http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/04/11/opinion/edbowring.html


UN power play drives China protests 
 Philip Bowring 
 Tuesday, April 12, 2005


HONG KONG There could scarcely be a sharper contrast than between the bonhomie 
displayed by China's prime minister, Wen Jiabao, on his current tour of South 
Asia and China's behavior towards its North Asian neighbor, Japan. The 
anti-Japanese demonstrations during the weekend, and some only slightly less 
nationalistic outbursts in South Korea, are not just forewarnings of future 
tensions in the region. They have implications for global governance and the 
United Nations system - in which India, in particular, would like to play a 
larger role. 
.
The demonstrations in China may have got out of hand, but there is no doubt 
that they were initiated with the connivance of the authorities. While the old 
issue of Japanese school textbook versions of Japan's occupation of China was 
one pretext, the main trigger was Japan's push to become a permanent member of 
the UN Security Council. 
.
It is always a worrying sign when students vent their wrath against foreigners 
rather than campaigning against injustices at home - and when governments drum 
up nationalist sentiments to divert attention from their own failings. The 
demands for apologies for Japan's past sins have been highly selective. 
.
It is true that Japan has not been as contrite as one would wish and the visits 
by Japan's prime minister to Yasukuni Shrine, where some war criminals are 
buried, are poor diplomacy. But plenty of British textbooks, for example, show 
scant regard for Chinese views of the Opium Wars or the destruction of the 
Summer Palace. Likewise many American ones gloss over the massacres that 
accompanied the "civilizing" U.S. occupation of the Philippines. Queen 
Elizabeth II has not apologized to Indians for the Amritsar massacre and 
statues commemorating the bloody exploits of British imperialists are two a 
penny in London. Beijing also likes to forget that for much of Asia beyond 
China and Korea, Japan's imperialism was welcomed as hastening the end of 
Western imperialism. 
.
As for the South Koreans, in their demands for more Japanese groveling they 
like to forget the fact that President Park Chung Hee, widely praised for 
masterminding their economic miracle, was himself an officer in the Japanese 
army of occupation in Manchuria. 
.
If none of this historical mud-slinging got beyond the more sensational news 
media it could be dismissed as no more relevant than the childish anti-German 
antics of Rupert Murdoch's tabloid press in Britain. But official encouragement 
of xenophobic attitudes is worrying in a region where cooperation will be vital 
when the United States is no longer both buyer and peacekeeper of last resort. 
It casts a shadow on much-advertised hopes of bilateral and regional free trade 
agreements, and currency cooperation, particularly for Southeast Asia, which 
needs Chinese-Japanese accord. 
.
China's stance on Japan's membership of the Security Council makes nonsense of 
its claims to represent the developing and upcoming world. It is a crude and 
blatant attempt to protect its privileged position as the only Asian and only 
developing country that is a permanent member of the council. If there is to be 
reform of the United Nations and expansion of the Security Council to reflect 
the world today, Japan's membership, along with that of India, Germany and 
Brazil, is essential. 
.
Proposals for UN reform are due to be debated in September. The most favored 
new model for the Security Council is for an additional six permanent and three 
nonpermanent members, none with veto power. Discussion may get nowhere, as the 
United States, as well as China, appears to oppose enlargement, and Britain and 
France seem unwilling to give any ground in return for Germany's membership. A 
more limited enlargement might attract U.S. backing. 
.
Any country that purports to want greater Asian representation deserves bitter 
criticism if in practice it thwarts the aspirations of Japan and India. 
Pakistan's objection to India's membership is just as petty as South Korea's 
objection to Japan's. They show governments driven by the most narrow and 
self-centered considerations. 
.
Perhaps China's outburst of jingoism toward Japan will persuade the United 
States to take a more favorable view of Security Council reform, recognizing 
that a larger permanent membership (without veto powers) would be in its 
longer-term interest. China, of course, could still veto such enlargement, but 
is unlikely to do so. Its leaders usually have a better understanding of its 
global interests than displayed by the current outburst in Beijing. 
.
.
