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Why 2012 Will Shake Up Asia and the World
Can Washington Move from Pacific Power to Pacific Partner?
The United States has long styled itself a Pacific power. It established the model of counterinsurgency in the Philippines in 1899 and defeated the Japanese in World War II. It faced down the Chinese and the North Koreans to keep the Korean peninsula divided in 1950, and it armed the Taiwanese to the teeth. Today, America maintains the most powerful military in the Pacific region, supported by a constellation of military bases, bilateral alliances, and about 100,000 service personnel.
It has, however, reached the high-water mark of its Pacific presence and influence. The geopolitical map is about to be redrawn. Northeast Asia, the area of the world with the greatest concentration of economic and military power, is on the verge of a regional transformation. And the United States, still preoccupied with the Middle East and hobbled by a stalled and stagnating economy, will be the odd man out.
Elections will be part of the change. Next year, South Koreans, Russians, and Taiwanese will all go to the polls. In 2012, the Chinese Communist Party will also ratify its choice of a new leader to take over from President Hu Jintao. He will be the man expected to preside over the country’s rise from the number two spot to the pinnacle of the global economy.
But here’s the real surprise in store for Washington. The catalyst of change may turn out to be the country in the region that has so far changed the least: North Korea. In 2012, the North Korean government has trumpeted to its people a promise to create kangsong taeguk, or an economically prosperous and militarily strong country. Pyongyang now has to deliver somehow on that promise -- at a time of food shortages, overall economic stagnation, and political uncertainty. This dream of 2012 is propelling the regime in Pyongyang to shift into diplomatic high gear, and that, in turn, is already creating enormous opportunities for key Pacific powers.
Washington, which has focused for years on North Korea's small but developing nuclear arsenal, has barely been paying attention to the larger developments in Asia. Nor will Asia's looming transformation be a hot topic in our own presidential election next year. We’ll be arguing about jobs, health care, and whether the president is a socialist or his Republican challenger a nutcase. Aside from some ritual China-bashing, Asia will merit little mention.
President Obama, anxious about giving ammunition to his opponent, will be loath to fiddle with Asia policy, which is already on autopilot. So while others scramble to remake East Asia, the United States will be suffering from its own peculiar form of continental drift.
Pyongyang Turns on the Charm
On April 15, 1912, in an obscure spot in the Japanese empire, a baby was born to a Christian family proud of its Korean heritage. The 100th anniversary of the birth of Kim Il Sung, North Korea's founder and dynastic leader, is coming up next year. Ordinarily, such an event would be of little importance to anyone other than 24 million North Koreans and a scattering of Koreans elsewhere. But this centennial also marks the date by which the North Korean regime has promised to finally turn things around.
Despite its pretensions to self-reliance, Pyongyang has amply proven that it can only get by with a lot of help from its friends. Until recently, however, North Korea was not exactly playing well with others.
It responded in a particularly hardline fashion, for instance, to the more hawkish policies adopted by new South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, when he took office in February 2008. The shooting of a South Korean tourist at the Mount Kumgang resort that July, the sinking of the South Korean naval ship the Cheonan in March 2010 (Pyongyang still claims it was not the culprit), and the shelling of South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island later that year all accelerated a tailspin in north-south relations. During this period, the North tested a second nuclear device, prompting even its closest ally, China, to react in disgust and support a U.N. declaration of condemnation. Pyongyang also managed to further alienate Washington by revealing in 2010 that it was indeed pursuing a program to produce highly enriched, weapons-grade uranium, something it had long denied.
These actions had painful economic consequences. South Korea cancelled almost all forms of cooperation. The North’s second nuclear test scotched any incipient economic rapprochement with the United States. (The Bush administration had removed North Korea from its terrorism list, and there had been hints that other longstanding sanctions might sooner or later be dropped as part of a warming in relations.)
Only the North’s relationship with China was unaffected, largely because Beijing is gobbling up significant quantities of valuable minerals and securing access to ports in exchange for just enough food and energy to keep the country on life support and the regime afloat. Between 2006 and 2009, an already anemic North Korean economy contracted, and chronic food shortages again became acute.
