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Bush visit to Japan cements closer ties against China
By James Conachy
1 March 2002
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The three-day visit to Tokyo by George Bush last week was used
to consolidate Japans support for a policy of containing
China and to secure its diplomatic and military participation
in the next stages of the US administrations war on
terrorism. The consequences will be profoundly destabilising
and heighten tensions in East Asia.
Closer US ties with Japan were foreshadowed before the 2000
US election, in a report co-authored by Joseph Nye and Richard
Armitage, now Bushs Deputy Secretary of State and main Asian
policy advisor. Underpinning the document was an assessment that
the greatest threat to American interests in Asia was Chinas
growing ability to project economic, political and military power
in the region. Its conclusion was that an active political and
military role by Japan alongside the US would be essential in
potential conflicts on the Korean peninsula, over Taiwan, in South
East Asia or on the Indian subcontinent. Based on the Nye-Armitage
report, Bush declared China a strategic competitor
and attacked Clinton during the election campaign for downplaying
security relations with Tokyo.
In Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, the Bush administration
has a Japanese leader who has been prepared, against considerable
domestic opposition, to closely align with the US and push for
the remilitarisation of Japan. After September 11, Koizumi rushed
through anti-terrorism legislation to enable Japanese participation
in the war on Afghanistan. Japanese warships are still operating
alongside US forces in the Indian Ocean, and 700 troops are now
being sent to join the ongoing UN operation in East Timor.
In late January, Koizumi sacked his popular foreign minister
Makiko Tanaka, the main opponent in his cabinet of a stronger
relationship with the US. From the time the cabinet was formed
last April, Tanaka clashed publicly and privately with Koizumi
over the policies of the Bush administration, Koizumis endorsement
of nationalist school history textbooks and his controversial
visit to the Yasukuni war shrine. Her removal from the government
has strengthened the position of Koizumis Fukuda faction
of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)its most right-wing
and traditionally anti-China grouping.
The broad agreement that exists between the two administrations
was on display during Bushs stay in Tokyo. At times, the
leaders praise for one another reached absurd proportions.
The Los Angeles Times called it a mutual lovefest,
while the New York Times was left with the impression
of one long bearhug.
In sharp contrast to many European leaders, Koizumi utilised
the opportunity to endorse Bushs State of the Union speech
and signal that Japan is prepared to take part in the next round
of US military aggression.
On February 18 he declared: The expression axis
of evil expresses the firm resolve of President Bush and
the United States against terrorism. President Bush has been very
calm and cautious vis-à-vis Iraq, Iran and North Korea.
He will not exclude any possibilities in order to prevent the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and to prevent terrorism.
I understand its going to be drawn out and a tough fight.
And Japan, together with the United States and the international
community, will, on its own initiative, cooperate very actively.
Bush used an address to the Japanese Diet or parliament the
following day to declare Japan had an indispensable role
in the war on terrorism, a role that was global
and begins in Asia. In a pointed affront to both China and
Europe, Bush declared the 21st century would be a Pacific
century upheld by the military and economic power of the
US-Japan security alliance.
Bush asserted the US was more committed than ever to
a forward presence in the region, naming Australia, the
Philippines and Thailand, alongside South Korea and Japan, as
Americas military allies in Asia. New threats were made
against North Korea over its alleged possession of weapons
of mass destruction. China was issued a warning that the
US would remember our commitments to the people on Taiwan.
Bush stressed that, to protect the people of this region,
and our friends and allies in every region, the US would
continue with the National Missile Defense (NMD) project.
Taken as a whole the speech indicates a more aggressive US
stance towards China. It cuts across Beijings ambition to
reunify the island of Taiwan, as well as its hopes of detente
on the Korean peninsula and its territorial claims in the South
China Sea. China is increasingly encircled by American bases and
military allies. Its small arsenal of nuclear weapons will be
undermined by the NMD and it confronts a resurgence of Japanese
militarism, the very force that invaded China in the 1930s at
the cost of 20 million Chinese lives.
That the White House views Japan as a key strategic partner
was reflected not only in Bushs promotion of Koizumi but
also his willingness to downplay economic and trade issues.
Bushs enthusiasm for the Japanese leader is not shared
in some US corporate circles. While Koizumi was hailed when he
rose to power, he has failed to deliver on his promises to push
through a long-demanded economic deregulation of the Japanese
economy. Instead, as the country has slumped toward its third
recession in a decade, Koizumi has lurched back toward the traditional
protectionist policies of the conservative factions of the LDP.
His government has tacitly encouraged the devaluation of the yen,
improving the position of Japanese exporters at the expense of
American and Asian competitors. The US National Association of
Manufacturers has complained that the falling yen amounts
to a global tariff of about 30 percent.
Within Japan, those sections of the media and business that
backed him as a reformer are now turning against him.
His rift with Tanaka, a populist advocate of deregulation and
breaking up the LDP factions, has sent his popularity plummeting.
Bush, however, threw the weight of his administration behind
the Japanese leader. He told the press: I am not here to
give advice, I am here to lend support. Koizumi, Bush informed
the Japanese parliament, was restoring prosperity and economic
growth through fundamental reform and the full embrace of competition.
