----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2000 12:34 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Liberate Okinawa From A Rogue Superpower


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

http://www.latimes.com/news/comment/20000623/t000059436.html
Los Angeles Times 
Friday, June 23, 2000 


Liberate Okinawa From a 'Rogue Superpower' 
 Asia: The U.S. and Japan will be embarrassed if they
don't take a cue from the Korean summit. 


By CHALMERS JOHNSON

     The three-day summit meeting between the leaders
of North and South Korea and the agreement they signed
in Pyongyang June 15 are as significant developments
in international relations as President Nixon's 1972
visit to China or the 1989 breaching of the Berlin
Wall. All these events heralded the onset of momentous
political changes and realignments. 
     The only people who seem not to be aware of this
are those in the U.S. Congress and the Pentagon and
their counterparts in Japan. The Americans are not
merely cautious but downright surly. The Defense
Department has reiterated U.S. intentions to keep
troops in South Korea indefinitely, and the Clinton
administration has reasserted its determination to
proceed with plans for a theater missile defense
because North Korea remains a "state of concern" (also
known as a "rogue state") capable, it alleges, of
destroying not just South Korea and Japan but even the
United States itself. 
     The United States has not been paying attention.
Changes in both Koreas have been in the works for a
long time. One of the most significant figures
accompanying President Kim Dae Jung to Pyongyang was
Lim Dong Won, head of South Korea's National
Intelligence Service. North Korea asked that he
attend. Lim played a major role in behind-the-scenes
negotiations with the North prior to the summit. China
was the midwife in preparing for these changes, and
the success of the summit also is a major victory for
Chinese foreign policy. As straws in the wind, two of
the United States' closest allies--Italy and
Australia--recognized the North Korean government
several months ago. 
     The so-called North Korean missile threat is
almost entirely the product of Republican
congressional imaginations, inspired by supporters in
the intelligence agencies and the military-industrial
complex. A missile defense is both untested and
strategically unsound, but defense contractors want to
go ahead with it anyway because of the huge profits it
will generate. 
     The reality is that North Korea, in its entire
history, has tested only four missiles, the last two
in 1993 and 1998. The missiles all have been based on
obsolescent Soviet technology and probably can't be
aimed. Facing them are more than 7,000 deployed
nuclear warheads, the 7th Fleet, the 2nd Army Division
in Korea and a South Korea that is twice as populous
and 25 times richer. 
     The implications for Japan of a Korean detente
are substantial. Ever since the Soviet Union
collapsed, Japan has justified the presence of more
than 50,000 American troops on its territory by
invoking a threat from North Korea. The people of
Okinawa, Japan's southernmost prefecture and where
more than 75% of the American forces are stationed,
have for 55 years pleaded for their departure. The
issue came to a head in 1995, when two U.S. Marines
and a sailor beat and raped a 12-year-old schoolgirl.
Rather than reconsidering the issue of ground forces
in Okinawa, the U.S. government has endlessly spun the
rape incident, arguing that it was not typical of what
happens when you locate 39 American military bases
among 1.3 million inhabitants. It has also tried to
divide the Okinawan people by making false promises to
close some bases while opening others elsewhere in
Okinawa. 
     It would be premature to start taking our forces
out of South Korea until the Koreans ask us to. But
the Pentagon should do three things quickly: Withdraw
the 3rd Marine Division from Okinawa and probably
demobilize it; return Futenma Marine Corps Air Station
to Okinawa as President Clinton promised in 1996; and
cancel plans to build a new military airfield at Nago
in northern Okinawa. If these things aren't done, the
United States and Japan are certain to be humiliated
at the G8 summit meeting to be held in Okinawa next
month. 
     Koreans themselves are ending the Cold War in the
Pacific without any help from the superpowers that
originally divided their country and fought over it
during the Korean War. The main security problem for
northeastern Asia today is not a rogue state in its
midst but a rogue superpower across the Pacific. 

- - -

Chalmers Johnson, Author of "Blowback: the Costs and
Consequences of American Empire" (Metropolitan Books,
2000), Is President of the Japan Policy Research
Institute


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