Skip to main content
Could Trump’s blundering lead to war between China and Japan?
Could Trump’s blundering lead to war between China and Japan?
or news out of east Asia, it is difficult to compete with North
Korea’s youthful, jocular despot, Kim Jong-un, and his near-daily
threats to fire a nuclear-tipped missile at US territory. On Monday, Kim
was pictured surrounded by his top generals mulling over maps with
targets closer to home, in South Korea and Japan, while warning again
that he was ready to “wring the windpipes of the Yankees”.
The young Kim, and his father and grandfather before him, have long
tossed violent epithets at their enemies, but Pyongyang’s new
capabilities – to potentially deliver a nuclear warhead across the
Pacific – have injected fresh danger into the crisis on the Korean
peninsula.
The North Korean crisis is one of the few creations of the cold war
to have outlived the Berlin Wall, despite persistent predictions that
the communist dynasty would collapse. There are many factors driving the
confrontation, chief among them paranoia in Pyongyang, where the Kim
dynasty is focused above all on preventing regime change. In
neighbouring China,
Beijing is paralysed: it is caught between anger at Kim for
destabilising the region, and fear that if it pushes Pyongyang too hard,
the regime will collapse, and fall into the hands of South Korea, an
ally of the US. The US itself also seems impotent, knowing that starting
any war could lead to devastating attacks on its allies in Seoul and
Tokyo.
Lost
among the headlines is the fact that the crisis is just a symptom of a
bigger drama unfolding in east Asia, where an entire postwar order,
built and maintained by the US since 1945, is slowly coming apart.
Read More...
Comments
Post a Comment