See more of the world that matters - click here for home delivery of the 
International Herald Tribune. 
.
< < Back to Start of Article 
HONG KONG There could scarcely be a sharper contrast than between the bonhomie 
displayed by China's prime minister, Wen Jiabao, on his current tour of South 
Asia and China's behavior towards its North Asian neighbor, Japan. The 
anti-Japanese demonstrations during the weekend, and some only slightly less 
nationalistic outbursts in South Korea, are not just forewarnings of future 
tensions in the region. They have implications for global governance and the 
United Nations system - in which India, in particular, would like to play a 
larger role. 
.
The demonstrations in China may have got out of hand, but there is no doubt 
that they were initiated with the connivance of the authorities. While the old 
issue of Japanese school textbook versions of Japan's occupation of China was 
one pretext, the main trigger was Japan's push to become a permanent member of 
the UN Security Council. 
.
It is always a worrying sign when students vent their wrath against foreigners 
rather than campaigning against injustices at home - and when governments drum 
up nationalist sentiments to divert attention from their own failings. The 
demands for apologies for Japan's past sins have been highly selective. 
.
It is true that Japan has not been as contrite as one would wish and the visits 
by Japan's prime minister to Yasukuni Shrine, where some war criminals are 
buried, are poor diplomacy. But plenty of British textbooks, for example, show 
scant regard for Chinese views of the Opium Wars or the destruction of the 
Summer Palace. Likewise many American ones gloss over the massacres that 
accompanied the "civilizing" U.S. occupation of the Philippines. Queen 
Elizabeth II has not apologized to Indians for the Amritsar massacre and 
statues commemorating the bloody exploits of British imperialists are two a 
penny in London. Beijing also likes to forget that for much of Asia beyond 
China and Korea, Japan's imperialism was welcomed as hastening the end of 
Western imperialism. 
.
As for the South Koreans, in their demands for more Japanese groveling they 
like to forget the fact that President Park Chung Hee, widely praised for 
masterminding their economic miracle, was himself an officer in the Japanese 
army of occupation in Manchuria. 
.
If none of this historical mud-slinging got beyond the more sensational news 
media it could be dismissed as no more relevant than the childish anti-German 
antics of Rupert Murdoch's tabloid press in Britain. But official encouragement 
of xenophobic attitudes is worrying in a region where cooperation will be vital 
when the United States is no longer both buyer and peacekeeper of last resort. 
It casts a shadow on much-advertised hopes of bilateral and regional free trade 
agreements, and currency cooperation, particularly for Southeast Asia, which 
needs Chinese-Japanese accord. 
.
China's stance on Japan's membership of the Security Council makes nonsense of 
its claims to represent the developing and upcoming world. It is a crude and 
blatant attempt to protect its privileged position as the only Asian and only 
developing country that is a permanent member of the council. If there is to be 
reform of the United Nations and expansion of the Security Council to reflect 
the world today, Japan's membership, along with that of India, Germany and 
Brazil, is essential. 
.
Proposals for UN reform are due to be debated in September. The most favored 
new model for the Security Council is for an additional six permanent and three 
nonpermanent members, none with veto power. Discussion may get nowhere, as the 
United States, as well as China, appears to oppose enlargement, and Britain and 
France seem unwilling to give any ground in return for Germany's membership. A 
more limited enlargement might attract U.S. backing. 
.
Any country that purports to want greater Asian representation deserves bitter 
criticism if in practice it thwarts the aspirations of Japan and India. 
Pakistan's objection to India's membership is just as petty as South Korea's 
objection to Japan's. They show governments driven by the most narrow and 
self-centered considerations. 
.
Perhaps China's outburst of jingoism toward Japan will persuade the United 
States to take a more favorable view of Security Council reform, recognizing 
that a larger permanent membership (without veto powers) would be in its 
longer-term interest. China, of course, could still veto such enlargement, but 
is unlikely to do so. Its leaders usually have a better understanding of its 
global interests than displayed by the current outburst in Beijing. 

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