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Deployment of the Battle Stars, the introduction of new generations of
weapons managed from space, and aggressive political pressure coupled with
economic policies will all be intended to contain Japan and Turkey. And
from the Japanese and Turkish points of view, American demands will be so
extreme as to seem unreasonable. The Americans will demand that both
countries withdraw all forces to within their original borders, as well as
guaranteeing rights of passage in the Black Sea, the Sea of Japan, and the
Bosporus.
If the Japanese were to agree to these conditions, their entire economic
structure would be imperiled. For the Turks, economic upheaval will be a
consideration, but so will the political chaos that would then surround
them. Moreover, the United States will make no equivalent demands on the
Polish bloc. In effect, the United States will demand that Turkey turn over
the Balkans and Ukraine, as well as part of southern Russia, to the Poles,
and that it allow the Caucasus to fall back into chaos.
The United States will not actually expect Turkey or Japan to capitulate.
That will not be the American intent. These demands will simply be the
platform from which the Americans try to impose pressure on these coun
tries, limiting their growth and increasing their insecurity. The Americans
won’t truly expect either country to return to its position of 2020, but it will
want to discourage further expansion.
The Japanese and the Turks, however, will not see things this way. From
their perspective, the best- case scenario will be that the United States is try
ing to divert their attention from pressing issues by creating insoluble inter
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national problems. Worst case will be that the United States is preparing the
way for their geopolitical collapse. In either case, both Turkey and Japan will
have no choice but to assume the worst, and prepare to resist.
Turkey and Japan won’t have the extensive experience of the Americans
in space. They may be able to construct manned space systems, and will
have created their own reconnaissance systems by this point. But the mili
tary capabilities possessed by the United States will be outside their reach,
certainly within a time frame that might cause the United States to recon
sider its policies. And neither the Japanese nor the Turks will be in a posi
tion to reconsider theirs.
The United States will not plan to go to war with either Japan or Turkey.
Its intention will simply be to squeeze them until they decrease their dy
namism and become more malleable to American demands. As a result,
Turkey and Japan will have an interest in limiting American power and will
therefore form a natural coalition. By the 2040s, technological shifts in war
fare will have made a close alliance remarkably easy. Space will change the
global geopolitical equation.
In more traditional terms as well, the Turks and the Japanese will be able
to support each other. The United States is a North American power. Japan
and Turkey will both be Eurasian powers.
This sets up a very natural alliance, as well as a goal for these countries.
Japanese power hugs the Pacific coast, but by 2045 it will have spread
throughout the Asian archipelago and on the mainland as well. The Turkish
sphere of influence will extend into Central Asia and even into Muslim
western China. The possibility will exist, therefore, that if Japan and Turkey
were to collaborate, they could create a pan- Eurasian power that would rival
the United States.
The fly in the ointment, of course, will be Poland, and the fact that
Turkish influence won’t penetrate beyond the Balkans. But this won’t pre
vent Turkey and Japan from seeking out an alliance. If just one European
power could be brought into the coalition, then Poland would have a seri
ous problem. Its resources and attention would be diverted, giving Turkey a
freer hand in Ukraine and Russia, and giving the Turkish- Japanese alliance a
third leg. The European country they will have in mind is Germany. From
the Japanese and Turkish perspectives, if Germany could be persuaded that
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the threat from a U.S.- backed Polish bloc would be sufficiently dangerous,
and the creation of a tripartite pact sufficiently threatening to force the
United States to act cautiously, then the possibility of securing Eurasia and
exploiting its resources jointly would be viable.
Germany will not believe for a moment that the United States would be
deterred. Indeed, it will fear that a tripartite coalition would trigger an im
mediate American military response. Germany also will reason that if the
Polish bloc is eliminated, it will shortly be facing the Turks in the Danube
basin and it will have no appetite for that game. So although I see the Ger
mans as the most likely choice to form a coalition with Turkey and Japan, I
also believe it will decline involvement—but with a caveat. If the United
States winds up in a war with Turkey and Japan and is allied with Poland,
Poland might well be severely weakened in that war. In that case, a later
German intervention would hold lower risk and higher reward. If the
United States won outright, Germany would be no worse off. If the United
States and Poland were both defeated—the least likely outcome—then Ger
many would have an opportunity to move in quickly for the kill. Waiting to
see what happens to Poland will make sense for Germany, and that is the
game it will play in the middle of the twenty- first century.
