Washington's two key allies in Asia, Japan and South Korea,
have been increasingly worried that the US is not fully committed to providing
them security at a time when North Korea appears to be actively pursuing
nuclear weapons and tensions in the South China Sea are rising, analyst Michael
Crowley asserted.
Some in Tokyo and Seoul have apparently
contemplated opting for a measure of last resort when it comes to security —
acquiring nuclear weapons as a means to deter potential North Korean
aggression.
This idea, even if marginal, marks a major departure for Japan , a country that has forsworn nuclear
weapons following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki
during WWII. In March, Osaka Governor Ichiro Matsui said that the nation should
discuss the issue and decide whether to go nuclear or not.
"With the perfect right to collective self-defense, we
should debate whether our troops can completely cover the needs of our own
country," Matsui told reporters. "If we possess weapons, the ultimate
weapon will become necessary."
In 2011, Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara urged Japanese
authorities to develop nuclear weapons.
"Pro-nuclear weapons sentiment in Japan remains mostly on the far right, to be
sure," Crowley
explained. "But the same conversation is brewing in South Korea ,
where a 2013 poll found that two-thirds of the country supports developing
nukes in response to its bellicose northern neighbor."
Should Washington's two key allies in the region decide to
explore this option, the move could spark a nuclear arms race in Asia, offering
a disturbing vision of what the analyst referred to as a "dangerous atomic
future."
It is against this backdrop that US President Barack Obama,
who has long advocated denuclearization efforts in the world, will visit Hiroshima on May 27.
(PNA/Sputnik)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=887705
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.