
diplomatic relations in spring of 1955, a full decade after the war.
Bilateral relations were finally restored in the fall of 1956. However,
a declaration was signed in lieu of the peace agreement. Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev suggested that Japan shut down US military bases in
exchange for the return of two of the South Kurile Islands. The US
opposed the offer while Japan demanded the transfer of all four
islands. The ownership of the islands is still in dispute, no maritime
border has been set yet, and no peace agreement has been signed.
Japan’s
Post-War Territorial Disputes with Korea and China
In
violation of terms of the Cairo Declaration, Japan has introduced
post-war territorial disputes also with Korea and China. With Korea the
dispute is with regard to islets known in Japan as Takeshima
which Koreans call Dokdo.
Control over the islets means control over fishing grounds and possible
undersea energy resources. With China the dispute concerns
Okinotori, an
uninhabited coral reef the size of a tennis court 2.9 inches above
water at high tide 1,100 miles south of Tokyo described as a “bunch of
rocks” by China whose interst in the area is based on its strategic
position. US naval forces based on Guam need to pass through this area
to approach Taiwan.
According to Article 121 of the
United Nations Council on Law of the Sea (UNCLS), an island is a
naturally formed area of land, surrounded by water, which is above
water at high tide. Rocks that cannot sustain human habitation or
economic life of their own shall have no exclusive economic zone or
continental shelf. Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara, known for his
outspoken ultra-chauvinistic views, wants to increase economic activity
on the rocky Okinotori islands. Japan in June 2005 installed radar, a
heliport and an official address plaque, “1 Okinotori Island, Ogasawara
Village, Tokyo.” China urges handling the relevant issues through
friendly consultation.
The Cairo Decalration
notwithstanding, Japan has also introduced post-war territorial
disputes over a chain of islands in the East China Sea with important
gas resources near key international shipping routes, known as
Diaoyutai in China and Senkaku in Japan. Located about 250 miles west
of Okinawa, Diaoyutai is claimed by both Beijing and Taipei as Chinese
territory. The waters surrounding the islands are expected to be
oil-rich.
Professor Kiyoshi Inoue of Kyoto University wrote in a published
article in the February 1972 issue of Historical Research:
“The islands which are being called the Senkaku Islands in Japan and to
which the Japanese Government claims title have historically been
definitely China's territory. As the victor in the 1894-95 war
with Qing [dynasty] China, Japan seized these islands along with Taiwan
and the Penghu Islands and incorporated them into Okinawa Prefecture as
Japanese territory. The Cairo Declaration jointly issued by China, the
United States and Britain during World War II stipulates the return to
China by Japan of all the territory she had stolen from China
during and after the Japan-Qing [dynasty] China war, including Taiwan
and Manchuria. The Potsdam Proclamation issued by the allies stipulates
that Japan must carry out the clauses of the Cairo Declaration. These
islands have been automatically reverted to China as its territory just
as Taiwan has been automatically returned to China from the time Japan
unconditionally accepted the Cairo Declaration (December 1, 1943) and
the Potsdam Declaration concerning Conquered Countries (August
2, 1945)
and surrendered to the allies including China. It follows that these
islands are territory of the People's Republic of China, the only
internationally recognized authority over all of China. But in
collusion with US imperialism, the reactionary rulers and militarist
forces of Japan are making a clamor that the Senkaku Islands are
Japanese territory in an attempt to drag the Japanese people
into the militarist, anti-China whirlwind. This big whirlwind is sure
to become fiercer after the return to Japan of the so-called
"administrative right over Okinawa" by the U.S. armed forces on May 15
this year.
We who are truly striving for the independence of the Japanese nation,
Japan-China friendship and peace in Asia must smash in good time this
big conspiracy of the US-Japanese reactionaries.”
Japan Most
Obdurate on Korea Nonproliferation and Missile Tests
On
the Korea nonproliferation issue, Japan has been the most obdurate
participant of the 6-nation talks, demanding that all the North Korean
nuclear reactors be shut down. Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
threatened to boycott the 60th anniversary of the European victory in
WWII held in Moscow to protest Russian stance on the still unsigned
peace agreement. Koizumi’s militarist activities, symbolized by his
visits to the Yasukini shrine where the most hideous WWII war criminals
are revered as sacred heroes, and Japan’s vocal revisionism on the
record of Japanese aggression and atrocities in Asia under Japanese
occupation sparked public anger and resentment in China on both sides
of the Taiwan Strait, and in Korea, both North and South, as well as
all other Asian nations. Japan also insists on a
pre-emptive strike option on North Korean missile sites.
