Thursday, May 07, 2009

Not the Agents of Change

What I think about when I think about the Six Party Talks: that the three countries at the table who spend the most time staring at one another -- Japan, China and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea -- all have been ruled by the same party for the last 54 years (pax the Hosokawa-Hata interregnum)-- and in each case the origins and durability of the ruling party in a particular country can be traced to the events in and actions of the other two countries.

Is there another trio of mutually-reinforcing party governments like unto the LDP, CCP and Workers' Party of Korea triple monopoly-on-power?

2 comments:

  1. That's an interesting observation. And to the extent that they do reinforce each others rule (not too much in the case of China) it's a nice illustration that collusion does not have to be explicit or even intended to be effective.

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  2. Anonymous6:48 PM

    It's not so much an issue of party politics, but the weak stance of ASEAN vis a vis Burma is sort of similar: there's a broad sense that something needs to be done about that government, but the potential consequences of it collapsing are scary enough that neighbors have a very strong, if not always stated, interest in keeping it afloat. The problem has dragged down ASEAN's credibility in general.

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