-Caveat Lector-

http://www.antiwar.com/justin/justincol.html

April 4, 2001

THE RESURRECTION OF GARY POWERS
Spy plane drama a blast from the past
The story we are getting about the "accidental" downing of an EP-3 spy plane,
packed with sensitive electronic equipment, over the South China sea, and its
emergency landing on Hainan island, at a Chinese military base, makes
absolutely no sense – no matter whom is doing the telling.




A GAUNTLET THROWN
The Chinese say that the American plane, having intruded into their airspace,
suddenly veered into one of two Chinese jet fighters on its tail. This is
hardly credible: you don't have to be a military specialist to figure out
that a jet fighter has a lot more maneuverability than the propeller-driven
EP-3. Either the ChiComs are sending their pilots to the Chinese equivalent
of the Comedy Driving School, or something else occurred that neither side is
talking about. But word, as usual, is getting out. According to a report in
the Taipei Times, the spy plane was collecting information on China's most
advanced warship when the alleged collision took place. The spy plane then
tried to hightail it out of there, when it was forced down by warning fire
from the other Chinese fighter. Citing an anonymous "intelligence source,"
the Taipei newspaper reports that "the source – who had monitored the
incident by radar and also listened to cockpit exchanges – said he believed
the EP-3 was forced to land by the Chinese fighter plane at an airport on
Hainan." While none of this is confirmed, it sounds very credible, or at
least possible: if true, it points to a deliberate provocation, a gauntlet
hurled in the path of the American hegemon – one that the Bush administration
is all too eager to pick up.

THE LADYBUG AND THE FROG
The American side of the story is even more dubious than the Chinese version.
US officials claim that the collision was so damaging to the spy plane that
it had no choice but to send out a "Mayday" signal and make an "emergency
landing" – at one of the biggest and most strategically important Chinese
military bases in the region! Pardon me for asking, but isn't the idea of
running a military spy operation to avoid capture at all costs? If they had
fallen into the sea, surely the area would have been swarming with US ships
in very short order – or else what do we have all those bases over in Japan
and the Philippines for? The Taipei Times reveals that "this is not the first
time that a US surveillance plane such as the EP-3 has tried to collect
information on the most advanced fighting ship in the Chinese navy, which
poses a major threat to US aircraft carriers with its lethal Sunburn
anti-ship missiles." The US has also complained that this aerial game of
cat-and-mouse occurred with greater frequency in recent weeks. In that case,
why was this great turtle of an airplane – propeller-driven for god's-sake,
and packed with highly-sensitive spying devices – dangled in front of the
Chinese, like a big fat ladybug lazily circling a frog?

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GARY POWERS?
We don't have a lot of answers, yet, just questions: but perhaps, in looking
at history, and searching for precedents, we can find some clue as to what is
going on here, with the image of Gary Powers, downed over the Soviet Union at
the dawn of the cold war, coming immediately to mind. On May 1, 1960, Powers
took off in the top-secret U-2 spy plane, which had so far eluded all Soviet
efforts to down it. The Soviet Sputnik had just been launched, and US
military circles were in an uproar: after a short lull, overflights of Soviet
territory were resumed, even as preparations were under way for the Paris
peace summit. When the Soviets announced, on May 5th, that they had shot down
an American spy plane, the US government at first tried to push the story
that that plane's mission was entirely meteorological – but this was rendered
completely untenable by the reappearance of Powers as the captive of the
Soviets. Brought before a Soviet court and charged with espionage, he was
slapped with a ten-year sentence – and wound up serving only 17 months.
Exchanged for a Soviet spy, Rudolf Abel, Powers returned to the US a hero,
but eventually wound up a somewhat embittered man, convinced – as he says in
his memoirs – that he had become a political pawn in the cold war chess game.
His book, Operation Overflight, was very critical of the CIA. After his
release from a Soviet prison, he was hired by Lockheed as a test pilot.
Unaware that the US government was his hidden benefactor, Powers worked for
Lockheed for seven years, but when they got wind of his book – and that it
was highly critical of the CIA – the hero was promptly dumped. He died in a
helicopter crash, in Los Angeles, while piloting for a radio station.

