Asia's reckoning China, Japan, and the fate of U.S. power in the Pacific century

Richard McGregor, 1958-

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
New York : Viking [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard McGregor, 1958- (author)
Physical Description
xvii, 396 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 357-382) and index.
ISBN
9780399562679
Contents unavailable.
Review by Choice Review

McGregor, a top British journalist specializing in Asia who's known for his 2010 study of the Chinese Communist Party (CH, Jan'11, 48-2930), details the ups and downs of postwar China-Japan-US tensions. Episodically, Beijing tries to lure Tokyo into a more neutral position but always fails. China uses commercial deals as bait and constantly plays "history wars" to try to shame Japan. Japanese prime ministers may apologize for wartime atrocities but still visit Yasukuni Shrine to honor war dead, igniting Beijing's howls. China periodically encourages anti-Japan rage but calms it before it gets out of hand. Beijing has always claimed the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands, but didn't push it until China sensed its strength and US and Japanese weakness. All three try to play off one against the other, but often blunder by inflexibly demanding too much. Replete with anecdotal and archival quotes, McGregor sees ominous trends as the three nations' policy options narrow and harden. He just mentions Trump and wrote before the current Korea crisis, which, unfortunately, fits all too well with his sense of foreboding. Asia's reckoning is heavy on details and personalities but light on prognosis. Essential for all those dealing with East Asia. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals. --Michael G. Roskin, Lycoming College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Seasoned Asia correspondent McGregor (The Party) anatomizes the dynamic, often strained trilateral relationship between China, Japan, and the U.S. since WWII. His informed volume comes at a time when, in his opinion, East Asia sits at the heart of the global economy and China's aggressive foreign policy is upsetting the region's stability. McGregor reviews China's stunning rise to prosperity, beginning with the Deng Xiaoping era, and the economic expansion of East Asia as a whole, now a manufacturer of smartphones, furniture, and clothing for the world. While McGregor emphasizes the enduring American-Japanese postwar alliance, he recounts U.S. ambivalence toward Japan's emergence as an economic superpower. He also outlines a century of seemingly intractable animosity between China and Japan. Often critical of Washington's "combination of idealism and arrogance," McGregor offers detailed, vivid descriptions of America's Asian diplomacy. His work demonstrates that a long-established Pax Americana, now buffeted by rising Chinese ambitions and military power, is facing unprecedented challenges. Reviewing East Asia's toxic rivalries with balance and insight, McGregor's survey concludes ominously with President Trump's lack of familiarity with regional issues and disdain for old alliances, portending further tensions in East Asia's future. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

What do China's rise, Japan's stagnation, and the potential decline of U.S. power mean for the future of the Asia/ Pacific region? Journalist McGregor (The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers) addresses this question by providing a detailed description of diplomatic relations among the three superpowers since World War II. Examining this history provides readers with important context regarding recent disagreements between China and Japan, specifically their continued differences over historical interpretations of World War II and territorial disputes over islands in the East China Sea. The author makes a strong case that U.S. security guarantees have kept the peace in the region. However, concerns over increasing Chinese aggression and possible American drawdown from the region are prompting Japan to strengthen its position. The inclusion of fascinating anecdotes of interactions among leaders and diplomats from these countries makes this a highly enjoyable read. VERDICT Essential for readers interested in international relations or East Asian diplomatic history and a great companion volume to Clyde Prestowitz's Japan Restored, which covers overlapping topics from a future-oriented perspective. [See Prepub Alert, 4/3/17.]-Joshua Wallace, Tarleton State Univ. Lib. Stephenville, TX © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Wide-ranging study of China's re-emergence as a regional power in Asia after a long hiatus, thwarting the designs of other powers, including the United States and Russia.The presence of the U.S. in Asia, Chinese leaders argue, is a matter of choice. China's presence, conversely, is a "geopolitical reality." So writes journalist McGregor (The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers, 2010) in this far-reaching exploration of how China has been building influence in Asia while at the same time frustrating Washington's efforts to assert American superpower dominanceand even resisting it, as in a recent instance in which China seized territory claimed by the Philippines, when "Washington was outmaneuvered in what for the United States was a clarifying moment." The author further triangulates this rise with the recent re-emergence of Japan as a military presence in the regionthough, as he notes, China has been taking pains to improve relations with Japan, even as it asserts territorial claims in the East China Sea. It was for that reason that Barack Obama spent so much time cultivating Shinzo Abe and was "willing to put his personal reservationsaside to work more closely with the Japanese prime minister." Not so Obama's successor, who has been sending mixed signals to both Japan and China, threatening to cancel trade agreements and demanding that Asian nations in the American sphere pay more for their own defense. The U.S. is therefore firmly ensnared in the so-called Thucydides trap, "the principle that it is dangerous to build an empire but even more dangerous to let it go." So it is, and the current leadership appears to be at a loss about what to do or to formulate other aspects of any coherent policy in and toward Asia. Geopolitics wonks will want to give attention to this urgent but nonsensationalized argument. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

