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US and Japan exploit missile crisis to heighten
tensions in North East Asia
By John Chan
11 July 2006
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With the strong backing of the Bush administration, a Japanese-drafted
UN resolution on North Koreas missile tests last week is
further inflaming tensions in North East Asia.
For the first time since the end of World War II, Japan is
playing a leading role in a major international crisis. Its draft
resolution, submitted to Security Council last Friday, condemns
the missile tests as a threat to international peace, demands
an immediate end to missile launches and calls for economic sanctions
against Pyongyang.
The draft urges member states to prevent the transfer
of financial resources, items, materials, goods and technology
to end users that could contribute to DPRKs [North Korea]
missile and other WMD programs. By invoking Chapter 7 of
the UN Charter, the resolution would make sanctions binding and
even pave the way for military action. The US has been demanding
a similar UN resolution condemning Irans nuclear program.
Of the 15 UN Security Council members, 13, including France
and Britain, have indicated their willingness to vote in favour.
However, China and Russia, which both have a veto, have publicly
opposed a binding Chapter 7 resolution and the imposition of sanctions
on North Korea. At Chinas request, a vote has been delayed
in order to allow a Chinese envoy to go to North Korea to press
Pyongyang for renewed multilateral negotiations. China and Russia
have proposed a non-binding UN Security Council presidential statement
on the missile tests.
For all the furore over its missile tests, North Korea has
not actually breached any international law. In fact, on Sunday,
India tested a new Agni-3 long-range ballistic missile capable
of carrying a nuclear warhead and reaching deep into Pakistan
or China. Of course, the Bush administration did not denounce
New Delhi with which it is seeking a strategic partnership
as a counterweight against Chinaa move that is far more
of a threat to world peace than North Koreas
very limited military capacity.
From the outset, the Bush administration has whipped up fears
about North Koreas missile or nuclear programs, as a means
of isolating the Pyongyang regime, and strategically undermining
rival powers in the region, particularly China. As Graham Allison,
a former US assistant defence secretary under the Clinton administration
told the Financial Times on July 6: Bushs objective
is Chinas nightmare. Bush wants regime change [in North
Korea]. The worst outcome for China is the collapse of a regime
that is absorbed by South Korea, creating a US ally on its border.
On assuming office in 2001, the Bush administration immediately
ended Clintons moves to open relations with Pyongyang. In
2002, Bush branded North Korea as part of an axis of evil. In
2003, Washington supported six party talks, which
also included China, Japan, Russia and South Korea, not to negotiate
with North Korea, but to pressure the other partners
to take tough action against Pyongyang. No talks have taken place
since last September because of Washingtons provocative
efforts to choke off North Koreas limited international
financial activities. Pyongyang has refused to return to the six-party
talks until the new sanctions are lifted.
Not surprisingly Japans draft has caught Beijing between
a rock and a hard place. The Chinese UN ambassador, Wang Guangya,
has declared: If this resolution is put to a vote, definitely
there will be no unity in the Security Council. China cannot
simply abandon North Korea, which is a convenient buffer on its
northern border. At the same time, Pyongyangs bellicose
words and reckless actionsa rather desperate attempt to
gain some political leverageplay directly into the hands
of the most right-wing elements in Tokyo and Washington that are
pushing for tough sanctions and military action.
Japan, however, has refused to compromise on the resolution.
Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso told national broadcaster NHK
on Sunday: It would be a mistake to alter the stance for
the sake of one country with veto power [China], even though many
countries agree. Commenting on the prospect of China being
isolated in the Security Council, Aso told TV Asahi that Beijing
should not be backed into a corner. However, that is exactly what
Tokyo is doing. Aso also urged Russia to support the resolution,
saying it should avoid being isolated at the upcoming G8 summit
in St Petersburg.
Within Japan, the missile crisis has given further
political ammunition to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and his
government, which, with the backing of the Bush administration,
has been taking a more aggressive stance in North East Asia. During
his term of office, Koizumi and his allies have been pushing to
revise the Japanese constitution and its so-called pacifist clause,
have revived symbols of Japanese militarism of the 1930s, and
have been aggressively staking out Japans claims in neighbouring
waters against South Korea and China.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe, who is a leading contender
to replace Koizumi in September, immediately seized on the missile
tests to argue that Japan had to be able to take pre-emptive strikes
against missile launch pads in North Korea. If we accept
that there is no other option to prevent a missile attack,
he said yesterday, there is an argument that attacking the
missile bases would be within the legal right to self-defence.
Abes comments came a day after the head of Japans
defence agency, Fukushiro Nukaga, declared that Japan should consider
pre-emptive strikes if an enemy country definitely has a
way of attacking Japan and has its finger on the trigger.
