A large chunk of this has been shamelessly plagiarized from Asia Times, without any credit or notation - http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/JAP-01-100513.html
a blot on an otherwise interesting synopsis of what is going on in NE Asia
the entire Japan/Korea Philippines/Taiwan narrative doesn't really help the "China is an aggressive a Bully" strapline, but these simmering conflicts are all ultimately attributable to US meddling over the past century, and if the Asians had any common sense, they'd surely identify THAT as the underlying problem
I believe that the author of this blog is indeed Mr. Lee, the author of Asia Time's op-ed.
9:46 PM
“Irritating Japan” Well On Its Way to Replacing “Rising
China” Meme
There is a delicious—well, delicious to me, anyway—flavor of
Western bewilderment about the neverending parade of Japanese nationalist shenanigans.
The most recent entry was Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto’s
endorsement of the World War II Japanese military brothel system a.k.a. “comfort
women”:
"In the circumstances in which
bullets are flying like rain and wind, the soldiers are running around at the
risk of losing their lives,"
"If you want them to have a rest
in such a situation, a comfort women system is necessary. Anyone can understand
that."
Hashimoto—who seems to have way too much of his mental space
occupied by visions of sexually rampaging soldiers-- made his remarks in the context of promoting the Okinawan sex worker industry as a legal
source of relief for the hard-working American military men based on the
island.
Toru Hashimoto…told reporters
Monday that he visited with Marine Corps Air Station Futenma’s commander last
month and told him that servicemembers should make more use of Japan’s
legalized sex industry.
“There are places where
people can legally release their sexual energy in Japan,” Hashimoto said during
a video press conference Monday in Osaka. “Unless they make use of these
facilities, it will be difficult to control the sexual energies of the wild
Marines.”
Hashimoto said that the
commander responded with a bitter smile and told him that brothels are
off-limits to U.S. servicemembers.
Bitter smile, indeed.
Perhaps the US government took little comfort from Hashimoto
conflating the sexual needs of the US military today with those of the Imperial
Japanese Army.
For those who have been following the Okinawan issue—and China's
rather malicious and successful highlighting of particularist
sentiments among the Okinawan population as part of its campaign to undermine
Japan’s claim to eternal and uncontested sovereignty over the Senkakus—it was noteworthy
that there were also Okinawan protests against Hashimoto’s comfort-women
remarks.
Since most comfort women on Okinawa during World War II were
Korean, Okinawan objections are apparently more along the lines of resentment
against the sexual impositions involved in contemporary Tokyo-imposed US
basing, rather than the historical revisionism on the comfort women issue that
inflamed opinion in China and South Korea.
As China continues to push the Okinawan hot button with its
questioning of Japanese sovereignty over the Ryukyu Island chain, expect more
media focus on the most loaded question in Okinawa/Japanese history: the Battle
of Okinawa in 1945.
Japanese nationalists have worked assiduously to shape the
official narrative—down to the wording of memorial plaques—to depict Okinawa as
the frontline of Japanese resistance.
However, many Okinawans consider the battle—which resulted in the death
of over 100,000 Okinawan civilians in the Japanese military’s Gotterdammerung
defense—as an atrocity in which Okinawa and Okinawans were sacrificed to buy
time for the Japanese home islands. (In
the event, fear that the bloody action on Okinawa would be replicated across
the four “home islands” reportedly convinced President Truman to cancel the invasion and short-circuit
the war by dropping atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima.)
A vocal sector of Okinawan public opinion regards Japanese
nationalist revisionism as an effort to deny Okinawan suffering and submerge it
beneath an untrue narrative of Japanese heroism.
Asia-Japan Focus reported in
2012 on the fracas over a plaque commemorating the Japanese army headquarters
on Okinawa (which, interestingly and tragically, was sited at Shuri Castle, the
“pre-eminent symbol of the Ryukyu Kingdom” according to the translators):
A controversy has arisen over Okinawa governor Nakaima’s deletion of
the word “suteishi" (sacrificial stone) [this doesn’t mean “sacrificial stone” in the
exalted sense of a “consecrated altar”; it refers to a disposable position and
losable game piece in the board game of go--PL] from the draft that was
prepared for the translation of the description for the explanation panel about
the 32nd Army HQ Shelter. Hitherto, the word “suteishi” has been used as
a key term that directly captures the essence of the Battle of Okinawa. This
word also symbolises “postwar” Japan-Okinawa relations, in which Japan regained
its sovereignty with the San Francisco Peace Treaty, while abandoning Okiwawa
to US military domination, and forcing it to bear the burden of the US bases,
even after Japan regained administrative rights over Okinawa.