To these economic travails must be added political ones. The country’s leadership is long past retirement, with 70-year-old leader Kim Jong Il younger than most of the rest of the ruling elite. He has designated his youngest son, Kim Jeong Eun, as his successor, but the only thing that this mystery boy seems to have going for him is his resemblance to his grandfather, Kim Il Sung.
Still, North Korea seems no closer to full-scale collapse today than during previous crises -- like the devastating famine of the mid-1990s. A thoroughly repressive state and zero civil society seem to insure that no color revolution or “Pyongyang Spring” is in the offing. Waiting for the North Korean regime to go gently into the night is like waiting for Godot.
But that doesn’t mean change isn’t in the air. To jumpstart its bedraggled economy and provide a political boost for the next leader in the year of kangsong taeguk, North Korea is suddenly in a let's-make-a-deal mode.
Kim Jong Il’s recent visit to Siberia to meet Russian President Dmitri Medvedev, for instance, raised a few knowledgeable eyebrows. Conferring at a Russian military base near Lake Baikal, for the first time in a long while the North Korean leader even raised the possibility of a moratorium on nuclear weapons production and testing. More substantially, he concluded a preliminary agreement on a natural gas pipeline that could in itself begin to transform the politics of the region. It would transfer gas from the energy-rich Russian Far East through North Korea to economically booming but energy-hungry South Korea. The deal could net Pyongyang as much as $100 million a year.
The North’s new charm offensive wouldn’t have a hope in hell of succeeding if a similar change of heart weren’t also underway in the South.
The Bulldozer's Miscalculation
On taking office, the conservative South Korean president Lee Myung Bak, known as "the Bulldozer" when he headed up Hyundai’s engineering division, promised to put Korean relations on a new footing. Ten years of “engagement policy” with the North had, according to Lee, produced an asymmetrical relationship. The South, he insisted, was providing all the cash, and the North was doing very little in exchange. Lee promised a relationship based only on quid pro quos.
What he got instead was tit for tat: harsher rhetoric and military action. Ultimately, although the North made no friends below the 38th parallel that way, the new era of hostility didn’t help the Lee administration either. South Koreans generally watched in horror as a relatively peaceful relationship veered dangerously close to military conflict.
Lee's ruling party suffered a loss in last April's by-elections, and in August, he replaced his hardline “unification” minister with a more conciliatory fellow. Still insisting on an apology for the Cheonan sinking and the Yeonpyeong shelling, the ruling party is nevertheless looking for ways to restore commercial ties and again provide humanitarian assistance to the North. Since the summer, representatives from North and South have met twice to discuss Pyongyang’s nuclear program. Although the two sides haven’t made substantial progress, the stage is set for the resumption of the Six Party Talks between the two Koreas, Russia, Japan, China, and the United States that broke off in 2007.
Even if the opposition party doesn't sweep the conservatives out of power in the 2012 elections, South Korea will likely abandon Lee's tough-guy approach. In September, his likely successor as the ruling party candidate in 2012, Park Geun-Hye, openly criticized Lee’s approach in an article in Foreign Affairs that called instead for "trustpolitik."
One project Park singled out for mention is an inter-Korean railroad line that would "perhaps transform the Korean Peninsula into a conduit for regional trade." That's an understatement. Restoring the line and hooking it up to Russia’s Trans-Siberian Railroad would connect the Korean peninsula to Europe, reduce the shipment time of goods from one end of Eurasia to the other by about two weeks, and save South Korea up to $34 to $50 per ton in shipping costs. Meanwhile, the natural gas pipeline, which South Korea approved at the end of September, could reduce its gas costs by as much as 30%. For the world's second largest natural gas importer, this would be a major savings.
Serious economic steps toward Korean reunification are not just a dream, in other words, but good business, too. Even in the worst moments of the recent period of disengagement, it’s notable that the two countries managed to preserve the Kaesong industrial complex located just north of the Demilitarized Zone. Run by South Korean managers and employing more than 45,000 North Koreans, the business zone is a boon to both sides. It helps South Korean enterprises facing competition from China, even as it provides hard currency and well-paying jobs to the North. The railroad and the pipeline would offer similar mutual benefits.
According to conventional wisdom, North Korea has a single bargaining chip, its small nuclear arsenal, which it will never give up. But a real estate agent would look at the situation differently. What North Korea really has is "location, location, location," and it finally seems ready to cash in on its critical position at the heart of the world's most vital economic region.
