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Patrick Buchanan: Are The Senkakus Worth A War? – OpEd
Albany Tribune ^ | December 13, 2013 | Patrick J Buchanan

Posted on 12/13/2013 6:21:12 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo

Senkaku-Diaoyu-Tiaoyu-Islands

By Patrick J Buchanan

December 13, 2013

“The U.S.-Japan Mutual Security Treaty of 1960 obligates the United States to treat any armed attack against any territories under the administration of Japan as dangerous to [America's] own peace and safety. This would cover such islets as the Senkakus also claimed by Beijing.”

So this author wrote 15 years ago in “A Republic Not an Empire.”

And so it has come to pass. The United States, because of this 53-year-old treaty, is today in the middle of a quarrel between Japan and China over these very rocks in the East China Sea.

This Senkakus dispute, which has warships and planes of both nations circling each other around and above the islands, could bring on a shooting war. And if it does, America would be in it.

Yet why should this be America’s quarrel?

The USSR of Nikita Khrushchev and the China of Mao Zedong, the totalitarian Communist states against whom we were committed to defend Japan, are dead and gone.

Why, then, are we still obligated to defend not only Japan, but all of its island possessions? Why were the treaties that committed us to go to war for scores of nations in the Truman-Eisenhower era not dissolved, when the threat that gave rise to those treaties disappeared?

“The commonest error in politics is sticking to the carcass of dead policies,” said Lord Salisbury. Of no nation is that truer than 21st-century America.

For some reason, we cannot let go. We seem so taken with our heroic role in the late Cold War that we cannot give it up, though the world has moved on.

Following China’s declaration of an air defense identification zone over the Senkakus [Diaoyu to China], South Korea declared its own ADIZ, which overlaps upon those of both China and Japan.

South Korea is also in a quarrel with China over a submerged reef in the Yellow Sea known as Ieodo, but to China, Suyan. Seoul has built a maritime research station on the reef, the value of which is enhanced by the oil and gas deposits in the surrounding seabed.

These clashing claims of Beijing and Seoul could present problems for us — for, under our 1953 mutual security treaty, an attack on South Korean territory is to be regarded as “dangerous to [America's] own peace and safety.”

Thus far, China’s response to South Korea’s ADIZ has been muted. For Beijing’s focus is on Japan.

However, South Korea also has a long-running dispute with Tokyo over an island chain in the Sea of Japan.

To the Koreans these islands are Dokdo, to the Japanese, Takeshima.

What we have here, then, are three overlapping air defense identification zones — of China, Japan and South Korea — and three territorial disputes — between China and Japan, China and South Korea, and Japan and South Korea.

And all three nations claim the right to fly warplanes into these zones, and to deny access to foreign warplanes.

America has little control over these countries, all of which have new governments that are increasingly nationalistic.

And this week there appeared an even more ominous cloud.

North Korea’s 30-year-old ruler Kim Jong-un, who has been purging his party and army, ousted, on charges of corruption, his uncle and mentor Jang Song Thaek, the second-most powerful man in the regime.

Kim reportedly had two of Jang’s aides executed, and he is now massing ships and planes along his western sea border with South Korea, a site of previous clashes between North and South.

Kim may also be about to conduct a fourth nuclear test.

Any collision between North and South could instantly involve the United States, which, 60 years after the end of the Korean War, still has 28,500 troops on the peninsula, with thousands right up on the Demilitarized Zone.

And, lest we forget, the United States has a 1951 security treaty with the Philippines that obliges us to come to the defense of those islands. Yet, Manila, too, is involved in a dispute over islets such as Mischief Reef and Scarborough Shoal in a South China Sea that has been declared sovereign territory by Beijing.

The U.S. security treaties with Manila and Tokyo were entered into to defend those countries against a Sino-Soviet bloc that no longer exists.

Our treaty with Seoul was signed when South Korea was ravaged and destitute after three years of war. Today, the South has twice the population and 40 times the economy of the North. Why are we still there?

Neither U.S. political party has shown the least interest in reviewing these open-ended war guarantees, though it seems certain that one of these 50- or 60-year-old commitments will one day drag us into a confrontation if not a major war.

U.S. foreign policy today appears rooted less in U.S. vital interests than in nostalgia for the Cold War. As Dean Acheson said of the British half a century ago, so, it seems to be true of us:

The Americans have lost an empire — and not yet found a role.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Germany; Japan; Russia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: china; germany; japan; patbuchanan; pitchforkpat; russia; surrendercaucus; waronterror
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The Cold War is over. It's time to lay down the unnatural burdens of that era before they destroy us.
1 posted on 12/13/2013 6:21:12 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

GW...George Washington... wasn’t crazy when he warned about “entangling alliances.” They led to WW I.


2 posted on 12/13/2013 6:22:02 AM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Pearls Before Swine
I've got mixed feelings about this. I believe we need to militarily pull back considerably in some regions, but in others if we do not get involved early and convincingly things will surely get out of hand to the point we do get involved and the eventual cost to us will be significantly higher.