A
new draft of the Japanese constitution provides for the formation of a
full-fledged “Defense Army” of 60,000 strong, the number could be
increased up to 375,000 in times of war repelling foreign aggression
not just on Japanese soil but wherever Japanese interests claimed by
Japan are located, with the authority to participate in collective
defense alliance formalized. Active monitoring of China and North Korea
is part of a new Japanese military doctrine. Under the new
constitutional provisions, Japan can legally export missile components
to the US, canceling the arms export ban effective in Japan since 1967.
Japan’s electricity is largely produced by nuclear power, giving Japan
the nuclear technologies to produce nuclear weapons on short notice.
Echoing
Israel’s geopolitical game of securing US support by playing the role
of counterbalance against communism during the Cold War and against
Islamic terrorist threats after the Cold War, Japan aims to emerge as a
regional military power in the name of counterbalancing a rising China
in the region. It may well be another Japanese geopolitical
miscalculation that will spark dire consequences. From
the point of view of China, Korea and other Asian nations, US presence
in Asia is tolerated only on the condition of checking any revival of
Japanese militarism.
US Forces
around the World
The
US has maintained the largest permanent force in peacetime beyond its
home longer than any other empire in history. These troop arrangements
are largely the result of post-WWII arrangements and Cold War
exigencies. Fear of a massive land invasion of Western Europe from the
former Soviet Union prompted the US to place large numbers of ground
forces there to defend it. US forces in Korea and Japan have been in
place for a rapid response to a North Korean or Chinese threat for the
past 50 years. The current Iraq occupation takes about 130,000 troops,
plus another 130,000 in the Persian Gulf.
The Nixon Doctrine
stated that Asian nations should strengthen their own defense
capabilities and not depend on the US for their security. After
Vietnam, the Nixon Doctrine reflected a desire to reduce US force
commitments to Asia. Some 20,000 US troops of the 7th Division were
withdrawn from Korea by March 1971 as part of a Nixon strategy of
opening to China.
President Carter planned to reduce US troop levels in Korea, pledging
during
his campaign that US forces in Korea would be completely withdrawn in
stages over four to five years. Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub, then Chief
of Staff of the Eighth Army, protested to Congress against Carter’s
withdrawal plan. The effort was eventually abandoned in 1979 after only
3,600 troops had been withdrawn.
The US Congress
adopted the Nunn-Warner Amendment to the 1989 Defense Appropriation
Bill, which mandated a reduction in US troop strength in Korea from
43,000 to 36,000 by the end of calendar year 1991. In early 1990 the
first Bush Administration announced plans to cut 7,000 of the 42,500 US
troops in Korea over two and a half years. At that time, the US had
11,600 Air Force personnel and 31,600 Army personnel in Korea.
As a result, the 2nd Infantry Division’s 3rd
Brigade was withdrawn from Korea in 1992 and deactivated.
South
Korea, having refused to sign the armistice agreement of the Korea War
due to the personal intransigence of Syngman Rhee, is technically in a
continuing state of civil war with North Korea. For security, Seoul
forged a mutual defense pact with Washington to keep the 37,000 troops
there, the largest US contingent in Asia after Japan, which has 45,000
troops in 39 bases. The defense treaty with South Korea has kept the
US, by proxy, technically at war with North Korea for almost six
decades, beyond the original US “police action” mandate.
The
US-Japan Security Treaty was also signed during the Korean War in 1951,
at the same time as the San Francisco Peace Treaty that formally ended
the Allied occupation of Japan. The security treaty with Japan enabled
US troops to remain in Japan and use Japanese facilities as staging
areas and logistics bases in the war then being waged on the Korean
Peninsula and later in the Vietnam War and other future wars in Asia. The
US-Japan Security Treaty is the technical reason why Japan is paranoid
about North Korea nuclear proliferation. As a frontline offensive base
for US forces, Japan is a legitimate target in a war in East Asia.
US
military bases in Japan were seen as essential to containing communist
expansion in Asia during the Cold War, especially since the Soviet
Union, China and North Korea were mistakenly viewed by the US as a
monolithic threat unaffected by geopolitical contradictions. Throughout
the Cold War, the US deployed more than 500,000 troops outside its
borders, not counting troops directly engaged in shooting wars, such as
Korea and Vietnam. Even now, after the end of the Cold War, the US
military "forward deploys" almost 450,000 troops in foreign bases, with
large numbers in Europe (112,000), East Asia (82,000) and the Middle
East (240,000). The US failed to prevail in the two
major wars the US fought in Asia since WWII in Korea and Vietnam.
