-Caveat Lector-

<< A major concern after the "end" of the "Cold War" was the divisions
between the "SuperPowers" had crumbled right along with the Berlin Wall --
the axiom "better to have a known (and knowing one's) adversary
than not" comes into play.  What's this?  The "Reagan Legacy"?  Whatever
happened to "strong fences make for good neighbours"?  Speaking of
"playing", now everyone wants a seat at the table to play in the game. >>


>From SalonMagazine.Com


The empires strike back
AS THE WORLD FOCUSES ON THE BALKANS, THE RETURN OF GERMANY AND JAPAN TO
MILITARY ACTION BARELY MADE NEWS.


BY JEFF STEIN | They're back.

For the first time since their empires lay in sizzling ruins a half-century
ago in the waning days of World War II, old Axis partners Germany and Japan
went on the offensive this week, firing and bombing outside their borders.

As Germany dropped bombs on targets in Yugoslavia, and Japanese warships
pursued unmarked spy ships across the Sea of Okhotsk to North Korea, the
two powers seemed a shadow of their former ferocious selves militarily, but
they crossed a historic, if symbolic, threshold nonetheless.

The unprecedented events were widely noted in Europe but virtually
unnoticed here amid headlines on the bombast in the Balkans, as NATO
warships and missiles pounded Serb targets, and turmoil erupted on
Yugoslavia's frontiers with Macedonia and Albania. Even Greece, subjected
to Nazi atrocities during the Third Reich's 1941-45 occupation, had little
to say about the German Tornadoes dropping bombs to the north, opting
instead to denounce the NATO offensive as destabilizing to the region.

Even less was made of Japan's first naval engagement since the meltdown of
the Imperial Empire in 1945, as Tokyo's warships hotly pursued two unmarked
spy ships, disguised as fishing trawlers but bristling with antennae and
steaming at unnatural speeds. Japanese military ships, firing warning
shots, joined in the chase after the coast guard failed to stop the fleeing
vessels, which were moving at high speed. Japanese warplanes also dropped
what officials called "warning bombs.'' The spy ships escaped undamaged
into North Korean ports, leaving behind a debate across Japan over its
proper military role.

But the sudden reanimation of the two former military titans is just one
more sign of the shifting balance of world power already evident in the
conflict over Kosovo.

The changing role of Germany is most obvious. Japan and Germany's postwar
constitutions, virtually dictated by the Allied victors, strictly limit
their military forces to self-defense or, in Berlin's case, action in
concert with NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization established in
1949. Germans were prohibited from taking part in Operation Desert Storm,
targeting Iraq, in 1991.

But currently some 3,000 Germans -- nearly a third of the European and U.S.
peace-keeping force for Kosovo -- are deployed in Macedonia, the
potato-shaped republic stuck between Kosovo and Greece. Fourteen German
warplanes have been bombing Yugoslavia from the soil of another fascist-era
ally, Italy.

Nazi forces, allied with fascist Croatia, viciously attacked Belgrade in
1941. To some, especially victims and surviving Allied war veterans, the
specter of rifle-toting "Huns" on foreign soil and the Japanese Navy
pursuing enemy ships across the open sea inevitably evokes new shudders and
old nightmares. Those with no memories of the global holocaust -- the vast
majority of today's Americans, Europeans and Asians -- will most likely say
it's about time that the two economic superpowers started carrying their
military weight.

Either way, the deployment of German air and ground units abroad this week
marks the biggest break yet with the Third Reich's bitter Nazi legacy,
positioning a reunified Berlin on the threshold of becoming the inevitable
military -- not just financial -- leader of the New Europe.

As European papers devoted pages to the World War II memories of Nazi
pilots, Germans themselves maintained a stoic aloofness over their historic
step back into the Balkans.

"There's not a huge debate going on there, no huge demonstrations for or
against the involvement in Kosovo," said Claudius Fischbach, a spokesman at
the German embassy in Washington. "I think the general feeling is that this
was an indispensable step of the international community to avert a
deepening humanitarian crisis in Kosovo, that's all."

Fischbach added: "No one was looking forward to it."

Even Germany's pacifist Green Party supported the German mobilization,
though there were pockets of dissent in parliament from individual Greens
and former East German communists. The relative quiet was surprising in a
country that quickly erupts in protest over fascist sentimentality in the
ranks of the Bundeswehr, Germany's 330,000-strong army.

In 1991 there were reports that Germany was disappointed it had been
prohibited from participating in Desert Storm, but Fischbach called those
reports "incorrect."

As for whether Germans felt pride in their country's belated military
coming out in Kosovo last week, he said, "I can't see that anywhere now. "

In a nation with a deep military culture, however, there was carping that
NATO didn't do it right. "A surprise air attack would have been better.
NATO unnecessarily weakened its chances,'' complained Bernhard Gertz,
chairman of the Federal Army Association, which represents German soldiers'
interests.

N E X T+P A G E+| Japan's cautious steps toward a military role
commensurate with its economic muscle
THE EMPIRES STRIKE BACK | PAGE 1, 2
- - - - - - - - - -

Meanwhile, there are signs that Japan -- facing the missile-rattling North
Koreans a day's sail away, and a muscular Chinese military buildup only 500
miles from its southernmost islands -- is likely to take even more, albeit
cautious, steps toward a military role commensurate with its economic
muscle.

"There's no question that Japan is beginning to realize inch by inch how
dangerous that part of the world is and is preparing to do a little more,"
said Ayoko Doi, editor of the U.S.-based Japan Digest and a former
correspondent for Japan Times. "But it's still at a stage where the
politicians in the Diet debate whether it's constitutional or not to supply
water to U.S. warships going to conflicts in Korea," Doi chuckled. "That
would be aiding a war effort."

Doi humorously recounted the worried conversations between Japanese naval
commanders and Tokyo officials even as they pursued the spy ships across
the sea toward North Korea last week.

"There was a debate while the chase was going on, between the destroyers
and Tokyo, of whether to shoot at the rudder to incapacitate the ships or
not," she said. "The Navy guy said we have only 5-inch guns, and if we use
them, it will blow up the whole stern and sink the ships and people will
die and we can't do that. So they didn't, they just fired warning shots,
and when they came to the end of the Japan air self-defense zone, they
said, that's it."

The Japanese government, which usually downplays North Korea's constant
provocations -- from dumping amphetamines on Tokyo's black market to
flinging a ballistic missile over the country last summer -- no doubt made
a big deal of the spy ship intrusion on purpose, to tilt a just-opened
parliamentary debate over Japan's military profile, including the question
of whether to embrace a theater missile defense system and extend its
operational zone to Taiwan.

Reflecting Japanese restiveness, just last week Tokyo's outgoing ambassador
to the United States warned the U.S. to reduce its criticism of Japan, or
risk reviving militant nationalist sentiment at a time when many people
still wave the Rising Sun flag and sing the wartime national anthem.

"I'm not worried about a problem yet," warned Kunihiko Saito, "but I don't
think we should forget that only 50 or 60 years ago we made some big
mistakes, and one of the reasons was excessive nationalism."

As German pilots flew their maiden missions toward Kosovo with the setting
sun on their backs Thursday, however, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder issued
an appropriately somber statement.

"The government did not take the decision lightly," he said. "After all,
this is the first time since World War II that German soldiers have been
deployed in combat.''

The threshold had been crossed.
SALON | March 29, 1999

Jeff Stein writes on national security affairs from Washington.

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