The train line would bind the world's two biggest economic regions into a huge Eurasian market. And the pipeline, coupled with green energy projects in China, South Korea, and Japan, might begin to wean East Asia from its dependency on Middle Eastern oil and thus on the U.S. military to secure access and protect shipping routes.
Thought of another way, these projects and others like them lurking in the Eurasian future are significant not just for what they connect, but what they leave out: the United States.
Out in the Cold
The Bush administration anticipated Lee Myung Bak’s approach to North Korea by chucking the carrot and waving the stick. By 2006, however, Washington had made a U-turn and was beginning to engage Pyongyang seriously. The Obama administration took another tack, eventually adopting a policy of "strategic patience," a euphemism for ignoring North Korea and hoping it wouldn’t throw a tantrum.
It hasn't worked. North Korea has plunged full speed ahead with its nuclear program. The U.S./NATO air campaign against Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, who had given up his nuclear program to secure better relations with the West, only reinforced Pyongyang's belief that nukes are the ultimate guarantor of its security. The Obama administration continues to insist that the regime show its seriousness about denuclearization as a precondition for resuming talks. Even though Washington recently sent a small amount of flood relief, it refuses to offer any serious food assistance. Indeed, in June, the House of Representatives passed an amendment to the agriculture bill that prohibited all food aid to the country, regardless of need.
Though the administration will likely send envoy Stephen Bosworth to North Korea later this year, no one expects major changes in policy or relations to result. With a presidential election year already looming, the Obama administration isn’t likely to spend political capital on North Korea -- not when Republicans would undoubtedly label any new moves as "appeasement" of a “terrorist state.”
Obama came into office with a desire to shift U.S. policy away from its Middle Eastern focus and reassert America's importance as a Pacific power, particularly in light of China's growing regional influence. But the president has invested more in drones than in diplomacy, sustaining the war on terror at the expense of the sort of bolder engagement of adversaries that Obama hinted at as a candidate. In the meantime, the administration is prepared to just wait it out until the next elections are history -- and by then, it might already be too late to catch up with regional developments.
After all, Washington has watched China become the top trading partner of nearly every Asian country. Similarly, the economic links between China and Taiwan have deepened considerably, a reality to which even that island’s opposition party must bow. The Obama administration's recent decision not to upset Beijing too much by selling advanced F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan, opting instead for a mere upgrade of the F-16s it bought in the 1990s, is a clear sign of relative U.S. decline in the region, suggests big-picture analyst Robert Kaplan.
Then there's the sheer cost of the U.S. military presence in the Pacific, which looks like a juicy target to budget cutters in Washington. Key members of Congress like Senators John McCain and Carl Levin have already signaled their anxiety about the high price tag of a planned “strategic realignment” in Asia that involves, among other things, an expansion of the U.S. military base in Guam and an upgrading of facilities in Okinawa. In response to a question about potential military cuts, new Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter has confirmed that reducing U.S. troops and bases overseas is "on the table."
The future of East Asia is hardly a given, nor is an economic boom and regional integration the only possible scenario. Virtually every country in the region has hiked its military spending. Tension points abound, particularly in potentially energy-rich waters that various countries claim as their own. China's staggering economic growth is not likely to be sustainable in the long term. And North Korea could ultimately decide to make do as an economically destitute but adequately strong military power.
Still, the trend lines for 2012 and after point to greater engagement on the Korean peninsula, across the Taiwan Strait, and between Asia and Europe. Right now, the United States, for all of its military clout, is not really part of this emerging picture. Isn’t it time for America to gracefully acknowledge that its years as the Pacific superpower are over and think creatively about how to be a pacific partner instead?
Comments
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10 Comments so far
Show AllI know pundits like to analyse foreign policy to the nth degree, it's their bread and butter. But if you look at countries as if they're children, their actions usually make alot of sense.
Given that, why would China want to "partner" with a dumbed down, has been who's addicted to itself? I think it's pretty ominous that China is building UP it's military.
