Paul Joseph Watson
January 23, 2014
January 23, 2014
Harvard Professor Ezra Vogel warned of the devastating
consequences of a potential war between China and Japan during a
conference in Beijing.
Vogel, a Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences
Emeritus at Harvard University, is an expert sinologist having written
extensively on relations between the two countries for decades.
During his speech, Vogel highlighted Japan’s historical
revisionism, characterized by the refusal in Japanese school textbooks
to accept responsibility for the second world war, as well as the
territorial dispute over the Senkaku Islands, as the two key factors
driving hostilities.
“Any potential war between the two nations would be devastating to both, Vogel said,” according to the Want China Times,
“adding that it would take at least 10 years for Beijing and Tokyo to
resume normalized relations if a third Sino-Japanese war were to take
place.”
Vogel also urged Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to stop
visiting the the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo that honors 14 war criminals
who were executed as a result of post-war Allied tribunals. During his speech at
Davos yesterday, Abe warned that the global community must restrain
military expansion in Asia. Although he didn’t name them directly, Abe’s
comments were obviously aimed at Beijing.
Vogel’s warning arrives concurrently with analysis by
Moscow-based Expert magazine which suggests that the United States would
easily defeat China in a potential nuclear war because Beijing is
reliant on decades-old Soviet technology. Back in November, Chinese
state-run media released a map showing
the locations of major U.S. cities and how they would be impacted by a
nuclear strike launched from the PLA’s strategic submarine force.
Earlier this week, state media reported that China’s new hypersonic missile vehicle is primarily designed to target U.S. aircraft carriers.
A deluge of aggressive rhetoric has emerged out of
official Communist Party organs in recent months, including discussion
about China’s ability to attack US military bases in the Western Pacific,
as well as a lengthy editorial which appeared in Chinese state media
last month explaining how the Chinese military’s current reformation
process was part of a move by President Xi Jinping to prepare the People’s Liberation Army for war.
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