EERIE PARALLELS
The parallels between the U-2 incident, and the Hainan collision, are eerie
and unsettling. As with the U-2, the downing of the EP-3 was the climactic
denouement of a series of incidents, in which American surveillance efforts
were, at first, largely successful – only to have the whole program come
crashing down on the heads of embarrassed US policymakers. While this was not
exactly an American overflight – the U-2 penetrated deep into Soviet airspace
– the Chinese consider the arena of the encounter to be under Chinese
sovereignty. Indeed, this is one of the major regional issues, second only to
Taiwan: how far out from the mainland into the South China Sea does Beijing's
authority extend? What the US considers "international waters" are seen by
the Chinese to be within their rightful jurisdiction. This question, in turn,
is intertwined with the issue of the Spratley Islands, a collection of
practically useless atolls that at least 6 different nations lay claim to:
not only China, but also the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and
Taiwan. This is a region fairly bristling with flashpoints, any one of which
could set off a major military conflict involving the US, China, and
inevitably dragging in others.

FOR REASONS OF STATE
In this case, as in the U-2 incident, both sides appear to be lying, to some
extent, for reasons of state: and both sides, as in 1960, are using this as
an opportunity to make propaganda, with the Chinese demanding an apology, and
the Bush administration making good on secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld's
startling thesis, revealed barely two weeks earlier by the [London] Guardian,
that China was now "the principal threat to American global dominance."

FLIP THE SCRIPT
Indeed, the newly-aggressive behavior of the Chinese, exemplified by the
Hainan incident, can in large part be seen as a direct response to this new
American stance. The recent decision to end all negotiations with the North
Koreans, the news that the US sale of sophisticated Aegis weaponry to Taiwan
is imminent, and the stepped up propaganda campaign aimed at Beijing in such
international forums as the United Nations – this is the context in which the
interception and downing of the American spy plane has to be understood. The
Chinese are reacting to a perceived threat. At the risk of committing the sin
of "moral equivalence," if we "flip the script," as Tony Karon of Time
magazine puts it, it is easy to see why the Chinese are p-o'ed:

"Imagine a Chinese plane flying a surveillance mission off the Florida coast
colliding with an Air Force F-16 sent on an aggressive monitoring mission.
The U.S. fighter goes down and the pilot is lost; the Chinese plane is forced
to land on US soil. The incident occurs at a moment when China is about to
supply a package of sophisticated weapons to Cuba."

PRIVILEGES OF EMPIRE
But an imperial nation, such as ours, is hardly willing to put itself on the
same level as others: by definition, the world's only superpower is allowed
to do things impermissible for others. What would be an act of war, committed
by anyone else, is, for Americans, a simple act of droit de seigneur. But in
f*cking-over the rest of the world, we provoke a reaction that, in Asia at
this moment, seems to be breaking out all over. What Chalmers Johnson calls
the "blowback" from the ongoing military occupation of much of Eastasia, and
America's "forward stance" in the Pacific, is already happening in Japan: not
only on account of the Ehime Maru, but due to the long history of violent
incidents involving US troops stationed at Okinawa. The latest incident,
involving the sudden appearance of a US submarine at a Japanese port without
notice, takes the resentment to a higher level, raising as it does the stark
picture of Japan as a US vassal whose consent is not required. In South
Korea, the resentment of US bases is combining with anger at Washington's
abrupt dismissal of the ruling government's "Sunshine policy" toward the
North. The springtime of Korean reunification has been spoiled by a Bushian
frost, as Cold War, Version 2.O, is released by the Rumsfeld-Rice faction,
now in the ascendant in the foreign policy councils of this administration.

