airsuperiority
Captain
Re: Abe cites Thatcher reflections on Falklands war
actually he's just trying, in a very sly way, to "legitimize" japan's claims by referring and using a real-life case and applying that's also what they're doing. japan learned how to play the cards of being part of the "right crowd" since the late-1800s meiji era(something they learned as a very important thing). with now, it's given.
and i totally agree with the "first point". thats exactly what the f--king problem is today.
Actually, I suspect that Abe is making the comparison to imply that Japan would win against China in a military conflict over DYT. This is yet another signal (the other being the radar lock accusation) that Abe is actively trying to start a fight.
Look, I know some forumites scoff at comparisons between current events and WW2 China-Japan relations, but I would point out that institutions often have their own memory.
First, I would note that the current Japanese government is composed in large part by the descendants of those who were in power during WW2. Second, I would note that the current DYT crisis is the lowest point in Sino-Japanese relations since WW2.
I would posit that the current Japanese administration has no idea how to engage an assertive and, to their view, belligerent China. Therefore, they are falling back on "institutional memory", that is, the last time Japan had to engage China as a potential adversary.
And this is why I am starting to find Abe's comments and actions sinister. The radar lock accusation is ominously reminiscent of the "missing soldiers" pretext shortly before the Marco Polo Bridge incident. Add to that the comparison with the Falklands War, and it's starting to become obvious that Japan is trying to intimidate China, much as they had done, with much success, during WW2.
Unfortunately for them, the CCP is a vastly different breed from Chiang's Nationalists, and I think Abe is going to miscalculate very badly.
actually he's just trying, in a very sly way, to "legitimize" japan's claims by referring and using a real-life case and applying that's also what they're doing. japan learned how to play the cards of being part of the "right crowd" since the late-1800s meiji era(something they learned as a very important thing). with now, it's given.
and i totally agree with the "first point". thats exactly what the f--king problem is today.