Instead, these two wars did enormous damage to US social cohesion,
caused sharp curtailment in domestic liberty, degraded public trust in
government and created cynicism on professed US national values.
US Forces
Korea
The
US currently has some 37,000 troops in US Forces Korea (USFK) based in
South Korea under an agreement dating back to the Korean War 50 years
ago. The US is planning a major realignment of its forces in East Asia
but says it remains fully committed to the defense of South Korea. The
withdrawal of 4,000 men would significantly weaken the strength of the
Second Infantry Division - the main US fighting force in South Korea.
The division currently has 14,000 soldiers stationed near the border
with North Korea.
The US announced plans in May
2004 to shift 3,600 troops from South Korea to Iraq, the first time the
United States had reduced its armed forces in South Korea since the end
of the Cold War. On June 7, 2004 a US delegation, led by Assistant
Secretary of Defense Richard Lawless, met with South Korean officials
and reportedly proposed withdrawing up to one-third of the 37,000 US
troops in South Korea. The two-day talks also covered plans to move
about 7,000 US troops from their bases near the border with North Korea
to a new military camp well south of Seoul.
On October 6, 2004,
the Department of Defense announced that after several months of close
consultations, the US and the Republic of Korea had reached final
agreement regarding the June 2004 US proposal to redeploy 12,500 US
troops from Korea.
Prior to 2004, there were normally about
37,500 military personnel stationed in the USFK Area of Responsibility
(AOR), including an air force of 225 planes. The number of troops
deployed in the area does not normally fluctuate. With the 2nd Brigade
Combat Team deployed to Iraq in August 2004, the total number of USFK
troops declined by 5,000, to a total of 32,500 military
personnel.
US Forces Japan
US
Forces, Japan (USFJ) with its Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps
elements, consists of approximately 47,000 military personnel, 52,000
dependents, 5,500 Department of Defense civilian employees and 23,500
Japanese workers. There are roughly 350 aircrafts from the Air Force,
Navy and Marines located in the USFJ AOR. North Korea’s missile test
launches come at a time when the number of US troops in South Korea and
other nearby Asian nations is declining and the Pentagon has been
focusing more on alleged potential threats from China which it aims to
counter with the power projection capability of a beefed up 7th
Fleet, as the US aims to avoid another land war with China.<>
As
for US military strength in eastern Asia, the plan is to break down
large Cold War-era bases around the world, bring tens of thousands of
uniformed personnel back to the United States and move some troops
closer to potential hot spots so they can more quickly respond to
conflicts.
At the same time, saying it has an eye on
surges in China’s defense spending, the Pentagon is strengthening its
Asia-Pacific force. US troop reduction in South
Korea where it has had a military presence since the Korean War is part
of a plan to rely on South Korea to assume more responsibility for its
own security. Similar restructuring is being implemented in Japan where
40,000 US troops are still stationed including more than 15,000 Marines
and more than 13,000 airmen. Japan also is home port for the Navy’s 7th
Fleet. Unlike South Korea which has always been on a war footing, US
force restructure in Japan involves US acceptance of a revival of
Japanese militarism, with serious geopolitical consequences. While US
troop reduction in South Korea faces a South Korean government that is
increasingly friendly to both China and its Northern brother to seek
avoiding military conflict, particularly on Korean soil, US troop
reduction in Japan opens the Pandora’s Box of Japanese militarism
revival with ambition to exploit regional instability to recover
territories lost after WWII.
Japan Echoes
Pentagon’s China Threat Theory
Japanese
Foreign Minister Taro Asu, who is a contender for premiership to
replace Koizumi in September, has echoed the Pentagon’s “China threat”
theory. The annual “Self-Defense White Paper” released by Japan cites
China’s rising military strength for the main “reason” that Japan has
increased its military spending at double digits rates for the past 17
consecutive years. The Japan-US “2+2” (US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld plus Japan’s
Minister for Foreign Affairs Nobutaka Machimura and Minister of State
for Defense and Director-General of the Defense Agency Yoshinori Ohno)
Joint Statement of February 19, 2005 confirms US-Japan cooperation on
global security issues beyond Asia to include Afghanistan, Iraq and the
broader Middle East. The two pair of ministers commit the two countries
to promotion of nonproliferation, particularly through the
Proliferation Security Initiative, a proactive global effort that aims
to stop shipments of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), their delivery
systems, and related materials worldwide first announced by President
Bush on May 31, 2003. The Joint Statement confirms Japan’s acceptance
of ballistic missile defense (BMD), Japan’s new National Defense
Program Guidelines (NDPG) emphasizing Japan’s capability to respond
effectively to new threats and diverse contingencies, Japan’s active
engagement to improve the international security environment, and the
importance of the Japan-US Alliance.