HOW TO REANIMATE A CORPSE
Both sides, I want to emphasize, need this new cold war: Beijing, because the
economic consequences of the global downturn in Asia are particularly harsh –
and, politically, potentially catastrophic for the regime. The downturn could
not have come at a more inauspicious time for the Chinese Communist Party
(CCP): just as the ongoing crisis of the state-owned sector is reaching
climactic proportions. Without an external enemy to focus the hatred and
frustration of the average Chinese, and divert it away from its proper target
– the CCP – the economic crisis would turn all that energetic hatred inward,
and the whole system would implode. As a means to pump up the economy, as
well as political support, a foreign threat to the very sovereignty of the
Chinese nation has the revivifying effect of a sudden shot in the arm. The
jolt of military spending can reanimate, for a time, the corpse of a
collectivist economy, either "market socialist," or state-capitalist – and,
more importantly, direct those short-term benefits to the politically
well-connected.

THAT MAGIC MOMENT
The same principles operate here in the US. We need the same kind of jolt,
and for the same reasons. There is also the psychological and political need
for foreign enemies – a necessary diversion away from the domestic problems,
such as high taxation and government intrusion, that threaten the political
status quo. We shall have a new cold war because both sides require it, the
Americans no less than the Chinese. America is always in search of enemies,
it seems, and it is no wonder that it has found another. This has been the
abiding passion of many conservatives of the "neo" variety since the end of
the first cold war. Having once allied with the Chinese Communists against
their "revisionist" former comrades in the Kremlin, right-wing circles in the
US are now embarked, in Orwellian fashion, on a holy crusade against the
"godless" Commies of Beijing. Richard Nixon's opening to China was the
beginning of a long, and bizarre partnership, in which Chinese Communist
propaganda was indistinguishable from material that appeared in, say,
Commentary magazine, or National Review: the Soviet Union was "the principal
enemy of the world's peoples," declared the Beijing Review, a line that was
faithfully echoed by the dwindling band of pro-Beijing communists in the
West, including the US. For a while there, from the mid-70s up until the fall
of the Berlin Wall, the Committee on the Present Danger and the Beijing-loyal
Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist) marched in lockstep. But, alas, it was an
ironic moment that, being too good to be true, could not last.

CLUELESS CONSERVATIVES
It is typical of our hypocritical and generally clueless "movement"
conservatives that they would declare holy war on Beijing as it moved away
from Marxism-Leninism and toward a much freer economic system, one which
allows for the potential of greater political diversity. But our hardliners
reinforce theirs. China's hardliners have been handed a pretext for
overruling and silencing their moderate, or even pro-Western factional
opponents. With reformers already in retreat, and China generally withdrawing
from the radical privatization plans initiated by the Communist party only a
few years ago, the Hainan incident is bound to become the rallying point and
symbol of rising Chinese nationalism, especially among the young – a
generation that could have and should have been pro-American.

A RETROGRADE TREND
I am not at all surprised at the news that the Chinese government may put the
captured American crew on trial: the [London] Times posted a story to that
effect as I finished up this column, as if to confirm my ominous sense of
deja-vu. It is Gary Powers all over again, only this time to the 24th power.
I have the uneasy feeling that we'll all soon be digging bomb shelters in our
back yards, while, over at the local elementary school, they go through the
"duck and cover" air raid drills that gave life its weird, surreal edge for
those of us who grew up in the 1950s. To complete the picture, even Russian
spies are back in the news. We are going back in time – not back to a golden
age, but regressing to a more primitive, less promising era, a kind of
intellectual and political ice age, in which all foreign policy discussion is
frozen in place, Big Government is a military "necessity," and the prospects
for peace and liberty are dim indeed.

NO GOOD ANSWER
Amid the gloom, there are still glimmers of humor, however dark. When told of
the US claim that the inside of the downed spy plane constituted sovereign US
territory, and that the Chinese had no right to enter it, a top Chinese
official asked: "Well then how is it that it landed in China?" For the Bush
administration, there can be no good answer to that question.

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