TruthDig
One might think that a
bitter Central Asian war in Afghanistan ,
spilling into Pakistan , with
no sign of ending, and an as yet ambiguous military commitment to a defeated
and incompletely reconstituted Iraq ,
now overshadowed by Iran and
the Arab Awakening across the Middle East ,
would be enough for President Barack Obama to cope with.
He was, after all, elected
to reduce American military commitments. He was going to end things in Iraq , fight the “right war” in Afghanistan ,
which Gen. David Petraeus told him could be wound up in a year. Unaccustomed to
generals as he might have been, he surely did not expect “Af-Pak” to turn into
a permanent activity and a source of income for the Pentagon and the American
arms industry.
Why then does he now want a
war with China ?
No one seems to have made much of this in American press reports and comment,
but others have noticed, most of all in China . His journey to Asia this
month proclaimed a Pax Americana for Asia —which
as such is absurd. The effort is likely to become just the opposite: a steadily
deepening and costly engagement in suppressing China ’s attempt to reclaim the
Asian preeminence it held for more than a thousand years.
This is the sort of thing that starts world wars. Think of
What is at stake between China and the United States ? We are on the
opposite sides of the world with next to nothing to fight about, except raw
materials—of which there still is a good deal available for all. Industrial
domination of the world? What does that actually mean, and what is it worth?
Bragging rights about who is top nation? That’s what Washington seems to care about. If American
leaders push that too far, they could end in a war that eliminates both from
the competition.
The Spratly Islands ? The message Barack Obama delivered to Asia,
first in Indonesia in
mid-November while attending the political conference organized to accompany an
ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) conference, and subsequently at
a bilateral meeting with the Australian government, was a double-barreled
warning by the United States
to China .
This message said that the United States
now considers itself a permanent Pacific and Asian power. Just as it settled in
long ago as an unofficial permanent European power (the ally who wouldn’t go
home), it now is permanently Asian, and anything that happens in the Pacific
and the Far East automatically will concern
Americans.
The specific meaning of this
message, as directed to Beijing , was that
matters officially considered by China
to be local or regional in nature, and meant to be solved directly by
one-to-one negotiations between China
and its neighbors, are now considered by the United
States to be America ’s affair too. (We are
talking here about islands in the South China Sea, possible sites of energy and
other resources, to which rival claims are made by China ,
Vietnam , the Philippines , Brunei ,
Malaysia , and Taiwan , and also the Senkaku
Islands held by Japan but claimed by China
and Taiwan .)
There is, in addition, the Taiwan
issue itself, which China
considers a rebel province, and Taiwan
disagrees.
The president then went on
to Canberra and signed an agreement with Australia to station 2,500 U.S. Marines in Australia ’s Northern
Territory (closest to mainland Asia ).
He said to the Australian Parliament that the United States is shifting its
military weight from the Middle East to the Pacific, declaring in one of those
“Let there be no doubt” phrases habitual to American presidents that “in the
Asia Pacific in the 21st century, the United States of America is all in.”
Are we Americans really sure
that we want to be “all in”? All in what? A war over China ’s
claims on Taiwan and the South China Sea ? Or over access to “rare earths”? Or
over—as just might happen—a China
reduced to ruins by revolutionary upheaval? Or, are Mr. Obama and the Washington elite looking
for distraction from our own revolutionary unrest?
Visit William Pfaff’s website for more on his latest book, “The Irony of Manifest Destiny: The Tragedy of
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