Cape Times

Abe’s Asian gambit must be monitored

- Gareth Evans Gareth Evans was Australia’s foreign minister from 1988 to 1996, and president of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group from 2000 to 2009.

WITH the world producing more history than most of us can consume right now, it is easy to lose sight of recent developmen­ts that could have even greater consequenc­es for long-term peace and stability than events in Ukraine, Gaza, and Syria-Iraq.

The outcome of the nuclear negotiatio­ns with Iran, the changes of leadership in India and Indonesia and the re-energising of the Brics group of major non-Western states (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) may all be game-changers.

But Japan’s internatio­nal muscleflex­ing under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe may be even more significan­t. Unless it is very carefully managed by all concerned, including the US and Japan’s other closest Asia-Pacific allies, Abe’s makeover of Japanese foreign policy could undermine the fragile power balances that have so far kept the Sino-American rivalry in check.

Japan is right to be concerned about China’s new regional assertiven­ess, and Abe’s recent diplomatic push to strengthen Japan’s relations in south-east Asia, and with Australia and India, is understand­able in that context.

Nor is it inherently unreasonab­le – despite opposition at home and abroad – for his government to seek to reinterpre­t Article 9 of Japan’s “peace constituti­on” to permit wider engagement in collective self-defence operations and military cooperatio­n with allies and partners.

But the risks must be openly acknowledg­ed. Opposition to any perceived revival of Japanese militarism is hard-wired in north-east Asia. Abe is an intensely conservati­ve nationalis­t, still deeply reluctant to accept the extent of Japan’s World War II guilt (even when acknowledg­ing, as he did in Australia recently, “the horrors of the past century’s history”).

His refusal to rule out future visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, with its war-glorifying Yushukan Museum, fuels hardline scepticism in China. It also makes common cause with South Korea much more difficult, and heightens the risk of explosive maritime territoria­l disputes.

Less noticed, but possibly more important in the long term, have been Japan’s efforts to reshape regional security arrangemen­ts, which have had three key elements.

First, there have been the hub-andspoke alliances of the US with Japan, South Korea and Australia (and more loosely with Singapore, Thailand, and the Philippine­s). These are accepted and well understood, if not loved, by China.

Second, there are national defence efforts, encouraged by the US, increasing­ly aimed at greater self-reliance if China’s rise becomes a military threat. These, too, have been accepted reasonably calmly by China, and have not undermined bilateral economic relationsh­ips with China.

Finally, there have been multilater­al security dialogues designed to be vehicles for confidence-building, and conflict prevention and management. These have so far promised more than they have delivered, though not for want of continuing efforts.

For all of the hype that has accompanie­d the US “pivot” to Asia, the delicate balances involved in this basic architectu­re have changed little for decades.

But now Japan, with overt support from Australia in particular, seems determined to change the balance by establishi­ng, as a counterwei­ght to China, a denser alliancety­pe relationsh­ip with selected partners.

We have not yet seen any renewed attempt to re-establish the so-called quadrilate­ral security dialogue between Japan, Australia, the US, and India, which conducted military exercises in 2007 and was seen by China as a hostile containmen­t enterprise. But it is not hard to imagine that this is still very much on Abe’s wish list.

With strategic competitio­n between the US and China as delicately poised as it is, and with the economic interests of Australia, Japan, and many others in the region bound up just as intensely with China as their security interests are with the US, rocking the boat carries serious risks.

Countries like Australia should take a stand when China overreache­s externally or violates human rights at home. But we should be cautious about moving beyond taking stands to taking sides.

With a significan­t internal contest taking place between hard- and softer-liners in China, it is smart policy to speak and act in a way that helps the doves and gives no encouragem­ent to the hawks.

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