29 Mar 2023

ChatGPT Goes to Germany

Thomas Klikauer



Image Source: ChatGPT interface

By early 2023, the advent of an algorithm-based website called OpenAI.com and its ChatGPT had triggerd a global education crisis. Teachers around the world feared that it is a homework- and exam-writing machine that allows students in schools and universities to use the Internet for their assignments. The global fear was that a machine would do it for them.

With this new tool, students can safely leave the writing of entire essays – even books – to artificial intelligence. Not surprisingly, the idea caught on. ChatGPT subscribers reached 10 million in just two months. Even more impressive, the online platform crossed one million users in just five days of its launch. Beyond all that, it also sets a record for being the fastest-growing platform ever – gaining a whopping 100 million users by January 2023.

Perhaps because of its phenomenal growth rate, critics started to dread that something central to human personality development might be lost as writing –and this is not just for school homework – would now be done by an algorithmic system.

The first training video for ChatGPT arrived on Tobias’ smartphone – a German highschool student – at the turn of the year. By early 2023, Tobias received one TikTok clip after another. These Tiktok videos were telling him how to use ChatGPT. In addition to girlfriend and makeup advice, dance perfections, and silly animal videos, it presented ChatGPT as a rather ingenious invention.

Whether at his German school or online, someone was constantly telling Tobias how easy it was to do his homework with ChatGPT, and how it would turn his entire school life upside down in a matter of minutes. Soon, Tobias found himself trying the new toy for himself.

Since ChatGPT was launched at the end of November 2022, discussions on German online platforms have often revolved around a language system based on artificial intelligence (AI). Soon, Germany’s quality press – Der Spiegel, Zeit, TAZ, etc. – all made AI a topic.

What AI can already do, where AI is already being used, when will AI take over our work, and has it passed the Turing Test? are all important questions – not only for German readers and users. Simultaneously, we are plastered with new “expert” opinions every week. Perhaps AI can write such columns itself. Well, it has not written this one – so far!

Many experts claim that ChatGPT – and even more so ChatGPT-4 at $20.- a month – can answer complex questions, give explanations and tips, help with travel planning just as quickly as writing a computer code, or a new theatre play.

Simple, just enter your question and copy the answer. This is totally easy to do – particularly for those who are lazy or don’t have the time.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT (GPT = general purpose technology) also helps Tobias with basic learning materials – particularly when he had not enough time left during the lessons at his local German school. As a result, AI has become the standard tool for the 17-year-old German boy.

If the answer isn’t good enough, Tobias simply inserts, please explain this in more detail, or Tobias asks the same question but framed differently. Already, Tobias gets new and more detailed texts helping him with his learning.

Is this cheating?

Reactions to ChatGPT are, at times, filled with enthusiasm, while at other times, there are serious concerns. Yet, some have known that our world could have been overwhelmed by AI decades ago. In 1997, a computer called Deep Blue defeated the world champion in chess – a significant step for computing and perhaps also for human society.

For quite some time, GPS-guided algorithms have helped us with driving. On the downside, algorithms recommend – some say manipulate – people through so-called “personalized” preferences, such as what books and music to buy and even what movies to watch. It also plasters us with an endless array of bargains.

But we are really starting to get off the rails when an artificial intelligence starts drawing crazy pictures on demand and is chatting with us. Much of this is fascinating yet scary at the same time.

ChatGPT can indeed be scary, especially for schools (read: teachers) and universities (read: professors). Where essay writing is supposed to train a personality, promote critical thinking, and educate young people to become responsible citizens, students are starting to leave writing to a machine. Sociologists would call this: structure (algorithm) replaces agency (us).

If the very educational step of conceptualizing and writing of a school or university essay, for example, is taken over by an algorithmic-guided computer, something very central and personal can be lost. And this is even before getting into the sophisticated and intellectually demanding “form of the essay”, as German philosopher Adorno calls it.

