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    East Asian states caught between popular demands and empire
    
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         States in general caught between 
		popular demands and empire
	    States in general caught between 
		popular demands and empire
    
    
    - China slams scheming US plans for an
      Iraq after Saddam
- AFP Thursday 9 January 2003. Official Chinese media
	    stepped up the rhetoric against Washington, slamming
	    scheming US plans for an Iraq after Saddam Hussein,
	    which it said were illegal. The U.S. has no authority,
	    legal or moral, over the fate of Iraq as a sovereign
	    state. The planned US postwar military presence is
	    unnecessary and the country of Iraq does not have to be
	    stabilized until it is unstabilized.
- Price of backing U.S. against Iraq
- Editorial, The Japan Times, 3
	    March 2003. The Japanese government, expected to support
	    U.S. military action, feels the economic impact will be
	    temporary. Higher oil prices will have a relatively
	    small effect on Japan. Another scenario is that in the
	    event of war, the Japanese economy will contract as consumer
	    spending and business investment drop. Japan, plagued by
	    ballooning budget deficits, finds itself in a situation
	    similar to that of Germany.
- China Calls for Immediate Halt to War on
      Iraq
- By Brian Rhoads, Reuters, Thursday 20 March
	    2003. China, in a surprisingly strong reaction to the
	    start of the U.S.-led war against Iraq, called on Thursday
	    for an immediate halt to military action and a return to
	    efforts to resolve the crisis peacefully. Beijing chose to
	    focus on the primacy of the U.N. Security Council in world
	    affairs. The U.S. ignored the opposition of most countries
	    and peoples of the world and went around the U.N. Security
	    Council to begin military action against Iraq.
- Japan reiterates support to US on Iraq
      war
- Agence France-Presse, Tokyo, 23 March 2003. Japanese
	    Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi on Sunday underscored his
	    support for the war on Iraq, describing the United States
	    as an absolutely invaluable ally . Despite a vast
	    majority of Japanese opposing the war in Iraq and his own
	    approval rating, Koizumi is stepping up his support for
	    the US action.
- After Iraq, US may turn to China: Analysts
      Press Trust of India
- The Hindustan Times. 26 March
	    2003. The Iraq war has convinced the Chinese Communist
	    Party leadership that some form of confrontation with the
	    U.S. could come earlier than expected. Beijing has begun
	    to fine-tune its domestic and security policies to counter
	    the perceived threat of US neo-imperialism. Alarm bells
	    about a deteriorating international situation.
- Additional troops unlikely
- Korean Herald,, 27 March
	    2003. The Defense Ministry said yesterday that an
	    additional dispatch of medical troops to the U.S.-led war
	    on Iraq is unlikely. The U.S. tried to tag our position on
	    the dispatch of medical staffers to concentration
	    camps. The administration’s bill to dispatch 600
	    military engineers and 100 medics is likely to be defeated
	    by parliament; mounting anti-war public protests.
        