There is no shortage of scenarios in which America's postwar world comes under challenge and starts to crack. It could take the form of a draining showdown with Islamist radicals in the Middle East, a conflict with Russia that engulfs Europe, or a one-on-one superpower naval battle with China. Soon after his election, Donald Trump finished his first conversation as president-elect with Barack Obama at the White House fretting about the threat from a nuclear-armed North Korea.   In daily headlines, the jousting between China and Japan can't compete with the medieval violence of ISIS or the outsize antics of Vladimir Putin or threats from tyrants like Kim Jong Un. The rivalry between the two countries has festered, by some measures, for centuries, giving it a quality that lets it slip on and off the radar. After all, China and Japan, according to the conventional wisdom, are at their core practical nations with pragmatic leaders.   The two countries, along with Taiwan, South Korea, and Southeast Asia, sit at the heart of the global economy. The iPhones, personal computers, and flat-screen televisions in electronic shops around the world; most of the mass-produced furniture and large amounts of the cheap clothing that fill shopping centers in the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom; a vast array of industrial goods that consumers are scarcely aware of, from wires and valves to machine parts and the like--all of them, one way or another, are sourced through the supply chains anchored by Asia's two giants. With so much at stake, how could they possibly come to blows?   China and Japan's thriving commercial ties, one of the largest two-way trade relationships in the world, though, have failed to forge a closer political bond. In recent years, the relationship has taken on new and dangerous dimensions for both countries, and for the United States as well, an ally of Japan's that it has signed a treaty to defend. Far from exorcising memories of the brutal war between them that began in the early 1930s and lasted more than a decade, Japan and China are caught in a downward spiral of distrust and ill will. There has been the occasional thawing of tension and the odd uptick in diplomacy in the seventy years since the end of the war. Men and women of goodwill in both countries have dedicated their careers to improving relations. Most of these efforts, however, have come to naught.   Asia's version of the War of the Roses is being fought on multiple battlefields: on the high seas over disputed islands; in capitals around the world as each tries to convince partners and allies of the other's infamy; and in the media, in the relentless, self-righteous, and scorching exchanges over the true account and legacy of the Pacific War. The clash between Japan and China on this issue echoes a conversation between two Allied prisoners of war in Richard Flanagan's garlanded novel set on the Burma Railway in 1943, The Narrow Road to the Deep North . "Memory is the true justice, sir," a soldier says to his superior officer, explaining why he wants to hold on to souvenirs of their time in a Japanese internment camp. "Or the creator of new horrors," the officer replies.   In Europe, an acknowledgment of World War II's calamities helped bring the Continent's nations together in the aftermath of the conflict. In east Asia, by contrast, the war and its history have never been settled, politically, diplomatically, or emotionally. There has been little of the introspection and statesmanship that helped Europe to heal its wounds. Even the most basic of disagreements over history still percolate through day-to-day media coverage in Asia more than seventy years later, in baffling, insidious ways. Open a Japanese newspaper in 2017, and you might read of a heated debate about whether Japan invaded China, something that is only an issue because conservative Japanese still insist that their country was fighting a war of self-Defense in the 1930s and 1940s. Peruse the state-controlled press in China, and you will see the Communist Party drawing legitimacy from its heroic defeat of Japan, though in truth, Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists carried the burden of fighting the invaders, while the Communists mostly preserved their strength in hinterland hideouts. Scant recognition is given to the United States, who fought the Japanese for years before ending the conflict with two atomic bombs.   