Posted on 04/19/2005 3:54:22 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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China Photos-Getty Images
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April 25 issue - If there was a script, this wasn't in it. China's president, Hu Jintao, convened an emergency session of the Politburo's powerful Standing Committee two weekends ago, just hours after anti-Japanese protests in the capital first turned violent. Thousands of marchers had converged on the Japanese Embassy, breaking windows and chanting "Kill the Japanese!" and "Come out, Japanese pigs!" Diplomacy aside, Hu's big worry was the threat of a new Tiananmen-style showdown. A well-informed Chinese source tells NEWSWEEK that in a jittery scene reminiscent of the leadership's 1989 war room, Hu warned against allowing the turmoil to spread. That, he said, would only give dissidents "a pretext to vent their dissatisfaction."
His concern came too late. Unrest erupted in Guangzhou, Shanghai and other cities while police fought to maintain order.
The public outcry was supposedly set off by advance reviews of a revisionist history textbook to be released in Japan this May. (Even Japan's leading teachers' association has denounced the book for its skimpy treatment of Japan's wartime atrocities in Asia.) But in those early stages, at least, it also may have been quietly fanned by the Chinese government. The real conflict is about the future, not the past. It's about two economic giants competing for vital energy reserves.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
Ping!
Offshore drilling? Why aren't the environmentalists over here staging huge protests at the Chinese and Japanese embassies and consulates? Oh, that's right -- I forgot they use all their energies trying to stop America from using its energy resources.
Is it possible that less than a hundred years after defending China from Japan we could end up defending Japan from China?
Things change.
China is reaching out and moving in on the Spratley Islands that are also claimed by the Philippines. China built "fishing villages" and set up house on the islands. China is also in Panama. There is no change in what China
plans to do. Tibet was annexed. Nobody cared. They are spreading out. I do not think they can be stopped by anyone.
Only partially so.
The Chinese are also adept at inflicting violence on themselves. The so-called "cultural revolution" fed on some of the same dark energies. What the Chinese leadership fears most is mobs that they do not control.
bump! ping
Bill Gertz wrote a book about China that is worth a read.
And after an entire generation of a one child policy, and most families chosing to keep their boys, there is now an entirely too large group of young men with no prospects for girlfriends or wives and they are angry. The government has put a lot of them in the military and now they need to do something with them.
I once lived in Manila and worked in a Makati hi rise.
When the Japaneese office manager for Mitsubishi got on the elevator, no one else got on, they took another. Those already on the elevator practically squeezed themselves into the elevator wall to get as far away as possible.
Only if nobody wants to stop them.
Was that out of fear or hate?
Oh, wonderful..
The troop strength of the Chinese military has been shrinking VERY rapidly over the last few years, actually.
Other than nukes Japan doesn't need any help to defend itself from China. And Japan could have its own nukes within 6 months any time it chose to.
I read Gertz's book several years ago, so perhaps things have changed, but I don't remember that was his take on it.
Now whether the government is letting more people leave the military and replacing them with these angry young men, I don't know.
Well, we did defend the western half of Germany from our erstwhile Soviet allies for 45 years and are still there to this day. Nations do not have friends, only interests.
The reductions are an attempt to model the PRC military more after the US military.
Untrained cannon fodder is worthless in modern warfare; much of the PRC military budget is wasted on masses of poorly trained infantry that would be worthless in all conflicts other than someone invading China on land, which isn't going to happen.
Hence the big cuts in the overall troop strength of the PRC military.
Napoleon, surveying a map in 1803 pointed to China and said "There lies a sleeping giant. Let him sleep. For when he wakes he will move the world."
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