gak mungkin banget.
yang ada malah sebaliknya, usa takut serangan mata2 dari china melalui
penduduk sipil yg menjadi warga usa


On Fri, May 6, 2011 at 10:10 PM, Jusfiq <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> Apa iya?
>
> --
> After Osama, China fears the next target
>
> Although relieved with bin Laden's death, many Chinese are scared where
> Washington will focus its attention next.
> Antoaneta Becker Last Modified: 06 May 2011 13:54
>
> The Chinese reaction to the circumstances surrounding Osama bin Laden's
> death were mixed with admiration for a successful covert operation, and fear
> for where Washington would start focusing its attention next [EPA]
>
> The United States' most vilified terrorist foe has been dead only a week
> but China is already haunted by the phantom of the next big US enemy. Almost
> simultaneously with the spread of the news of Osama bin Laden's death in a
> covert US operation in Pakistan, Chinese analysts had begun the guessing
> game of where Washington will focus its attention next.
>
> "Why didn't they catch him alive?" speculated military affairs analyst Guo
> Xuan. "Because he was no longer needed as an excuse for Washington to take
> the anti-terror war outside of the US borders. It is because of bin Laden
> that the US were allowed to increase their strategic presence in many places
> around the world as never before. But Libya and NATO's attack there have
> changed the game. They (the US) no longer need bin Laden to assert their
> authority."
>
> Even before bin Laden's death, Beijing had expressed concern that the US
> strategists are diverting their attention from the war on terror to
> containing the rise of China and other emerging economies.
>
> A long article on Libya stalemate published by the editor of Contemporary
> International Relations magazine, Lin Limin, argued that the US has been
> unwilling to take the lead role in the Libya conflict because it has
> "finally woken up to the fact that its main reason to worry are the emerging
> countries.
>
> "If the US position on Libya is not only a tactical stance but a strategic
> one and they have really come to understand that they should not waste
> military power and energy in numerous directions 'spreading democracy' all
> over the world but should begin focusing their attention on the rise of
> emerging countries, then we do have a reason to worry," Lin argued.
>
> The US presence in Afghanistan has always been a controversial one for
> Chinese politicians. China joined the global war on terror because bin
> Laden's political agenda of setting up an Arab caliphate and sponsoring
> terrorism presented a direct threat to its restive Muslim north-western
> region of Xinjiang. But Beijing has been suspicious of the US intentions,
> worrying that Washington is pursuing a broader agenda for long-term presence
> in the region, which China regards as its backyard.
>
> Beijing officially hailed the killing of the terrorist leader by the US as
> "a milestone and a positive development for the international anti-terrorism
> efforts".
>
> "Terrorism is the common enemy of the international community. China has
> also been a victim of terrorism," foreign ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu was
> quoted by the official Xinhua news agency as saying after bin Laden's death.
>
> She was referring to Xinjiang, where Muslim separatists have been waging a
> bloody insurgency against Chinese rule. Beijing had linked the global war
> against terror with its struggle to quell separatist sentiments in the
> Muslim region, insisting insurgents are aided from outside.
>
> Chinese public reaction to the news of bin Laden's death has mixed
> reluctant admiration at the success of the secret mission played out
> reportedly on screens in front of US president Barack Obama with outright
> fear over what comes next.
>
> "The whole thing seemed like an intelligence operation lifted straight out
> of '24' (a TV series about US counter-terrorism agents)," said Huang Mei, a
> TV producer with barely concealed awe. "How advanced and confident they must
> be to ask their president to watch the killing mission on screens live!"
>
> But some see bin Laden's demise as a blow to efforts to promote a school of
> Anti-American thought.
>
> "The great anti-America fighter bin Laden was murdered by the US! How sad!"
> wrote one commenter on Sina's popular Weibo micro-blogging site.
>
> "Is this real? Excellent!" wrote another of the news. "Now the only
> terrorist left is the United States!"
>
> Commentators have begun analysing the political capital reaped by Obama and
> preparing for the possibility that he may win a second term in office.
> Writing in Beijing's Xinjing Bao, commentator Chen Bing predicted the US
> will exploit the death of bin Laden to expand its influence in the Middle
> East and bring the Arab spring to an end.
>
> "What a great way to issue a warning to all anti-American politicians in
> the region," Chen said. "And a declaration that it (the US) intends to mould
> the Middle East according to its own design."
>
> A version of this article first appeared on Inter Press Service news
> agency.
>
>  
>



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