
“The deceptively named North Atlantic Treaty Organization is expanding into the Asia-Pacific region.
NATO has waged wars on Libya, Afghanistan, and the former Yugoslavia. Now the US-led military alliance has its crosshairs set on both Russia and China.
Former top State Department officials have admitted that the “United States and its NATO allies are engaged in a proxy war with Russia” in Ukraine.
While it is flooding Ukraine with weapons and training far-right fighters to kill Russians, NATO is simultaneously threatening China, and expanding its presence in the Asia-Pacific in hopes of containing Beijing.
In a press conference on April 5, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg announced that the Western powers plan to “deepen NATO’s cooperation with our Asia-Pacific partners, including in areas such as arms control, cyber, hybrid, and technology.”
Stoltenberg complained that “China has been unwilling to condemn Russia” over its war in Ukraine, and made it clear that Beijing is NATO’s next target.
NATO held a meeting of the foreign ministers of its member states at its headquarters in Brussels on April 6 and 7, where they pledged to increase their military support for Ukraine and escalate the proxy war on Russia.
This gathering featured representatives from several European states that are not NATO members, including Georgia, Finland, and Sweden.
But even more noteworthy was the presence of numerous Asian-Pacific countries at the NATO meeting in Brussels: Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand.
It goes without saying that these Asian-Pacific nations are far from the North Atlantic region.

Ronald Reagan designated Japan, South Korea, and Australia “major non-NATO allies” of the United States back in 1987.
Japan and Australia are members of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue or Quad, an anti-China alliance created by Washington to try to isolate and destabilize China.
The US military still has 55,000 troops stationed in Japan, where they have been since the end of World War II. Washington also has 28,000 troops in South Korea, which have remained there since the early 1950s.
Japan and South Korea joined the Western powers in imposing sanctions on Russia over its military intervention in Ukraine.
As the United States escalates its new cold war on China, NATO is expanding its military cooperation with these Asian-Pacific powers.
Just as NATO repeatedly violated its promises and expanded onto Russia’s borders, militarily encircling Moscow, Washington’s goal is to surround Beijing with antagonistic military forces.
In 2021 the major Japanese media outlet Nikkei revealed that US Indo-Pacific Command is spending $27.4 billion over six years to militarize the region, including by “establishing a network of precision-strike missiles along the so-called first island chain.”
Nikkei explained, “The first island chain consists of a group of islands including Taiwan, Okinawa and the Philippines, which China sees as the first line of defense.”
US Indo-Pacific Command wrote clearly in its “Pacific Deterrence Initiative” that its goal is to “focus resources on vital military capabilities to deter China.”
In other words, this is a US plan to encircle China, threatening it at any moment with a massive missile installation.
NATO is going to play an increasingly important role in this plan to militarily surround and threaten Beijing.
The US-led military cartel boasts on its website of its close alliance with Japan. And Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi has stated openly that the East Asian country is cooperating with NATO over Ukraine.
In July 2021, a top South Korean government officialtraveled to Brussels “for talks on common security challenges and NATO’s partnership with Seoul.”
The military cartel disclosed that they discussed “China’s rise, as well as opportunities for stronger cooperation between NATO and the Republic of Korea, including in the areas of cyber defence and arms control.”
Then in October, South Korea’s first vice minister of foreign affairs visited NATO headquarters as well.

After a meeting of the heads of state of NATO’s 30 members in Brussels in June 2021, the US-led military cartel published a joint declaration clearly revealing that it sees China as a threat.
“China’s growing influence and international policies can present challenges that we need to address together as an Alliance,” NATO wrote.
The military cartel claimed China and its cooperation with Russia “present systemic challenges to the rules-based international order and to areas relevant to Alliance security.”
This statement was released eight months before Russia invaded Ukraine.
NATO has planned on targeting China for years, and is now only using Beijing’s refusal to condemn its major strategic partner Moscow as an excuse to continue escalating an aggressive campaign of military encirclement that it had planned long before.”
Credit: Benjamin Norton. Publication: Multipolarista. Published: April 9th 2022. Source Link: https://multipolarista.com/2022/04/09/nato-asia-pacific-china-russia/