Although the United States and Japan are for the moment firm allies, the trilateral relationship among Washington, Tokyo, and Beijing has been fraught and complex in ways that are little understood and appreciated, often even inside the countries themselves. Each of the three, China, Japan, and the United States, at different times has tried to use one of the others to gain an ascendancy in regional diplomacy in the last century. Each at different times has felt betrayed by the others. All have tried to leverage their relations with one of the others at the expense of the third. In that respect, the relationship is like a geopolitical version of the scene in the movie Reservoir Dogs in which a trio of antagonists all simultaneously point guns at one another, creating a circle of dangerous, cascading threats.   In the east Asian version of this scenario, the United States has its arsenal trained on China. China, in turn, menaces Japan and the United States. In ways that are rarely noticed, Japan completes the triangle with its hold over the United States. If Tokyo were to lose faith in Washington and downgrade its alliance or trigger a conflict with Beijing, the effect would be the same: to upend the postwar system. In this trilateral game of chicken, only one of the parties needs to fire its weapons for all three to be thrown into war. Put another way, if China is the key to Asia, then Japan is the key to China, and the United States the key to Japan.   I left Tokyo for Hong Kong and China in 1995 after a five-year posting as a newspaper correspondent, soon after Japan's then prime minister issued a heartfelt apology for the war. At the time, I remember feeling relieved that the issue seemed to have finally been put to rest. The history wars, though, far from ending, were just getting started. Over the ensuing two decades, under pressure from the Chinese Communist Party and abetted by Japanese revisionists, the same old issues have remained stuck on the front lines of regional politics.   Like east Asia more generally, the story of Japan and China is one of stunning economic success and dangerous political failure. China in particular has a whiff of the Balkans, where many young people have a way of vividly remembering wars they never actually experienced. A sense of revenge, of unfinished business, lingers in the system.   It may not require a war, of course, to deliver the last rites for Pax Americana. Washington could simply turn its back on the world under an isolationist president, a president, in other words, who simply did what Donald Trump promised to do on the campaign trail. America could also slip into unruly decline, with a weaker economy resulting in bits of empire, no longer financially sustainable, dropping off here and there.   Alternatively, of course, Pax Americana in Asia could survive, with a resilient U.S. economy and refreshed alliances robust enough to hold off an indebted and internally focused China. Indeed, it is unlikely that the United States will leave the region quietly. As Michael Green, a former U.S. government official, notes, over more than a century in the Asia- Pacific, Washington has beaten back quests for regional dominance "from the European powers, Imperial Japan and Soviet Communism."   The specter of a renewed Sinocentric order in Asia, though, is upending the regional status quo for good, whatever path the United States might take. Geopolitically, the three countries have increasingly become two, with Japan aligning itself more tightly with the United States than at any time in the seven decades-plus since the war. China, too, has changed. Once, Beijing begrudgingly accepted America's Asian alliances as a tool to keep the Soviets at bay and stabilize the region. Since the end of the cold war, its attitude has shifted, from frustration with America's enduring military footprint in Asia to outright rejection of the alliances as "cold war relics" that threaten China's security. As its power has grown, China has begun building a new regional order, with Beijing at the center in place of Washington. The battle lines are clear. For decades, the United States has set its forward defensive line against rival hegemons in the region in different places before establishing it firmly along and around the Japanese archipelago, where it stands today. Excerpted from Asia's Reckoning: China, Japan, and the Fate of U. S. Power in the Pacific Century by Richard McGregor All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.