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US needs to play constructive role and rein-in Japan
AS US Vice President Joe Biden embarked on his weeklong East Asia trip on Sunday, analysts wondered if he was aware of his country’s higher stakes in the region caused by Japan’s increasingly rightward shift.
During his visit in Beijing more than two years ago, Mr Biden unexpectedly dined at a small Chinese restaurant for traditional local snacks.
Despite all the controversial speculations about his motive, one thing was sure: Mr Biden did try to get close to ordinary Chinese as he understood that it was in Washington’s interests to ameliorate US relations with China.
China’s determination to boost its market-oriented and consumer-driven economy would offer tremendous opportunities for the United States to foster its own economic growth and further shrink its jobless population.
Several days ago, US National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice spoke at length about tje US-Asia relationship at Georgetown University.
In her remarks, Rice reaffirmed that “rebalancing toward the Asia Pacific” remains a “cornerstone” of the Obama Administration’s foreign policy, adding that Washington seeks a new model of major country relations with Beijing, a concept already agreed to by the presidents of both nations.
However, tensions are running ever higher in East Asia as right-wing politicians in Japan continue to roll out inflammatory statements and actions, starting with nationalizing China’s Diaoyu Islands.
This has overshadowed the fresh prospects for China-US cooperation, if not thwarted them.
Right now, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his cabinet are sailing Japan’s ship of state at full speed to the far right. It seems to them that the only feasible path for Japan to be a “normal country” is to deny its wartime crimes and build an armed force that would stir another round of arms race in the region.
It’s somewhat understandable that Washington wants to do something to shore up its little brother.
Yet when Tokyo keeps offending almost everybody in the region by its attitude toward its wartime history, these actions will ultimately cost the United States more than it would gain from backing a country that still honors those whose hands were red with American blood.
Moreover, if Japan continues with its adventurous moves, while those who are capable of reining in it fail to act Ñ or even embolden it Ñ there will likely be a day when the situation spirals out of control, and everybody in the region has to give up on their blueprints for development in the face of a broken peace.
A far-sighted Washington should play a constructive role in the region, ending its indulgence of Japan’s recklessness in exchange for a mess of pottage, and persuading Japan not to go too far. Otherwise, the Obama administration might have to rebalance toward an Asia-Pacific it very much wants to flee.
The author is a Xinhua writer.
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