The only other possible member of the coalition might be Mexico, how
ever unlikely. Recall that Mexico was invited into an alliance by Germany in
World War I, so this idea is hardly unprecedented. Mexico will be develop
ing rapidly throughout the first fifty years of this new century and will be a
major economic power by the late 2040s, although still living in the shadow
of the United States. It will be experiencing a major outflow of Mexicans to
the southwestern borderlands after the new American immigration policy of
2030. This will be troubling to the United States in a number of ways, but
Mexico will hardly be in a position in the late 2040s to join an anti- American
coalition.
U.S. intelligence, of course, will pick up the diplomatic discussions be
tween Tokyo and Istanbul (the capital will shift there from Ankara, return
ing the capital of Turkey to its traditional city) and will be aware of the
feelers to Germany and Mexico. The United States will realize that the situ
ation has become quite serious. It also will have knowledge of the joint
Japanese- Turkish strategic plans should war break out. No formal alliance
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will be in place, but the United States will no longer be certain it is facing
two separate and manageable regional powers. It will start to appear that it
is facing a single coalition that could, in fact, dominate Eurasia—the pri
mordial American fear. This goes back to the grand strategies I discussed in
the early sections of this book. If it controlled Eurasia, the Japanese–Turkish
coalition would be secure from attack and able to concentrate on challeng
ing the United States in space and at sea.
The American response will be a policy it has executed numerous times
in history—it will squeeze each of the powers economically. Both countries
will depend to some extent on exports, difficult in a world where popula
tions will no longer be growing very fast. The United States will begin form
ing an economic bloc that will bestow most-favored-nation status on exports
into the United States for countries that are prepared to shift their purchases
away from Turkey and Japan and toward third countries—not even neces
sarily the United States—that could supply the same goods. In other words,
the United States will organize a not particularly subtle boycott of Japanese
and Turkish goods.
In addition, the United States will start limiting the export of tech
nology to both of these countries. Given the American work being done in
robotics and genetics, this will hurt Turkish and Japanese high- tech capabil
ities. Most important, there will be a surge in U.S. military aid to China, In
dia, and Poland, as well as to forces resisting Turkey and Japan in Russia.
American policy will be simple: to create as many problems as possible for
these two countries in order to deter them from forming a coalition.
But the intense activity of the United States in space will be the most
troubling to Japan and Turkey. The establishment of the Battle Star constel
lation will convince them that the United States will be prepared to wage an
aggressive war if necessary. By the late 2040s, given all the actions of the
Americans, the Japanese and Turks will have reached a conclusion about
American intentions. The conclusion they will draw, however, is that the
United States means to break them both. They will also conclude that only
the formation of an alliance will protect them, by serving as a deterrent—
or make it clear that the United States intends to go to war no matter what.
A formal alliance will therefore be created, and with its formation Muslims
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throughout Asia will be energized at the thought of a coalition that will
place them at the crossroads of power.
The resurgence of Islamist fervor built around Turkey’s confrontation
with the United States will spill over into Southeast Asia. This will give
Japan, under the terms of the alliance treaty, access to Indonesia—which,
together with its long- term presence in the Pacific Islands, will mean that
U.S. control of the Pacific, and access to the Indian Ocean, can no longer be
assured. But the United States will remain convinced of one thing—that al
though it might face challenges from the Japanese and the Turks within
their region and in Eurasia, they will never challenge America’s strategic
power, which will be in space.
Having put the Japanese and Turks in an impossible position, the Amer
icans will now simultaneously panic at the result and yet remain complacent
about their ultimate capacity to manage the problem. The United States
will not view the outcome as a shooting war, but as another cold war, like
the one it had with Russia. The superpower will believe that no one would
challenge it in a real war.
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