There is nothing new about Japanese nationalism with a World
War II denialist tinge.
Despite efforts to keep it buttoned up (members of the
ruling LDP distanced themselves from Hashimoto’s remarks), nationalism keeps
bubbling up and its emergence into the Japanese political mainstream is an
unpleasant surprise for American pundits.
After all, “peaceful, progressive, and democratic Japan” is
more than a useful cliche in the compare-and-contrast framing opposite “assertive,
oppressive, and communist China”.
A cooperative, helpful Japan is the linchpin of US efforts
to orchestrate a soft containment of China based on US-friendly liberal norms
and justified by the idea that the unruly Chinese dragon needs to be kept in
its cage by an alliance of the US and Asian democracies.
Japan “going off the res” and behaving like a war-loving
dingbat creates obvious problems for the optics of the “pivot to Asia”.
Japanese nationalism also complicates the US narrative with
its healthy dose of anti-Americanism (including a sub voce tendency to blame
the US-imposed constitution, US-demanded yen appreciation, the US-inflicted
global financial crisis, and US blind infatuation with the strategic and
economic importance of China for Japan’s long term woes), and a remarkable and
embarrassing hostility toward critical US ally South Korea as Japan’s zero-sum
rival for economic and diplomatic leadership among the Asian democracies.
The fact that a bona-fide Asian democracy can act so “assertively”
also calls into question the lazy liberal assumption that democratization
is a panacea which automatically translates into tolerance, transnational amity, de-escalation of tensions,
and regional stability.
A less obvious but, I expect, to US diplomatic strategists,
more pressing problem is that nationalist ideals are serving as a justification
for an independent-minded Japanese foreign policy that plays lip service to US
objectives but actually exploits US backing in order to advance Japanese
interests at the expense of US goals.
In the US, we call it “The tail wagging the dog”.
In China (and Japan), the relevant proverb is “The fox
pretending to the tiger’s might”. (In the
Chinese proverb, the fox claims that people respect him more than the
tiger. “Just walk behind me, and you’ll
see how people fear me.” The gullible
tiger follows the fox and is chagrined to see all the other animals fleeing, apparently, before the fox.)
My personal shorthand for the situation is “Japan as the
Israel of East Asia”.
I think this is a metaphor that troubles the US government
as well.
After all, one of the attractions of pivoting to Asia and
away from the Middle East was that the United States would be leaving a region
in which its freedom of movement was constrained at enormous financial,
military, and diplomatic cost by Israel’s ability to substitute its own
security narrative (existential threat of Iran’s nuclear weapons) for the US
priority, at least for the Obama administration (normalizing relations with
Iran and resolution of the Palestinian issue).
Instead, I have a feeling that Japan under nationalist rule
will be more interested in encouraging polarization between pro-China and
pro-US blocs in Asia—thereby providing Japan with a favored and decisive role—than
it will be in behaving like the good, obedient ally assisting the United States
as it manages its relationship with China-- soon going to be the world’s
largest economy--at the expense of the interests and anxieties of an
increasingly marginalized Japan.
By this reading, the Senkaku crisis—which forces the United
States to line up with Japan against China over some Taiwanese rocks the Obama
administration cares nothing about—is like money in the bank for the Abe
government.
Therefore I’m not expecting that crisis to go anywhere soon.
US anxieties about Japan are creeping into the news sections
and editorial pages, albeit with continued allegiance to the old tropes of the “China
rising” menace and the “loyal Japanese ally”.
In a stern Gray Lady editorial which read like an exercise in US
imperial nostalgia that does not translate well into a 21st century
reality of increasingly assertive Asian nations, the NY Times acknowledged the
inconvenience of provocative Japanese nationalism while presuming to lecture
both sides on where their real interests lie:
The right-wing
nationalists who took power in December may be equally unwilling to put Japan’s
past behind it, although the government of the new prime minister, Shinzo Abe,
took a positive step on Tuesday when it said it would abide by official
apologies that the country made two decades ago to victims of World War II.