As a central component of
its broad defense transformation effort, the US is in the process of
reorienting and strengthening its global defense posture to provide it
with appropriate, strategy-driven capabilities in an uncertain security
environment. The Joint Statement confirms the need to continue
examining the roles, missions, and capabilities of Japan’s Self Defense
Forces and the US Armed Forces required for responding effectively to
diverse challenges in a well-coordinated manner. This examination will
take into account recent achievements and developments such as Japan's
NDPG and new legislation to deal with contingencies, as well as the
expanded agreement on mutual logistical support and progress in BMD
cooperation. The “2+2 Ministers” of the two countries also emphasized
the importance of enhancing interoperability between US and Japanese
forces.
The Joint Statement also declares a common
strategic goal to push China towards increased transparency in military
spending. Yet Japan’s own official defense spending data is purposely
opaque. It does not reflect defense contractor output values and
capital investment. Despite the appearance of a market economy, the
Japanese economic system is still very much a state enterprise that has
been aptly described as Japan Inc.
In the past half
century, China’s total GDP rose by 172 folds from a very low base and
Japan’s by 80 folds from a relatively high base in nominal local
currency terms. During the same period, China’s military spending
increased by 32 folds and Japan’s by 47 folds. China’s population of
1.3 billion is ten times larger than Japan’s 127 million. In 2005,
Japanese military expenditure was $44.3 billion or $350 per person
while China’s was $81.5 billion or $63 per person. The increase in
China’s military spending is 45% less than Japan’s notwithstanding
China’s faster growth rate over Japan. China’s annual military spending
rate in the two decades from 1985 to 2004 was 13.4%, and Japan’s yearly
military spending increase for the two decades from 1961 and 1980 stood
at 14%. This despite Japan’s security has been guaranteed by the US,
thus relieving it from much military expenditure. The ratio of China’s
military spending to its GDP has been falling to 4.3% in 2005. The
ratio of military spending to the financial expenditure in China has
fallen down from 34.2 percent in 1953 to 18 percent in 1973 and to 7.7
percent 2003. Japan sees the Taiwan Straits and East China Sea regions
as area of possible conflict with China.
US-Japan security
cooperation on regional arms build-ups, including theater missile
defense systems for Japan and Taiwan means that the Taiwan issue is not
one of a simple ‘renegade province’ in Chinese domestic politics, but a
focal point around which Sino-Japanese and Sino-US antagonism and,
ultimately, the entire region, could evolve. For
example, Australia which is increasingly aware of its future as being
tied to peace and cooperation with her Asian neighbors is doing its
level best to avoid being dragged by belligerent US policy into
otherwise avoidable conflict with China. US-Japan alliance does not
reinforce regional security and instead risks creating unnecessary
global instability.
As part of a worldwide
realignment of US forces, the Pentagon is drawing down troops at some
decades-old installations in Asia, and the region’s allies are taking
more responsibility for their own defense. This has been accompanied by
burgeoning U.S. naval strength in the Pacific. Pentagon figures show
just under 30,000 US troops in South Korea, compared with 37,000 two
years ago, with some troops being deployed instead to Iraq. In its
biggest reorganization in two decades, the US plans to bring down the
number further to some 25,000 by 2008 and to compensate by building up
the power projection capability of the Pacific Fleet. This is why North
Korea says its missile program is for self-defense against US threat
from the sea.
On September 17, 2002 Japanese Koizumi visited Pyongyang in North Korea and
held talks with General Secretary Kim Jong Il. After
the meeting, Koizumi told the press unilaterally: “We confirmed that we
would resolve the missile issue through dialogue and Chairman Kim
Jong-Il stated that he would freeze all missile launchings without any
time limit.” There was no mention of the conditions
behind the alleged understanding or even misunderstanding. Since
it was not a joint press conference, what Koizumi said was merely his
understanding which may not be Kim Jong Il’s understanding.
