We touched upon this before. This will be the major catalyst in the next world war yet it is the one aspect that most people do not understand. #msg-4100800
Bush is not securing oil and gas solely because the United States requires energy he is attempting to control all of the oil and gas in the world in order to force allegiances, subdue competition, stifle freedom and subject the nations of the earth to a form of serfdom in which countries are bound to the United States and owned by a feudal lord in Washington.
The U.S. is not interested in Caspian oil to supply its own internal industry. The U.S. is grabbing for control of the Caspian oil fields because other countries need this oil--and because the U.S. wants to control them. Other imperialist rivals--including Germany and Japan--are "energy poor" and need access to oilfields outside their borders. Most Third World countries are heavily dependent on imported oil. #msg-3775550
The following text confirms just that.
-Am
The China-US-Japan triangle Peter H. Updated: 2004-11-27 11:28
China has been trying to woo Japan away from the US alliance. But it is not working. In fact it is not going to work no matter how hard China tries.
There are underlying reasons why this strategy will not bear fruit for China.
A triangle relation among three actors is the structurally most unstable relationship. This is because any two actors could gang up against the third actor. Therefore, there are possible configurations in the China-US-Japan triangle relation:
Config 1: The US and Japan vs. China
Config 2: China and Japan vs. The US
Config 3: China and the US vs. Japan
The current trianglar relation is in configuration 1. The US is allied with Japan to contain the rise of China.
The US as the current sole superpower obviously has motivation to contain any rising power. Since China is a rising power, the US seeks to contain China in various ways. The US-Japan alliance is one of such instruements.
Japan then has to choose sides: either the US or China. Japan has many reasons to choose the US over China.
First, Japan attacked the US in Word War II but was defeated and totally devastated in the end. Remember the drop of two atomic bombs. The seed of fear is sowed and will not disappear easily.
Second, the US helped to rebuild Japan after World War II, although for geopolitical reason. Most Japanese are grateful of Americans' generosity.
Third, Japan is economically dependent on the US. The US controls the world oil supplies which Japan heavily relies on. Japanese economy is export-oriented and the US is among its biggest export destination countries.
Fourth, Japan has an unnatural (or genetic, maybe) fear of China. Although it is unnatural, it is a factor of life that will impede any Chinese attempt to woo Japan.