Japans bellicose response has provoked an angry reaction
in South Korea, which, like China, is keen to defuse the crisis.
There is no reason to fuss over this from the break of dawn
like Japan, but every reason to do the opposite, a statement
from South Korean President Roh Moo-hyuns office declared.
The South Korean government is attempting to balanceopposing
tough economic and military action against North Korea, while
keeping onside with Washington. Seoul has temporarily cut aid
to Pyongyang.
The role of the Bush administration
By pushing Japan to take the leading role, the Bush administration
is actively encouraging the revival of militarism in Japan and
heightening pressure on China. Its rhetoric about a diplomatic
solution is entirely cynical. Since last September, the
US has deliberately tightened the noose around the stricken North
Korean economy by pressuring international banks and financial
institutions to end relations with North Korea. While the US campaign
is nominally to end North Koreas illicit activities,
the objective is to economically strangle the country.
An article published on June 6 on YaleGlobal Online
warned that the US financial quarantine has exacerbated
North Koreas rogue behavior by hurting its legitimate
economy. Nigel Cowie, general manager of the Daedong Credit
Bank, the only foreign bank in Pyongyang, said: The result
of these actions against banks doing business with DPRK [is] that
criminal activities go underground and [are] harder to trace,
and legitimate business either give up, or end up appearing suspicious
by being forced to use clandestine methods.
The article pointed out that the Stalinist regime in Pyongyang
had been seeking to embrace global capital since 1998 and had
already taken a series of pro-market measures. These included
opening up rural markets, deregulating prices and wages and setting
up free trade zones. North Korean officials had been sent overseas
to study market economics, including at the New York Stock Exchange,
and a Centre for the Study of the Capitalist System had been established
in North Korea.
However, the Bush administrations constant campaign of
provoking tensions has sabotaged efforts by South Korea, China
and European countries to open up the North Korean economy. Its
Kaesong industrial zone, for instance, was projected to employ
one million workers by 2012. Ongoing US threats have kept the
zone to no more than a few thousands workers and a handful of
South Korean factories. Earlier this year, Washington demanded
that South Korea exclude products made in Kaesong from the terms
of a free trade agreement being negotiated between the two countries.
The YaleGlobal article commented: It is a remarkable
irony that an administration so wedded, at least rhetorically,
to market economics and globalisation has been so hostile to any
steps North Korea takes in that direction. From the hardliner
point of view, though, engaging North Korea sustains the regime.
Any successful economic activity, illegitimate or legitimate,
further delays the regime collapse that hardliners have anticipated
for nearly two decades.
The Bush administrations tactics are obviousto
tighten the economic screws on North Korea to precipitate a political
collapse, while, at the same time, exploiting the North Korean
threat to secure a closer military alliance with a
stronger Japan, directed against China. Washington has wholeheartedly
backed the Japanese resolution in the UN Security Council because
it will only strengthen this strategy. US Assistant Secretary
of State Christopher Hill has been dispatched to North East Asia
for discussions with Japan, South Korea and China. The US has
also called for a resumption of the six-party talks, but it has
ruled out any concessions to North Korea thus dooming any negotiations
in advance.
At the same time, the Bush administration has not ruled out
the military option. It has exploited the missile crisis
as a pretext for placing its controversial anti-ballistic missile
system into operational mode for the first time. Prior
to the North Korean missile tests, the Pentagon also hinted that
it may try to shoot down North Koreas long-range missile,
which, in the event, failed less than a minute after launch. Leading
Democrats have not only backed the Bush administration, but proposed
even more reckless military actions.
In a comment in the Washington Post on June 22, Clintons
former defence secretary William Perry and assistant defence secretary
Ashton Carter called for a preemptive US military
strike on North Koreas missile launch pad, even though such
action carried the risk of an all-out war on the Korean
Peninsula. Perry and Carter reiterated their position in an article
in Time magazine on July 8.
Critics of our article, including members of Bush administration,
say that a pre-emptive strike is too risky. But if the US is ever
going to defend a line in the sand with North Korea, that is the
least provocative way to do it, and next time it will only be
riskier, they declared, concluding: We dont
know whether North Koreas ambitions can be blunted by anything
short of the use of force unless and until the US takes the danger
seriously and gets in the game.
The last consideration in this tactical debate in US ruling
circles is the catastrophic consequences of an all out war
for hundreds of millions of people in North East Asia.
See Also:
US and Japan seize on missile tests to
tighten noose around North Korea
[6 July 2006]
North Korean "missile
crisis"--another example of unbridled US militarism
[29 June 2006]
Behind China-Japan
tensions
Washington fuels Japanese militarism--Part Two
[26 April 2005]
Behind China-Japan
tensions
Washington fuels Japanese militarism--Part One
[25 April 2005]
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