Meanwhile, Tobias was caught by his teacher. But what does getting caught actually mean? Why shouldn’t Tobias use ChatGPT? In the end, it is not that much different from using Google. After all, Tobias was looking for a topic for his history assignment. He found it by using AI and he was in a hurry.

The homework had something to do with constitutional institutions of Germany’s federal council – the Bundesrat. Unsurprisingly, the German version of ChatGPT – ChatopenAI.de – provided quite good answers. But then Tobias’ teacher found out about it.

It was by coincidence, his teacher Herr Fritz said. Tobias had been playing with ChatGPT and received quite a lot of typical but also very suitable responses. Yet, most of Tobias’ sentences in the homework had a very similar tone. Worse, on balance, his answer did not really fit the specific questions issued by teacher Fritz.

Yet, the question remains, did Tobias do something forbidden? Did he deceive his teacher? Did he plagiarize? Herr Fritz was not too sure about all that either. In the end, teacher Fritz asked Tobias to give a talk about ChatGPT in class.

Most of the students in Tobias’ school had already heard about the program. By now, many were also using ChatGPT for their school assignments. Most in his class thought that ChatGPT is totally useful. From now on, it will become increasingly more difficult for German teachers to evaluate written achievements – or are those ChatGPT’s achievements?

The fact that computers generate continuous texts that we – increasingly – can no longer distinguish between those that people or machines have written is becoming a huge problem for teaching. ChatGPT is even said to have already passed a law exam at the University of Minnesota.

Even more interesting is the fact that ChatGPT has “easily” achieved the prescribed minimum score in a theoretical examination that medical doctors must pass in order to be allowed to practice in the USA.

Meanwhile in the EU, the Commission and the EU Parliament have been working on an Artificial Intelligence Act to set some basic rules for AI. So-called high-risk applications are to be restricted, such as, for example, facial recognition and the checking of someone’s credit worthiness.

Almost by definition, ChatGPT can carry high-risk activities. Its AI-generated pictures and texts can be attributed to a specific person. Obviously, someone would have to be responsible for things like these. Very easily, ChatGPT can spit out sexist, racist, manipulative content. And it can simply issue lies, falsehood, mis- and even disinformation.

Berlin-based company launches its own version

The arrival of ChatGPT in Germany is part of ChatGPT’s global wave. In just five days, it reached one million users worldwide. No other online service has risen so fast. Instagram took just under three months and Twitter, two years. The hype about ChatGPT surprised many experts because such language systems – e.g. GPTs like LaMDA on Google, and OPT-175B on Facebook, now LLaMA – have been around for a while – even if they are not yet freely usable.

At its most bacic level, GPT – Generative Pre-Trained Transformer – is a supposedly “neural” network whose connections run between computing nodes. As a result, the network learns – a bit like our brain does – minus our subjectivity and creatitivity, of course.

Artificial intelligence trains itself with massive amounts of text and data, such as, for example, information gained from online articles, online photos, previously save locations on the net, essays, blog entries, scientific papers, fiction, cooking recipes, and so on. In short, there are literally millions of texts from which ChatGPT “learns”. In other words, it is a bit like the McDonald’s of standardized food and not like the exquisite Joël Robuchon restaurant.

Unlike a creative Nobel Prize winner in literature, one might think of ChatGPT as something like locking a child in a library, where – over time – the child pieces together some sort of “meaning” from the texts available.

Worse, ChatGPT works exclusively via algorithms. Which word follows which word is determined by algorithms. Which word sequences match grammatically and in terms of content is also determined by algorithms.

ChatGPT does not have something like what human beings simply call intelligence – and this is not even considering Gardner’s nine types of human intelligence. For us, human intelligence remains inextricably linked to subjectivity. ChatGPT does not – yet! – have something philosophy calls personhood.

Unlike human philosophypersonhoodsubjectivity, and even human intelligence, artificial intelligence is – when boiled down to its most basic level – a rather simple thing. It operates with a self-improving statistical probability formula written as a computer code – an algorithm.

ChatGPT is based on learned statistical probabilities. Amazon is one of the masters on statistical probabilities – Amazon knows that you will order condoms before you even know it! And with that, it makes millions of dollars selling a huge range of items – including condoms in 811 versions.