Apart from a fleeting reference to devaluation, which
was later put down to a gaffe, he made no public mention of the
falling yen, disregarding the concerns of such US conglomerates
as the Big Three auto companies.
An article in the Australian Financial Review commented:
The US has decided to absorb some of Japans recessionary
painabout $US35 billion worthand let Tokyo export
some more of it to the other economies of East Asia.... Why is
the Bush administration doing all this to help Japan? Partly because
it wants to help an ally; partly because it believes it is important
for international stability to help Japan arrest its deepening
deflation; partly because it hopes this will encourage Tokyo to
pursue restructuring. But the trump, as explained by the senior
fellow at the Institute for International Economics in Washington,
Adam Posen, is this: The Bush administrations national
security team wants Japan with us against China, and they have
won the argument... In sum, the Bush administration wants
a strong Japan to help it manage a rising China.
Regional antagonisms
A lower yen will add to the regional antagonisms as it will
put pressure not only on US manufacturers but on Asian export
economies, especially South Korea, Taiwan and China. Beijing clashed
sharply with Tokyo over trade matters last year and may retaliate
against the falling yen with a devaluation of its own currency,
the yuan. In the military sphere, China is likely to respond to
closer US-Japan ties with increased defence spending and efforts
to develop its own alliances.
In Japan, a discussion has opened up in ruling circles about
exploiting Bushs axis of evil speech to dispense
with the constitutional constraints on Japans armed forces.
The conservative Yomiuri Shimbun editorialised on February
19 on the necessity for a permanent [anti-terrorism] law,
anticipating that the US finally will decide to use force against
Iraq. Such a law would effectively bypass the pacifist clause
of the Japanese constitution as any military action could be presented
as self-defence against terrorism.
There are indications that Koizumi is collaborating with the
Bush administration to facilitate a second Persian Gulf War and
thereby his own remilitarisation agenda. An unnamed US official
told the Washington Post that Japan had agreed to discuss
our concerns with the Iranian government and see if the people
who are reasonable can get the other folks under control.
One US concern is that Iran makes no attempt to intervene during
or after any American attack on Iraq.
The Japanese government is well placed to apply pressure on
Iran. Japan lifted sanctions on the country in 1997 and any re-imposition
will have a severe impact on its economy. A consortium headed
by the state-owned Japan National Oil Corporation has signed contracts
to develop a major oilfield in exchange for long-term supply contracts.
Other Japanese transnationals, such as Mitsubishi, are pursuing
investments in Iranian gas, petrochemical and transport projects.
The Koizumi government is also adjusting its policy towards
North Korea to square with the hostile stance taken by the US.
An alleged North Korean threat was one of Koizumis central
arguments for legislation this month further expanding the external
and internal powers of the Japanese military.
While Koizumi has stated that his administration would like
to normalise relations with North Korea, the opposite has been
the case. In early November, Japan announced it was not sending
promised food assistance to North Korea. Later that month, police
raided the General Association of Korean Residents, the de-facto
North Korean embassy in Japan, over allegations of a financial
scandal. On December 20, the Japanese government called off scheduled
talks with Pyongyang because it had ended a search for Japanese
citizens who, Tokyo alleges, were kidnapped by North Korean spies
in the 1970s. Two days later, on December 22, the Japanese Coast
Guard pursued and sunk an unidentified ship in Chinese-claimed
waters on the grounds it was a North Korean spy boat.
An unpredictable state of affairs now exists on the Korean
peninsula. China had enthusiastically supported the sunshine
policy of South Korean president Kim Dae-jung and urged
the Pyongyang regime to enter into a detente. By isolating Pyongyang,
Bush has created political instability in South Korea and greatly
increased the pressure on North Korea, which is already facing
a social and economic disaster. A political collapse in the North,
which borders Chinas northern provinces, is viewed in Beijing
as a fundamental threat to its security.
There is, however, far from universal support in Tokyo for
the reckless policies emanating from Washington. Sections of the
ruling elite are openly questioning whether Japan is best served
by supporting the US administration and its war on terrorism.
Warning that the Bush administration is likely to find itself
increasingly friendless if it attacks Iraq, the February
20 editorial of the Asahi Shimbun asked: Will Japan
alone always be with the US under such circumstances?
The day after Bush left Japan, Makiko Tanaka broke her silence
and publicly criticised Koizumi. Specifically condemning him for
sabotaging her work as foreign minister, she told a parliamentary
inquiry into the circumstances of her dismissal: I feel
the prime minister has chosen to join the anti-reform forces.
The people around him are bad. Her break with Koizumi provides
a possible focus for those in Japanese ruling circles who want
to see a government in Tokyo that will aggressively and independently
pursue Japanese interests within the region and internationally.
See Also:
Bush's "evil axis"
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
Japan militarisation accelerates
after sinking of alleged North Korean spy ship
[9 January 2002]
Japanese parliament
votes for military role in Afghan war
[31 October 2001]
Koizumi's visit to
the Yasukuni shrine legitimises Japanese militarism
[17 August 2001]
Japanese history textbook
provokes sharp controversy
[7 June 2001]
Koizumi's agenda for
Japan: economic austerity and rightwing nationalism
[22 May 2001]
In the aftermath
of the US election:
Discussion intensifies in Japan over remilitarisation
[8 January 2001]
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