China and Japan have strong economic ties and are critical to regional
stability. Both will lose if they stumble into war or otherwise cannot resolve
this escalating dispute.
And, via Sinocism, Ian Burama wrote in the same oblivious vein in Wall Street Journal:
Things, in short, are
back to square one: Pax Americana containing China, with Japan as Washington’s
loyal vassal. This might seem a stable, even comfortable, position from the
U.S. point of view. In fact, it isn’t. For a long time, the Chinese put up with
the U.S. being the policeman of East Asia, because the prospect of a more
independent, fully rearmed, even nuclear Japan would be worse. But Japan’s role
as a kind of cat’s paw of American dominance, with Japanese nationalists
compensating for their subservience by indulging in bellicose talk, will be the
source of ever greater tensions, which are bad for everyone, including the U.S.
I think public-arena US pundits are a little bit behind the
curve here. We’re now drifting away from
the comfy post-World War II narrative of “Japan is completely dependent on us” and
“everybody wants to club together to contain the Chinese” to the brave new
world of eroding US dominance, the emergence of China as an economic linchpin,
and “US objectives are hostage to Japan’s forward Asian policy”.
China seems to sense an opportunity here.
Global Times, the Chinese populist/conservative mouthpiece,
unloaded on Abe in an editorial (not an op-ed, please note) whose true audience is probably the US
government, rather than bewildered Western observers:
But set against the
background of Japan's economic depression, Japan's national political ambitions
which Abe represents are full of loss, resentment and urgency.
In the few months since taking office, Abe impressed Japanese public by his
hatred of Japan's defeat in place of a normal hard-line diplomacy. He hates the
result of World War II instead of hating those who started the war. He does not
accept China's rise through peace and hard work and rails against the general
trend of East Asia's development.
China cannot change Abe's value nor influence his strategic choice. China
should lower its expectations toward the bilateral relationship.
As for Abe himself, we should have no expectation. We believe that there is no
need for Chinese leaders to meet him during his term. That would not alleviate
the bilateral relationship but will undermine our own image. China should
maintain its current indifferent interactions with Japan and try to reduce
chances of crisis.
The next chance for China to improve the bilateral relationship will come after
Abe's term. Before this, China should show Japan its confidence through
indifference.
The message here, other than the Chinese government is
righteously pissed off at Japan, is that the US pivot—with its hope of
modulated pressure leading to more desirable Chinese behavior—is on life
support.
China, using the excuse as well as the reality of Japanese
nationalism, is digging in for a period of confrontation, not conciliation or concession.
The key question is whether the PRC will be mollified by
some self-serving olive-branch extension by the Abe government.
I think not. I think
the PRC is hunting for bigger game.
Global Times is urging the PRC leadership to write off Japan
for the duration of Abe’s prime ministership.
It sees Japan’s nationalist preoccupations as the chance to
deepen the wedge between Japan and the United States, and push the US to a more
“G2” (i.e. US + China) Asian regime.
If the US desires a good working relationship with China, it
will have to do so at the expense of distancing itself from Japan and
undermining the basic premise of the pivot—that the Asian democracies and the
United States are not driven by vulgar and diverse national interests and
instead, indivisibly and completely, share the noblest multilateral values and
goals and interests in confronting China.
I parse the fate of the pivot in my most recent piece for
Asia Times, which appeared at ATOl on May 10, 2013:
US hoist by its own pivot petard
It is perhaps premature to announce the death of the US pivot to Asia,
but the patient looks less than healthy. The US effort to orchestrate
a win-win economic and security regime in Asia through selective and
constructive pressure on China is being undercut by an ally that sees
its importance, security, and prosperity eroding as China rises.
That nation is Japan, which is threatening to frustrate the US plan
for a new paradigm in Asia, and replace it with the dismal Middle
Eastern model of confrontation and containment, one that the Obama
administration is desperate to escape.
In this context, we can take an instructive look at the latest
kerfuffle in Sino-Japanese relations, the article by in People's [Image]Daily by two Chinese scholars calling into question
Japan's title to all the Ryukyu Islands in addition to the Senkakus,
including the big one - Okinawa.
