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Trump's Threat to Charge Japan More for U.S. Forces: Taoka Shunji says “Let them leave.”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2025
Extract
Ever since the end of America's Vietnam catastrophe, experts on both sides of the Pacific have sounded warnings about anachronistic, wasteful, and dangerously misguided U.S. military policies, seemingly perpetuated by inertia, in East Asia. Yet their recommendations are ignored and new policy initiatives thwarted. As a candidate for president in early 1975, Jimmy Carter advocated removing U.S. forces from South Korea. Of Carter's meeting that year with researchers at the Brookings Institution, Senior Fellow Barry M. Blechman recalled, “I told Carter we should take out the nukes (nuclear weapons) right off and phase out the ground troops over four or five years. I said the most important reason was to avoid getting the U.S. involved with ground forces almost automatically in a new war which is, of course, why the South Koreans want them there.” However, Major General John K. Singlaub, U.S. Forces Korea Chief of Staff at the time, publicly criticized Carter's proposed withdrawal and CIA Director Stansfield Turner privately expressed misgivings. It was never implemented.
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References
Notes
1 Don Oberdorfer, “Carter's Decision on Korea Traced Back to January, 1975,” Washington Post, December 6, 1977.
2 Michael Johns, “The Admiral Who Jumped Ship: Inside the Center for Defense Information,” Policy Review, 1988.
3 Chalmers Johnson, Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, Metropolitan Books, 2000, p. 58.
4 Ibid., pp. 40-51.
5 “The U.S.-North Korean Agreed Framework,” Arms Control Association Fact Sheet, August, 2004.