-Caveat Lector-

>>

>>> Date: Thu, 25 Mar 1999 17:56:47 -0600 (CST)

>>> From: "C. G. Estabrook"

>>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>>> Subject: Japan bombs New Mexico

>>>

>>> The following is a translation of last night's

>>> speech by the Prime Minister of Japan, explaining

>>> why the Japanese air force bombed military bases

>>> and command-and-control installations in the

>>> American Southwest:

>>>

>>> "My fellow citizens:

>>> Today our armed forces joined our allies

>>> in the Pacific Rim Organization for National

>>> Treaty Observance in air strikes against American

>>> forces responsible for the brutality in New

>>> Mexico. We have acted with resolve for several reasons.

>>> We act to protect thousands of innocent

>>> people in New Mexico from a mounting military

>>> offensive by the `border patrol.' We act to defuse

>>> a powder keg at the heart of North America that

>>> has exploded twice before in the last century and

>>> a half with catastrophic results, when the US

>>> invaded Mexico in 1846 and 1916. We act to stand

>>> united with our allies for peace. By acting now,

>>> we are upholding our values, protecting our

>>> interests, and advancing the cause of peace.

>>> Tonight I want to speak with you about the

>>> tragedy in New Mexico and why it matters to Japan

>>> that we work with our allies to end it.

>>>

>>> First, let me explain what it is we are

>>> responding to. New Mexico is a state of the

>>> United States, in the middle of southwestern North

>>> America, about 1500 miles west of Cuba -- that's

>>> less than the distance from Hokkaido to Okinawa --

>>> and only about 1000 miles north of Mexico City.

>>> Its people are mostly ethnic Latino and mostly

>>> Catholic.

>>>

>>> In recent years America's leader, Bill

>>> Clinton, the same leader who started the wars in

>>> Iraq and Colombia and attacked Sudan and

>>> Afghanistan in the last decade, increased the

>>> authority of the federal

>>> secret police, the `INS'; Mexicans are denied

>>> their right to speak their language, run their

>>> schools, shape their daily lives. For years,

>>> Latinos struggled peacefully to get their rights

>>> back. When President Clinton

>>> sent his troops and police to crush them, the

>>> struggle grew violent.

>>>

>>> The American leaders refuse even to

>>> discuss key elements of the Japanese peace

>>> proposal. America has stationed Marines along the

>>> border in preparation for a major offensive.

>>> We've seen innocent people taken from their homes,

>>> forced to kneel in the dirt and sprayed with

>>> bullets; Mexican men dragged from their families,

>>> fathers and sons together lined up and shot in

>>> cold blood. This is not war in the traditional

>>> sense. It is an attack by armored vehicles and

>>> high-tech weapons on a largely defenseless people

>>> whose leaders speak only of peace.

>>>

>>> Ending this tragedy is a moral

>>> imperative. It is also important to Japan's

>>> national interests. Take a look at the map. New

>>> Mexico is a small place, but it sits on a major

>>> fault line between North America,

>>> Latin America, and the Pacific, at the meeting

>>> place of Catholicism and both the liberal and

>>> evangelical branches of Protestantism. To the

>>> South are our allies, Peru (whose president is of

>>> Japanese descent) and Venezuela (which produces oil); to the north our

>>> increasingly important trading partner, Canada.

>>> And all around New Mexico there are other

>>> states struggling with their own economic and

>>> political challenges, states that could be

>>> overwhelmed by a large new wave of refugees from

>>> New Mexico -- California, Texas, Arizona. All the

>>> ingredients for a major war are there: Ancient

>>> grievances, struggling democracies, and in the

>>> center of it all, a president in America of highly

>>> questionable personal character who has done

>>> nothing since the Cold War ended but start new

>>> wars and pour gasoline on the flames of ethnic and

>>> religious division.

>>>

>>> In neighboring Guatemala President Clinton

>>> recently acknowledged that American support for

>>> torture and murder cost 200,000 lives. Earlier,

>>> World War II engulfed the Pacific. In both wars,

>>> the world was slow to recognize the dangers, and

>>> Japan held back from entering these conflicts.

>>> Just imagine if leaders back then had acted wisely

>>> and early enough. How many lives could have been

>>> saved? How many Japanese would not have had to

>>> die?

>>>

>>> We learned some of the same lessons in

>>> Nicaragua and El Salvador a decade ago. The

>>> world did not act early enough to stop those wars,

>>> either. And let's not forget what happened:

>>> Innocent people herded into concentration camps;

>>> children gunned down by snipers on their way to

>>> school; soccer fields and parks turned into

>>> cemeteries; a quarter of a million people killed

>>> not because of anything they had done but because

>>> of who they were. Two million Central Americans

>>> became refugees.

>>>

>>> This was genocide in the heart of the

>>> Americas, not in 1945 but in 1985, not in some

>>> grainy newsreel from our parents' and

>>> grandparents' time, but in our own time, testing

>>> our humanity and our resolve.

>>>

>>> At the time, many people believed nothing

>>> could be done to end the bloodshed in Central

>>> America, They said, `Well, that's just the way

>>> those people in the Americas are.' But when we and

>>> our allies in the UN joined with courageous

>>> Central Americans to stand up to the aggressors,

>>> we helped end the wars. We learned that in the

>>> Americas inaction in the face of brutality simply

>>> invites more brutality, but firmness can stop

>>> armies and save lives. We must apply that lesson

>>> in New Mexico, before what happened in Central

>>> America happens there too.