Seduced by the prospect of another China-bashing peep
show, seemingly oblivious of the Japanese government's concerted
campaign to skew coverage of its disputes with China, and too lazy to
read the original article (which apparently appeared only in Chinese,
got jerked after the intended uproar was generated, and now seems to
exist only on Chinese message boards), most of the media missed the
true import of the story.
The drift of the article is that after World War II the
United States returned sovereignty of the entire Ryukyu chain, not
just the Senkakus, to Japan on legally dodgy basis. As the estimable
Martin Fravel of MIT pointed out (and the Japan Times quite
commendably reported), this was not an attempt to claim Chinese
sovereignty over Okinawa:
The
scholars aren't necessarily saying that the Ryukyus belong to China,
said Taylor Fravel, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology who studies China's territorial claims. They are raising the
possibility that Japan's ownership could be disputed because the
islands' rulers in past centuries had tributary relations with
imperial China, he said.
"These are perhaps the most serious scholars to date to make this
insinuation," Fravel said. [1]
The
article emerged in the context of Okinawan alienation with rule from
Tokyo, disenchantment that has to do with central government
highhandedness as well as the continual irritation of the basing
issue. Okinawan dissatisfaction is growing as Japanese nationalism (and
impatience with Okinawan presumption) becomes the lingua franca of
Japanese politics, feeding a sense of disenfranchisement which carries
the faintest whiff of separatism. Chinese media follows the
unhappy-Okinawa story assiduously.
Xinhua's report on Japan's "national sovereignty day" celebrations - a
new exercise in right-wing nationalist hagiography - two weeks ago
killed two birds with one stone by a) pointing up Okinawan
dissatisfaction and b) linking it to the muddled sovereignty issue:
The
Japanese government on Sunday for first time commemorated the day
that the country ended the US occupation and recovered its sovereignty
in 1952 after its defeat in the World War II.
The government held a ceremony, in which the Japanese Imperial Couple,
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as well as about 390 lawmakers, prefectural
governors and government officials participated. ...
Okinawa, Japan's southernmost island prefecture that was returned by
the United States in 1972, consider April 28 as "day of insult" and
oppose the central government's sovereignty recovery ceremony.
The prefecture's governor Hirokazu Nakaima skipped the ceremony and
local assembly members also staged protests in the city of Ginowan in
the prefecture, according to reports. [2]
Nudging Okinawans
So,
the real purpose of the People's Daily think piece was to encourage
Okinawan particularism - or, at the very least, publicly expressed
dissatisfaction with Tokyo - and thereby further undermine Japan's
rather tenuous claims to the Senkakus.
For
bonus points, the article's authors proposed making representations to
the United States - which is demonstrably queasy over the whole
Senkaku sovereignty issue - to do the right thing, at least behind the
scenes, and address the contested issue of overall Rykyu sovereignty:
Although
under the current circumstances the United States can't be expected
to be upright in speech and action about the matter - it would be a
matter of "asking the tiger for its own skin" [exhorting somebody to do
something against their own interest] - nevertheless, China should
make efforts based on the principles of its position and try achieve a
better situation through its diplomacy with the United States.
The
Japanese government went predictably batshit over this attempt to
support a narrative of Okinawan separatism and US re-insertion into
the whole Ryukyu issue on China's behalf and reframed it as a Chinese
exercise in territorial aggrandizement that threatened the precious US
bases on Okinawa.
The
world media - which perhaps will one day be more careful about
reporting on Chinese-language stories filtered through the Japanese
press - obligingly followed on. The judge's trophy for gormlessness
(sorry, no link) goes to a certain Western journalist, who reported
the story as:
A
mouthpiece of China's Communist party has claimed that the Japanese
Island of Okinawa, home to several major US military bases, should be
ceded to Beijing.
The
consequences of a Japan working to reassert its national dignity and
control its economic and security destiny are still underestimated by
the punditocracy in United States, if not by the US government itself.
Writing in Forbes, Stephen Harner did acknowledge creeping anxieties
about Japan's assertive posture:
[Prime
Minister Shinzo] Abe, a romantic nationalist, is proving a
problematic, and potentially disastrous leader for Japan in its
relations with its neighbors (and increasingly, I suspect, with the
United States). Both in character and mentality he and his coterie
are yesterday's men, not the forward looking leaders Japan needs. [3]
However, Mr Harner chose to look beyond Prime Minister Abe's rather
off-putting retro-nationalist persona to conclude with an optimistic
vision of Japan's future:
I
support Abe's intended change in Japan's constitution because I see
it as a necessary step toward a Japanese foreign and defense policy and
capability independent of the United States, eventual abrogation of
the US-Japan mutual defense alliance, and pursuit by Japan of a
Swiss-like (non-nuclear) armed neutrality between the US and China,
the only position for Japan that is likely to be stable, sustainable
and in Japan's interest over time.