The operative fallacy is that only the super-rich,/super-powerful know enough to deal with other super-powers. Swiss direct democracy with one of the highest per capita incomes in the world, negates that assumption: ni4d.us/fossedal_2002
"North Korea has plunged full speed ahead with its nuclear program. The US/NATO air campaign against Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, who had given up his nuclear program to secure better relations with the West, only reinforced Pyongyang's belief that nukes are the guarantor of its security." -John Feffer
Ah yes, George W. Bush's assinine Axis of Evil speech - the neocon militarist hawks' foreign policy gift that keeps on giving.
It had not occurred to me that the North Koreans, who suddenly found themselves batting third on Uncle Sam's regime change hit list lineup card behind Saddam's Sunni Iraq and Shiite Iran in 2002, would see Obama's 2011 military campaign in Libya in this light.
Bill From Saginaw
Obama's military campaign in Libya?
Where have I been? __ I was totally unaware that we were fighting a war in Libya. The last I heard there was a Civil War in Libya and the UN had authorized a no-fly zone in Libya and to take whatever actin was necessary by NATO forces to prevent genocide by Gaddfi and his mercenary troops, short of sending in any NATO ground troops.
Haven't heard any recent news about that Civil War. The last I heard the Revolutionary forces had pretty much taken control and Gadaffi was hiding out in his home town vowing a fight to the death.
Has Obama sent in the Marines or something? Has he sent someone to steal Libya's oil yet?
I don't know about North Korea becoming a world power, but any world leader who has an arsenal of nuclear weapons could insure that country could be considered a "world power" and any madman in charge of a country can start a war... Bush Jr. proved that.
I do know this: Climate changes in 2012 are going to be horrific, lots worse than anything we have witnessed so far... World wide food shortages, droughts and floods, record setting massive tornadoes in size and number, hurrcanes and winter blizzards are going to be the real story...Those stories might not make the main stream news.
Geopolitically, five of the five world's bread basket areas on Earth are already in sad shape now and Japan is one of the five, with radioactive dust settling all over their country, spoiling their very precious soil and no end in sight to that long lasting disaster..... Anyway,,, we'll see.
Hi Bill from Sagiaw
I just did some searches of news about Libya and we don't have any troops in Libya, no NATO troops there in fact.... Obama hasn't pulled our troops out of Afghanastan, Iraq or Kosovo though, but we arent fighting a war in Libya and so far no one is stealing their oil.
Here is what the UN resoluton says on the Libya deal..
The resolution demands "an immediate ceasefire" and authorizes the international community to establish a no-fly zone over Libya and to use all means necessary short of foreign occupation to protect civilians.
he resolution, adopted under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter:
* demands the immediate establishment of a ceasefire and a complete end to violence and all attacks against, and abuses of, civilians;
* imposes a no-fly zone over Libya;
* authorises all necessary means to protect civilians and civilian-populated areas, except for a "foreign occupation force";
* strengthens the arms embargo and particularly action against mercenaries, by allowing for forcible inspections of ships and planes;
* imposes a ban on all Libyan-designated flights;
* imposes an asset freeze on assets owned by the Libyan authorities, and reaffirms that such assets should be used for the benefit of the Libyan people;
* extends the travel ban and assets freeze of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1970 to a number of additional individuals and Libyan entities;
* establishes a panel of experts to monitor and promote sanctions implementation.
Arming anti Gaddafi forces?
On the face of it, the arms embargo imposed by paragraph 9 of resolution 1970 would prevent arms being supplied to anyone in Libya. However, the resolution qualifies resolution 1970 with the wording "all necessary measures, notwithstanding paragraph 9 of resolution 1970" if the in so doing it would protect civilians. Hillary Clinton has argued that, though arming anti Gaddafi forces was not being proposed at present, it would be legal to do so.
2011 Libyan civil war
* Libyan People's Army,,,
* Free Libyan Air Force,,,
* National Conference for the Libyan Opposition,,,
* Anti-Gaddafi tribes,,,
UN member states enforcing UNSC Resolution 1973:
* NATO,,,
* Qatar,,,
* Sweden,,,
* UAE,,,
* Belgium,,,
* Canada,,,
* Denmark,,,
* France,,,
* Greece,,,
* Italy,,,
* Norway,,,
* Spain,,,
* Turkey,,,
* United Kingdom,,,
* United States.
So you can readily see it isn't "Obama war", it's a civil war and the Revolutionary forces asked the UN to assit them and the UN did that. In a war innocent civilians are going to be killed by military fire ftom both sides.
