CENTER TO KAIFU: ‘HOLD THAT LINE’ ON SOVIET AID

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(Washington, D.C.): On the eve of
Japanese Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu’s
meeting with President Bush in
Kennebunkport during the run-up to the
London Economic Summit next week, media
reports from Tokyo have signalled that
Japan does not believe that it will be
isolated at the G-7 sessions on the
question of large-scale aid to the USSR.

Typically, such a statement would mean
that any subsequent capitulation to the
coming, immense pressure from Germany,
Italy, France and U.S. — pressure aimed
at inducing Tokyo to reach into its deep
pockets to help prop up Mikhail
Gorbachev’s tottering regime — would
amount to a debilitating loss of
face for the Japanese
. For
Western taxpayers, such statements offer the
only hope
that such a
strategically and economically
ill-advised G-7 initiative can either be
thwarted in favor of direct assistance to
reformist republics or, at a minimum,
postponed pending the construction of
market-oriented institutions and a proven
track-record of structural reform in the
USSR.

Virtually alone among Western
governments, Japan has spurned Soviet
appeals to date for substantial
taxpayer-underwritten credit and
investment guarantees.
In this
regard, the Soviet Union’s continued
refusal to meet legitimate Japanese
demands concerning the Northern
Territories, which were summarily ripped
off by Josef Stalin at the end of the
Second World War, have provided a
reasonable and convenient excuse for
Tokyo’s posture on aid to Moscow. Even if
this precondition were fully
satisfied
, however, Japan
would be unlikely to accede to Moscow’s
demands for the same reasons that the
United States and other Western nations
should decline to do so
:
Premature, unconditioned, large-scale aid
to Moscow center will postpone,
not catalyze, systemic reform and
unnecessarily expose taxpayers to massive
financial losses.

Unfortunately, there is some reason to
believe that Prime Minister Kaifu is less
seized with these problems than are his
experts in the Ministries of Foreign
Affairs and Finance. For example, last
fall, a representative of the Prime
Minister — then-Secretary General of the
ruling LDP party Ishiro Ozawa —
reportedly undertook in a private meeting
in the USSR with Gorbachev to arrange a
$28 billion islands-for-assistance deal.
Unbeknownst to the competent Japanese
authorities, the Ozawa initiative
evidently had the approval of Prime
Minister Kaifu. It is unclear whether the
Prime Minister has learned the proper,
bitter lesson from this experience or
whether he, like a number of his G-7
colleagues, will find it difficult to
resist the temptation to place short-term
political expediency — masquerading
as statesmanship
— above long-term
national and Western strategic interests.

Accordingly, the Bush-Kaifu meeting
will be an important, early test of
Japan’s willingness to break with the
past and to begin to demonstrate global
political leadership commensurate with
its economic stature. This would involve
standing by its principles (particularly
those associated with the Northern
Territories policy) and sensible
commercial interests. Should it choose,
on the other hand, to fold under
the so-called “consensus” view
of the G-7 leaders, it will have lost
this historic opportunity to:

  • protect the common
    interests of Japanese and other
    Western taxpayers in a
    non-creditworthy Soviet
    marketplace
    ;
  • catalyze the genuine
    structural transformation of the
    Soviet economic and political
    systems
    by withholding
    premature assistance flows;
  • save billions in
    additional Western defense
    spending
    annually that
    would otherwise be required to
    counter the consequences of
    propping up the Gorbachev regime
    and its military-industrial
    complex — a potentially
    major new form of Japanese
    defense
    “burden-sharing”
    ;
    and
  • reduce Moscow’s
    capability to continue funding
    dangerous Soviet client-states

    such as North Korea, Syria,
    Vietnam and Cuba.

A number of other portentous
developments are also emerging in the
run-up to the London Economic Summit:

  • It is now evident that the
    Center has been correct in
    predicting that large-scale
    Western assistance to the
    strategic Soviet energy sector
    will emerge as the
    “Stealth” agenda item
    for the G-7 Summit
    .
    Straws in the wind on this score
    include repeated official
    references and press leaks
    concerning the likelihood that
    Western nations will: help Moscow
    center build or refurbish oil and
    natural gas export pipelines and
    other related infrastructure;
    undertake to enhance secondary
    recovery at existing Soviet oil
    fields; expand further Western
    Europe’s already inordinately
    high dependency on Soviet gas
    supplies; and permit the
    Kremlin’s discretionary use
    of billions of dollars of newly
    generated income from the Soviet
    energy sector.
  • Boris Yeltsin and other
    ostensibly reform-minded
    democratic leaders have
    associated themselves with
    Gorbachev’s fundraising campaign
    at the London summit and more
    generally have lent vital
    credibility to Moscow center’s
    program of economic
    half-measures. In so
    doing, they have done less to
    legitimize the central
    authorities’ efforts to stave off
    needed structural reforms than
    they have called into
    question their own commitment

    to the urgent implementation of
    wholesale, systemic political and
    economic change.
  • Disturbing new evidence is
    accumulating that the
    cease-fire agreement concluded
    under EC supervision last weekend
    in Brioni
    — intended to
    create a framework for the
    peaceful resolution of the
    Yugoslav drama — is in
    fact being cynically exploited by
    the Serbian authorities and their
    allies in the military to lay the
    groundwork for a massive, bloody
    assault on the freedom-bound
    republics
    of Croatia and
    Slovenia after the television
    lights of the London Summit are
    turned off.
  • Such evidence includes: the
    federal army freely equipping
    segments of the Serbian
    population, including those in
    the Croatian enclave of Krajina,
    with increasingly sophisticated
    weaponry; substantial
    infiltration of civilian-garbed
    Serbian soldiers into key areas
    of the break-away republics; the
    mobilization of over 200,000
    Serbian troops in addition to
    regular army forces to an
    advanced state of readiness; and
    the deployment of mines around
    Slovenian and Croatian barracks
    to which, pursuant the Brioni
    agreement, republic militias have
    withdrawn.

Center for Security Policy

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