Regardless of who is in the prime minister's seat, I suspect that 21st
century Japan is not going to look like the Switzerland of the Pacific.
For
instance, I did not notice Switzerland sending the chief of staff of
its putatively defensive army 3,000 miles, or nearly 5,000 kilometers,
to Kolkata to meet with India's commander for the Eastern Theatre
(which handles the frontline duties confronting China in Arunachal
Pradesh), apparently to counter-program against the state visit to
India of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, as Japan did this week. [4]
And I
wouldn't put my bet on "stable" and "sustainable" either - or
"neutral" or "non-nuclear" for that matter.
Japan's politics is now driven by more than a sense of political,
economic, and strategic malaise inspired by two decades of slow growth,
political gridlock, and the well-founded anxiety that rising China is
eating Japan's bento box lunch as a disinterested US looks on.
The
ruling Liberal Democratic Party is working to transform Japan's sense
of demoralization into a narrative of national crisis that translates
into political dominance.
A
member of Prime Minister Abe's cabinet told the Wall Street Journal:
Mr
Yamamoto said the Abe cabinet viewed Japan as having its back against
the wall. "Everyone shares the same sense of crisis," he said. "If we
don't do something now, Japan won't ever come back." [5]
Hiahiko Okazaki, head of the avowedly hawkish Okazaki Institute think
tank, foresees a sea-change in Japanese attitudes that involves an
assisted transition to a Ride of the Valkyries style of nationalism.
It should be noted that his conservative vision also involves a
repudiation of US tutelage that dovetails with Okazaki's well-honed
sense of the Sino-Japanese rivalry, and puts the US State Department
on notice that "Japan reborn" is going to be[Image] something other than a tractable ally:
The
Abe Cabinet is the first conservative government in Japan in a long
time. I believe, roughly speaking, conservatism in Japan faces two major
tasks.
The first is eradication of the so-called postwar historical view.
This view was a product of the US policy in the earlier days of the
postwar Occupation. US Occupation authorities taught Japanese children
that all of Japan's past and traditions were bad in an attempt to
completely eradicate Japan's war potential, both materially and
spiritually.
The US revised this policy as soon as the Cold War began in order to
make Japan a reliable ally. But the education based on this policy was
taken over by pro-communist leftist elements in Japan, whose main
purpose was to neutralize Japan in the realm of intellectual and moral
capabilities. This led to the emergence of the leftist biased
historical view.
No
nation can survive when its history and traditions are denied.
Eradication of this leftist historical view has been a long-term issue
for the Japanese nation and it has to be continuously pursued in
classrooms and other educational arenas. [6]
Even
if nostalgic nationalists are in the minority in public opinion
polls, their acolytes are in power and can set the national agenda,
override majority doubts, and, most importantly, foreclose competing
options for their successors ... especially if they can invoke the
specter of a national crisis.
The constitution beckons
And
big doings are expected for the second half of the year - if the
Liberal Democratic Party trounces the fractured opposition as expected
to control a two-thirds majority in the upper house of Japan's
legislature and adds revision of Japan's constitution, including its
restrictions on military adventures outside Japan's borders, to the
national renaissance/standing up to China dialogue.
So
far, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has successfully kept the
international focus on revival of Japan's stagnant economy through
"Abenomics", a gigantic roll of the quantitative easing dice that has
not coincidentally strengthened Abe's political hand by delivering two
highly anticipated benefits to the LDP's well-heeled corporate base -
a skyrocketing Nikkei index and a plummeting yen.
However, his administration has simultaneously engaged in a flurry of
diplomatic, economic, and security engagement with China's current and
potential antagonists from India and Sri Lanka to Vietnam to the
Philippines, Taiwan, and Russia.
