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– China, Growing Superpower
U.S. and E.U. at Odds over Arms Embargo on China
by Seung-Ryun Kim
The U.S. and the E.U., frequently conflicting with each other since the
Iraqi war, are waging psychological warfare again over lifting the arms
embargo on China.
The Korean government is also paying careful attention, saying, “If
China begins to buy up-to-date arms, it is imposing a burden on Korea as
China began a quiet war with Korea over the distortion of Goguryo
history” on August 10.
Does China Equip Itself with Up-to-date Arms?-
The measure of the arms embargo on China dates back the Tienanmen Square
uprising in 1989. At that time, the U.S. and the E.U. declared, “We
cannot sell arms unless the Chinese government takes epoch-making
measures to improve human rights.”
| While the U.S. has pursued
a foreign policy stressing power, the E.U. has opposed the sole
superpower system of the U.S. |
Fifteen years later, the E.U. is showing its intention to resuming
exports. French President Jaques Chirac, who began to arouse public
opinion, clearly showed his will to resume exports by saying some time
ago, “The arms embargo upon China does not fit in with the reality of
the international order.”
Presently, Chinese unofficial national defense annual expenditures are
around $70 billion, ranking third in the world. However, Russian arms
that can hardly be called “the spearhead” make up the bulk of China’s
major military capacity. This is a market in which defense companies in
the E.U. could be covetous as they have been hit hard due to reduced war
expenditures of the E.U. members.
But U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell clarified the lifting of the
embargo as premature by saying, “Has there been any improvement in
Chinese human rights?”
The E.U. and China are going to come to a conclusion after discussing
this matter in the seventh annual summit held in Hague of the
Netherlands, the E.U.’s chair, on December 8 this year. However,
considering the E.U. constitution that major policy decisions should be
adopted unanimously, some say it is not predictable whether it could be
achieved in a situation where at least four nations object to any
lifting of the embargo now.
The Korean government is watching this case carefully from a viewpoint
of reorganizing the U.S. Forces in Korea. It is because the U.S. army in
both Korea and Japan will be committed when China comes into conflict
into Taiwan if this force takes the role of regional stability after
being reorganized as a rapid-reaction force. And in this case, the
Korean army also could intervene indirectly.
Different Views between the U.S. and the E.U.-
The U.S. and the E.U. have shown discord, unlike the Cold War era, ever
since the George W. Bush administration came into power in the U.S.
While the U.S. has pursued a foreign policy stressing power, the E.U.
has opposed the sole superpower system of the U.S.
A representative neocon (neo-conservatives) theorist and the former
Assistant Secretary of State Robert Kagan insisted, “Abandon the idea
that the U.S. and Europe will have one voice.” According to his
explanation, the U.S. intervened because it has an ability to do so in
international issues whereas Europe remained a spectator because it lost
its ability to solve international conflicts.
In relation to the controversy over lifting the arms embargo on China, a
former policy aide in the Unification Ministry, Jeon Bong-keun,
analyzed, “The U.S. considers China as an object to restrain, but in
Europe, both the view that cooperation with China can keep the
international order and economic utilitarianism are appearing in a
complex way.”
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