US Promotes
Trilateral Military Cooperation against China
Admiral
William “Fox” Fallon, head of US Pacific Command, testified before the
Senate Armed Services Committee in March 2006 that US “trilateral
military cooperation” with Japan and South Korea aims to deal not only
with North Korea but also with China and terrorist threats in Asia. Yet
South Korea is only a reluctant ally in this “cooperation.” Fallon
indicated the US forces want the three countries to jointly “deal with
China’s increasing military power, North Korea’s possible collapse and
reunification of the two Koreas, unconventional regional threats,
including terrorism risks in Southeast Asia, and other regional
matters.”
But the trilateral process as well as bilateral
defense talks between Japan and South Korea has stalled due to
lingering territorial dispute and historical antagonism between Tokyo
and Seoul stemming from Japan’s 1910-45 colonial occupation of the
Korean Peninsula and to the recent revival of Japanese militarism.
Washington aims to keep Japan and South Korea as allies against China
and North Korea, especially hoping to prevent Seoul from leaning toward
Beijing out of similarity in disputes with Japan. Yet Seoul’s approach
to Korea unification conflicts with US policy on North Korea. South
Korea is not at all keen on preemptive strikes on North Korea and view
nuclear capability for a united Korea not necessarily an undesirable
development. The natural economic and cultural ties
between Korea and China are undeniable. Anti-China
hysteria is increasingly not shared outside of the US. Beyond
anti-communism fixation, there is little that the US can argue to
convince South Koreans from reuniting with their brothers in the north
or to form closer ties with China.
Fallon’s
congressional testimony came after the US Defense Department issued its
2006 Quadrennial Defense Review in February, singling out China as
having the “greatest” potential to militarily compete with the US among
emerging and major powers. In the QDR, which set the defense strategy
and military posture for the next 20 years, the Pentagon called for a
“greater” military presence in the Pacific Ocean and vowed to boost
military integration with allies to deter against hostility from
emerging and major powers. Japan and the US agreed in October 2005 to
step up integration and joint operations between the Japanese
Self-Defense Forces and US forces as part of their broad accord on
realigning the US military presence in Japan. Yet,
beside Japan and Britain, US unilateralism has dampened the enthusiasm
of Cold War allies of the US to support US policies of global
transformation.
Fallon praised Prime Minister Koizumi
Junichiro as having demonstrated “exceptional leadership” in guiding
the Self-Defense Force (SDF) through “significant change,” such as
sending ground troops to Iraq and refueling vessels to the Indian Ocean
to help the US-led anti-terrorism operations in Afghanistan. “These
actions clearly show the willingness and capability of the government
of Japan to deploy the SDF regionally and globally in support of
security and humanitarian operations,” Fallon said. Such
actions are viewed in most of Asia as signs of emerging Japanese
belligerence. The only thing that remains unchanged about Japan’s force
structure is the name of Self Defense Force. Such
“exceptional leadership” is viewed as dangerous adventurism by many in
Asia.
Seoul
and Washington agreed in early 2006 on “strategic flexibility” of US
armed forces in South Korea, paving the way for US forces there to
engage in missions outside the Korean Peninsula. But the accord led to
controversy in South Korea as it may lead the nation to get involved in
regional conflicts that the US could be engaged in, including a
possible conflict with China over Taiwan. Fallon said, “We welcome
[South] Korea’s adoption of a more regional view of security and
stability… in light of the changing security environment, including
unconventional threats, China’s military modernization and the
potential for reconciliation between the Koreas.” Seoul
is less sanguine about the congruence of US and Korean geopolitical
interests.
Such
is the geopolitical dynamics surrounding the Korea Nonproliferation and
Missile Test issue. All the noise out of Washington about “axis of
evil” and “defense of democracy” is just propaganda. It is as
convincing to the people of Korea, Asia, South America and Africa as
the Nazi’s noise about racial superiority and the right to living space
for Aryan nations. Just as the Nazis allowed the Japanese to be
“honorary Aryans” and South African Apartheid allowed them to be
“honorary Whites”, the US now allows the Japanese to be “honorary
democrats” despite Japan’s post-war one-party system token democracy.
Democracy has permitted some governments of otherwise peaceful people
to be seized by extremists and militarists who use war on evil as
pretext to dominate the world.
On what basis does the
US asserts the sacred privilege to declare nations which hold values
divergent from those held by the US as evil and not deserving of self
defense and survival? There are those in the US foreign policy and
security establishment who view US involvement in any military conflict
in Asia, particularly with China, as unnecessarily counterproductive
and a serious misstep for US geopolitical interests as the Third
Reich’s invasion of the USSR was for Germany geopolitical interests.
But such rational voices are muffled in the Neo-con controlled
militarist Bush administration.
Next: Korean
Nationalist Kim Il Sung and China
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