On
May 3, Asahi Shimbun - which has emerged as a reliable conduit for
anti-Abe anxiety inside Japan - reported on the recent visit of Deputy
Prime Minister Aso to Sri Lanka:
Deputy
Prime Minister Taro Aso's visit to Sri Lanka yielded promises of
stronger ties between the two countries, bringing Japan a step closer to
its goal of building a coalition against China. ...
Aso and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe are currently conducting a broad
range of diplomatic activities to counter China's growing influence.
... When Abe first served as prime minister in 2006, Aso, who was then
foreign minister, proposed making the area from Southeast Asia to
central and eastern Europe an "arc of freedom and prosperity."
The strategy was intended to contain China by helping Asian countries
move forward with democratization and the development of their
economies. [7]
Don't worry. Mr Aso said "Arc of Freedom and Prosperity". He didn't
say "Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere", and I do believe that
Japan's plans for regional pre-eminence include exploiting the United
States, not confronting it.
If
and when constitutional revision goes through and the doctrine of
"collective self-defense" permits military operations beyond Japan's
borders, Japan looks more and more like an destabilizing regional power
that relies on a narrative of existential threat, heightened
polarization with its enemies, and the expectation that the US has no
alternative but to back it up in its disputes with its neighbors even
when that works at cross purposes to US interests and objectives for
the region.
This
creates a dilemma for the United States and its master plan for
securing US pre-eminence in Asia. President Obama, for reasons not
entirely of his own making but inseparable from his inability to wheel
and deal with dictators, decided that G-2 - a US-PRC condominium that
would order East Asia to everyone's satisfaction - was not a viable
option.
Instead, the Obama foreign policy team decided that a concerted
display of forceful (but not hostile!) pressure by the United States
and its allies was needed to extract satisfactory Chinese behavior in
the short term and integration of the PRC into a US-led liberal-norm
diplomatic and economic architecture in the long term.
Call it the "pivot to Asia".
The
economic keystone of this coercive architecture is the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP), a "high standards trade pact" that pointedly excluded
China while not even trying to address the contradiction of welcoming
Vietnam - a nation whose rickety mixed-socialist economy mimics the
Chinese economy ... from 10 years back.
Unwanted turn on trade talks
With
the TPP, perhaps the Obama administration was too clever for its
good. I have a feeling - well, I hope - that the Obama administration
emitted a hollow groan of foreboding when Prime Minister Abe announced
during his US visit that Japan would join the TPP negotiations.
Abe's enthusiasm for the TPP process appears to be genuine - Japan had
to lobby all 10 current participants to obtain approval to join -
even though the near-term benefits to Japan appear relatively
marginal.
In
the back-of-the-envelope version (and not taking into account the
inevitable backroom deal-cutting, especially in the automotive
sector), by conservative calculations the TPP grows total Japanese GDP
about 0.5% (with about half of the growth in industrial production
offset by a spectacular cratering of agricultural production as
domestic rice, beef, and pork lose tariff protection and disappear
beneath an import avalanche). [8]
Economic factors aside, the TPP factor has already had a beneficial
knock-on effect to Japan's negotiating position in a raft of other trade
pacts, as Professor Aurelia George Mulgan of the University of South
Wales wrote:
Japan's
decision to participate in the TPP negotiations appears to have
spurred a whole series of other trade developments, including:
the
first round of trilateral China-Japan-South Korea FTA talks, beginning
less than two weeks after the TPP announcement on 15 March;
the start of serious Japan-EU talks on an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) in April; and
the
launching of negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP) in May, demonstrating how both emulation and
competition can act as triggers for FTA diffusion.
From a US
perspective, the RCEP and China-Japan-South Korea FTA are both
potentially rival blocs to the TPP, but Japan will be advantageously
positioned in all three. This has not escaped Chinese commentators who
note how Japan has welcomed the opportunity to maximise their profits
by establishing a footing in the TPP while not closing the door to
cooperation with China through means such as the China-Japan-South Korea
FTA. [9]
Trade blocs, in addition to their economic significance, are also
important geopolitical gambits in the Japanese struggle to deal with
China. Per Mulgan:
Abe
... recently told the Japanese Diet, "Japan's TPP participation will
result in Japan and the United States virtually leading the TPP ...
there are advantages to Japan and the United States forming a team to
make rules for the free trade area."
Which is why despairing groans should rise from the bosom of the Obama
administration. As noted above, unanimous agreement is stipulated for
a new nation to join the TPP negotiations. Behind closed doors,
apparently lesser powers such as Brunei allow the US to speak on their
behalf on membership issues.