That said I do not think this president is capable of doing anything convincingly.

3 posted on 12/13/2013 6:28:46 AM PST by skeeter
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Lets back down there like in Afghanistan, Iran, Egypt, Syria, Turkey.... totally give up to get along. Give the southwest back to Mexico. Give the Louisiana purchase back to France. Give Alaska back to Russia. Lets shut down all our energy operations to give up to Saudi Arabia/OPEC. This would give the liberals their UTOPIA in the cold and dark.


4 posted on 12/13/2013 6:30:47 AM PST by mountainlion (Live well for those that did not make it back.)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Is the Sudentanland worth a war?

Why die for Danzig?


5 posted on 12/13/2013 6:31:37 AM PST by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: skeeter
That said I do not think this president is capable of doing anything convincingly.

I don't know. He convincingly limp wrists a first pitch.


6 posted on 12/13/2013 6:34:31 AM PST by Dahoser (Separation of church and state? No, we need separation of media and state.)
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To: skeeter
It's China. They're out to destroy us economically. Now they assume they can get away with using force to annex land? Isn't it about time we stopped feeding the China economic machine?

They're testing us.

7 posted on 12/13/2013 6:36:08 AM PST by grania
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To: BenLurkin
Or, lest we forget ... 1960 Presidential campaign - QUEMOY and MATSU came into sharp focus.
8 posted on 12/13/2013 6:38:42 AM PST by jamaksin
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Its time to stop pretending that China is doing anything other than attempting to take over half the world by any means at their disposal


9 posted on 12/13/2013 6:40:40 AM PST by bill1952 (Choice is an illusion created between those with power - and those without)
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To: jamaksin

You’re dating yourself...


10 posted on 12/13/2013 6:42:11 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks ("Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth.")
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To: Pearls Before Swine

The issue in WWI was inherently conflicting interests and Great Power competition. The “entangling alliances” merely formalized those factors.

The only Power for which I’m aware that the existence of an alliance played a possibly definitive factor in its entering the War was UK and its guarantee of Belgium.

Yet even this claim falls apart on examination. Would UK really have been willing to stand by and watch as Germany took over Belgium and France, the likely result of a war with UK neutral? When this violated UK standard foreign policy going back many centuries of opposing any power that seemed likely to gain unchallenged hegemony on the Continent?

IMO, the definitive factor in the outbreak of general war was Germany’s belief (probably accurate) that their relative position vs. France and Russia was at its peak, and would only decline in future years as Russia’s political and economic reforms bore fruit. If Germany was to dominate Europe and the world, it needed to strike NOW.

This was a classic example of a pre-emptive war, just as Japan’s attack on the US was, and for very much the same reason. As such, they were example of offensive tactics used in what was perceived as a defensive strategy.

It should be noted that several countries, such as Italy, ignored their “entangling alliances” and acted in what they saw as their own interests.


11 posted on 12/13/2013 6:47:49 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
"The Cold War is over."

Really? And who do you think won that war?

12 posted on 12/13/2013 6:50:06 AM PST by DJ Taylor (Once again our country is at war, and once again the Democrats have sided with our enemy.)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Not a bit of our business.

China IS going to regain status as a major economic and military power in the world. I don’t blame them for seeing it as their right to be a superpower.

We got into a world of hurt before getting involved in struggles between Japan and China.

The entirety of southeast Asia is not worth he blood of one American seaman.


13 posted on 12/13/2013 6:54:34 AM PST by RedStateRocker (Nuke Mecca, abolish the IRS, DEA and ATF.)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

I agree.


14 posted on 12/13/2013 6:58:42 AM PST by LowTaxesEqualsProsperity
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

War comes from weakness, not strength.

Let’s keep showing strength.

Then, war will not come.


15 posted on 12/13/2013 6:58:59 AM PST by G Larry (Let his days be few; and let another take his office. Psalms 109:8)
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To: BenLurkin

No one lives on these rocks that China and Japan have disputed for centuries.


16 posted on 12/13/2013 6:59:36 AM PST by LowTaxesEqualsProsperity
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To: G Larry

But if we endlessly show strength on the other side of the world we are dissipating the strength needed to protect the vital points closer to home. The military proverb says if you try to defend everywhere, you end up defending nothing.


17 posted on 12/13/2013 7:09:25 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: LowTaxesEqualsProsperity

In the mid 90’s the reds were firing ballistic missiles over Taiwan. We shouldn’t make more of this than it is.


18 posted on 12/13/2013 7:09:44 AM PST by USNBandit (sarcasm engaged at all times)
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To: grania
In this case I agree - our national interests are apparent in doing what is possible to impede an aggressively expansionist china.

I don't know if war is necessary - but we should definitely explore the options.

19 posted on 12/13/2013 7:31:18 AM PST by skeeter
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To: LowTaxesEqualsProsperity

My understanding is China never contested ownership of the Senkakus until 69 when oil was discovered.


20 posted on 12/13/2013 7:32:08 AM PST by skeeter
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