>>>

>>> Today we and our PRONTO allies agreed to

>>> do what we must do to restore the peace. Our

>>> mission is clear: to demonstrate the seriousness

>>> of PRONTO's purpose so that the American leaders

>>> understand the imperative of reversing course; to

>>> deter an even bloodier offensive against innocent

>>> civilians in New Mexico; and if necessary, to

>>> seriously damage the American military's capacity

>>> to harm the people of New Mexico. In short, if

>>> President Clinton will not make peace, we will

>>> limit his ability to make war.

>>>

>>> Now, I want to be clear with you, there

>>> are risks in this military action -- risk to our

>>> pilots and the people on the ground. America's

>>> air defenses are strong. It could decide to

>>> intensify its assault on New

>>> Mexico or to seek to harm us or our allies

>>> elsewhere. If it does, we will deliver a forceful

>>> response. Hopefully Mr. Clinton will realize his

>>> present course is self-destructive and

>>> unsustainable.

>>>

>>> If he decides to accept our peace proposal

>>> and demilitarize New Mexico, PRONTO has agreed to

>>> help to implement it with a peacekeeping force.

>>> If PRONTO is invited to do so, our troops should

>>> take part in that mission to keep the peace. But

>>> I do not intend to put our troops in New Mexico to

>>> fight a war.

>>>

>>> Do our interests in New Mexico justify the

>>> dangers to our armed forces? I thought long and

>>> hard about that question. I am convinced that the

>>> dangers of acting are far outweighed by the

>>> dangers of not acting --

>>> dangers to defenseless people and to our national

>>> interests. If we and our allies were to allow

>>> this war to continue with no response, President

>>> Clinton would read our hesitation as a license to

>>> kill. There would be many more massacres -- tens of thousands more

>>> refugees, more victims crying out for revenge.

>>> Right now our firmness is the only hope the people

>>> of New Mexico have to be able to live in their own

>>> country without having to fear for their own

>>> lives.

>>>

>>> Imagine what would happen if we and our

>>> allies decided just to look the other way as these

>>> people were massacred on PRONTO's doorstep. That

>>> would discredit PRONTO, the cornerstone on which

>>> our Pacific security rests.

>>>

>>> We must also remember that this is a

>>> conflict with no natural national boundaries. Let

>>> me ask you to look again at a map. The arrows

>>> show the movement of refugees -- north, east, and

>>> west. Already this

>>> movement is threatening the unstable democracy in

>>> Texas, which has its own Mexican minority and an

>>> Indian minority. Already American forces have

>>> made forays into Mexico, from which New Mexicans

>>> have drawn support. Mexico has a Mayan minority.

>>> Let a fire burn here in this area, and the flames

>>> will spread. Eventually key Japanese allies could

>>> be drawn into a wider conflict, which we would be

>>> forced to confront later only at far greater risk

>>> and greater cost.

>>>

>>> I have a responsibility as Prime Minister

>>> to deal with problems such as this before they do

>>> permanent harm to out national interests. Japan

>>> has a responsibility to stand with our allies when

>>> they are trying to save innocent lives and

>>> preserve peace, freedom, and stability in North

>>> America. That is what we are doing in New Mexico.

>>> If we have learned anything form the

>>> century drawing to a close, it is that if Japan is

>>> going to be prosperous and secure we need a North

>>> America that is prosperous, secure, united, and

>>> free. We need a North America that is coming

>>> together, not falling apart, a North America that

>>> shares our values and shares the burdens of

>>> leadership. That is the foundation on which the

>>> security or our children will depend. That is why

>>> I have supported NAFTA and the economic

>>> unification of North America.

>>>

>>> Now, what are the challenges to that

>>> vision of a peaceful, secure, united, stable North

>>> America? The challenge of strengthening a

>>> three-way partnership with the EU, that despite

>>> our disagreements is a constructive partner in the

>>> work of building peace. The challenge of

>>> resolving the tension between Latin and indigenous

>>> peoples, and building bridges with the Christian

>>> world. And finally the challenge of ending

>>> instability in the United States so that these

>>> bitter ethnic problems are resolved by the force

>>> of argument, not the force of arms, so that future

>>> generations of Japanese do not have to cross the

>>> Pacific to fight another terrible war. It is this

>>> challenge that we and our allies are facing in New

>>> Mexico. That is why we have acted now, because we

>>> care about saving innocent lives, because we have

>>> an interest in avoiding an even crueler and

>>> costlier war, and because our children need and

>>> deserve a peaceful, stable, free North America.

>>>

>>> Our thoughts and prayers tonight must be

>>> with the men and women of our armed forces who are

>>> undertaking this mission for the sake of our

>>> values and our children's future. May God bless

>>> them, and may God bless Japan."

>>

>>>

>>    In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is

>>distributed without charge or profit to those who have expressed a prior

>>interest in receiving this type of information for non-profit research
>and

>>                   educational purposes only.

>>

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>>               Tel.: 310-288-5003   E-mail: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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>>

>>  End the racist death penalty! Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, Alejandrina Torres,

>>        and all political prisoners and P.O.W.'s in U.S. prisons!

>>

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