But I
doubt Japan's plans for its future security and prosperity involve
surrendering to the United States the precious right to blackball
China.
If
Japan is able to join the TPP club on its own terms, it will probably
possess a de facto veto over any PRC application to join the talks. In
other words, if current political trends continue, China may never
join the TPP. TPP policy toward China - the key raison d'etre for the
TPP - will become hostage to Japan's priorities and strategy.
For
the United States, that raises the possibility that the pivot to Asia
will not create a region-wide open market system with Chinese buy-in
that will give full play to US competitive advantage in technology,
patent-protected products, and sophisticated services, thereby
enriching the US corporations that are the TPP's most enthusiastic
promoters and, in fact, are basically writing the treaty's texts and
talking points and supporting the initiative through campaign
contributions and public relations expenditures.
Instead, maybe the Asian economy will plod ahead with only two
cylinders firing: a continental Eurasian bloc of state capitalist
economies that look to China as their primary demand engine, and a
maritime bloc of Asian democracies banded together by their shared
China-related security anxieties (which Japan will happily foment) but
hobbled by the fact that the two biggest participants, Japan and the
United States, both want to export their way out of their economic
slumps.
Hijack, Middle East style
If
Japan holds the whip hand for US policy in Asia, it will be an
unwelcome recapitulation of the fiasco in the Middle East that the
Obama administration is trying to leave behind.
In
the Middle East, the United States has largely lost control of the
security agenda thanks to the Arab Spring, but also thanks to the
desire of key US allies to seize the initiative and shape policy
through their unilateral actions. Israel and Saudi Arabia advance a
narrative of existential crisis centered on Iran and its nuclear
program and conduct independent security policies that exacerbate
regional polarization and force the US to abandon rapprochement with
Iran and back the narrower priorities of its allies instead.
Following the precedent of America's vexatious allies in the Middle
East, Japan is also advancing a narrative of national crisis,
polarizing the region into pro- and anti-China blocs, and exploiting
the security alliance to invoke US support that would otherwise be
given grudgingly or not at all.
I
have the feeling that President Obama hoped and expected that by
pivoting to Asia - a region of peace, prosperity, and rapid growth
generally sympathetic to a dominant US security role - the US would
find a way of profitably leveraging its military and economic
advantages into market and diplomatic opportunities throughout Asia.
Unfortunately, by piggybacking on the pivot - basically "soft China
containment that dares not speak its name" - Japan is working to
wrong-foot the US and establish itself as the key security and economic
intermediary in an Asia bifurcated into China and anti-China blocs.
The
Obama administration is showing various signs of unwillingness to
proceed down this dangerous, expensive, and well-trodden path. Tom
Donilon, the National Security Adviser openly frets about the
difficulties of managing the Chinese relationship, difficulties that
are certainly exacerbated if they include Japan openly goading the PRC
to advance its own destabilizing regional agenda in the expectation
of US backing.
Kurt
Campbell, the proud pappy of the pivot, now cautiously redefines it
as "a rebalancing", as if the game-changing injection of the US into
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations' island disputes with China
never happened, and the most important goal of the US Asian effort
was no more than the sweet, sweet victory of slaking the thirst of
freedom-loving (and, occasionally, Muslim-massacring) Burmese with
legal, un-smuggled Coca Cola.
In
recent weeks there have been valiant attempts to assert that the pivot
as conceived by the United States was "not about China", in the words
of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Martin Dempsey. [10]
And,
in a way that the Obama administration never anticipated, this is
true. The pivot to Asia isn't about China anymore. It's about Japan.
"The Tiger and the Fox"
2 Comments -
A large chunk of this has been shamelessly plagiarized from Asia Times, without any credit or notation - http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/JAP-01-100513.html
a blot on an otherwise interesting synopsis of what is going on in NE Asia
the entire Japan/Korea Philippines/Taiwan narrative doesn't really help the "China is an aggressive a Bully" strapline, but these simmering conflicts are all ultimately attributable to US meddling over the past century, and if the Asians had any common sense, they'd surely identify THAT as the underlying problem
9:01 PM
I believe that the author of this blog is indeed Mr. Lee, the author of Asia Time's op-ed.
9:46 PM