The citizens of Libya wanted to depose a near 42 year rule of a dictator, a Civil War ensued...Personally I support the Revolutionary forces,,, some people support Gaddafi.
Gee Wayne, You are just one huge source of disinformation aren't you. Want to confuse a bunch of kids. Next thing you'll be telling them is that Al Gore is anti-nuke. (I wasted two hours checking that.) I know better than to believe your nonsense on Libya. We had troops there from the beginning and we have admitted it now.
STOP MAKING THINGS UP.
I forgot. They're pumping oil and it's going to our puppets. That ain't theft?
~Inh~ wrote, (" forgot. They're pumping oil and it's going to our puppets. That ain't theft?")
Cite your reference ~Inh~.. . Is it Rush Limbaww?
They are sellng (their) oil, to whomever they choose to sell it to... You have a problem with that Inh?
Gee ~~Inh~~, what is it I poste that isn't true?? Tell us, be specific,, if you are going to bother to be rude and obtuse here.. Show us what (exactly) did I post that is false. Put up or shut up.~Inh~. NO opinions, (facts)... It isn't nice to call someone a liar, who hasn't lied and isn't a liar.... Thank you ~Inh~.
The only reason I mentioned the (Civil War) in Libya, is because ~Bill from Saginaw~ thought it was an Obama War... I was trying to help him know the truth.
I didn't intend to confuse you sonny... Do your parent know you are using their computer? And it's very late now, after 3 am when you posted that mis-information for a kid to be up playing on the computer, writng silly nonsense and attacking someone and publically saying they are a liar... What is wrong with you, brain damaged maybe?
Speaking of "making things up",,, you just posted "we had troops in Libya from the start and we have admitted it".... Cite a credible reference please, because I never heard that story and if it's true, we have violated the UNs legal mandate.
Everything I posted is common knowledge, there are many references, such as every newspaper in the world and the hundreds of media newscasts since the Civil War in libya first started. There are scads of articles posted on the web that are not substantiated that say such crap as you posted whch are written by delusional far to the right-winger ~Rush Limbawww~ fans.
And Al Gore?,, At least I mentioned North Korea here... I remember some un-informed ignorant person said "Al Gore was pro nuke", and I posted a direct cut and paste article of Al Gore's video, taped, reporter's interview on a televied newscast and Gore answered many questions on the subject and stated firmly that he had once been pro nuke but had changed his mind about that several years ago.
You obviously refuse to believe Gore and that is your perogative... Why blast me, say (I lied) for it... I choose to believe him.. In your opinion if someone has a different opinon than YOU do,,, they are a liar. Does that make any reasonable sense? Nope!...Talk about being childish and ignorant and totally unfair.
Have you ever sought treatment at a mental health facility? Or are you under the age of 7 and haven't learned how to be resonble and fair yet? __ Well, some adults never have grown up come to think about it... You aren't Bush Jr by any chance are you? Just askin.
So you have some credibel reference to state Gore lied about that? Please do post it for us. and please don't forget to show us (exactly) where I posted anything that was not factual.... Okay kid?
LMAOfff,,, there are always some who get pissed when someon posts something they disagree with and start raving like a spoiled brat.
And ~Inh~
You don't want the citizens of Libya to overthrow Gaddafi do you?
You don't want them to have a fair chance at having freedom from a theiving, crazy 42 year long dictatorship? A dictator who has hired thousands of mercenaries to protect him... Mercenaries who will kill any and all Gadaffi says are a threa to his rule.
You don't want to see them have electons, the women to have freedom of speech, etc. do you Inh? .. I do want them to have a fair chance at that ~Inh~.... So because I wish to see that rare opportunity for freedom in a dictatorial ruled country, you say I lied, made things up. Will they gain freedom, a decent democracy? I don't know, they have had a fair chance,, We'll see.
Will North Korea re-new the Korean War, break the 60 year long truce? It would not surprise me if they do... Would the North Koreans use atomic weapons? Don't know. The North Korean military have shown themselves to be the meanest, nastiest, cruelist fighters on the planet... They are tough too. very, very tough. We'll see.
What do you think of the North Korean issue Inh? Or were you unaware the Korean War has never as yet ended? __ Truman said it was a "Police Action", it's a war.