Apply statistical probability not to condoms but to ChatGPT and it simply imitates human speech and generates a new text with each request. But – and here comes the key to it all – it does this based on what it finds.

In other words ChatGPT simply cannot – yet! – write a Nobel Prize winning novel. ChatGPT is no Bob Dylan, Svetlana Alexievich, Doris Lessing, the superb Harold Pinter and the even more superb Elfriede Jelinek, Günter Grass, Dario Fo, the magnificent Gabriel García Márquez, etc.

For ChatGPT to work, the existing language models had only to be garnished with a new function – algorithms. While not being a literature genius like Thomas Mann, ChatGPT makes it easy to use the program and also brings fun into the game. The rather conservative Thomas Mann wasn’t really that funny as he was brilliant and creative.

So everyone can prompt ChatGPT, that is, make a request to the program. With that easiness, the inventors of ChatGPT were able to unleash their little monster on the whole world. Since then, ChatGPT further trained and improved itself by the prompts of currently well over 100 million people.

The fact that this data is going through the internet in just seconds, makes ChatGPT the big thing it is. For the first time, Google is not anticipating, but has to follow suit – hence forced into second place. Hastily, Google has released its own artificial language program called Bard.

It was pleagued with problems. Google’s AI chatbot Bard spreads a false information at its presentation, already. This caused the stock of Google’s parent company Alphabet to plummet. Meanwhile, China’s search engine Baidu was responding with its chatbot Ernie.

Ernie and Bard – not a Sesame Street joke. And as one might imagine, there is also a German version. Yes, it was created by a Heidelberg-based company called Aleph Alpha – almost at equal footing when it comes to AI.

Meanwhile, other German companies were still using GPT3 for their products. In their version, everyone can integrate an AI voice into their software free of charge. One of these German companies was Mind-Verse from Berlin. It’s 25-year-old boss – Noel Lorenz – was fascinated by GPT3 when it was still in its developing stage.

Their model was finally able to independently recognize patterns in data and create human-like texts. This was made possible because the AI was trained with a volume of data that was soon 1,500 times as large as that of the previous version.

Founded two years ago, Mind-Verse is now surfing on the successful wave of ChatGPT. Compared to other GPTs, Mind-Verse can speak better German. It is also more modern thanks to its live data from the Internet.

In addition to the chat function, Mind-Verse offers additional fine-tuning models that relate more specifically to the data records than with ChatGPT. The network only responds as well as it is asked. Therefore, Mind-Verse concretizes requests with its software.

One of its functions is designed to turn   key points into continuous text. Another function is to write essays with arguments, advertising-effective headlines, and even compose song lyrics.

Yet, in one case, German AI attributed the poem Berliner Abend written by Paul Boldt wrongfully to Erich Kästner. Worse, some of the arguments of the machine are partly arch-conservative, partly unworldly.

10th grader said, she prefers ChatGPT while another student said, you have to remain skeptical so that you don’t make mistakes. Many German students think that for topics for which there is no right or wrong answer and when an argument becomes ethical, emotional, and personal, ChatGPT tends to draw a blank.

In any case, ChatGPT is a language machine – not a knowledge machine. In other words, the program often waffles on, it tends to be over-self-confident, and yet is habitually low and shallow on content. As a consequence, many Germany students think that a chatbot can have at least nine problems:

1) It uses empty words,

2) It uses bad sources such as blogs and even Germany’s lowgrade tabloids,

3) It tends to ignore direct quotes,

4) It does not read between the lines,

5) It always prefers to present something, even if it is nonsense, rather than say nothing,

6) It uses a lot of empty phrases,

7) It has a tendency towards the inflationarily twisting of foreign words,

8) It appears confident but this, repeatedly, comes with ignorance, and finally,

9) It gives the illusion of plausibility where there is none.

Nevertheless, another student called Max also works a lot with the language tool. When he is writing an essay, AI shortens the time dedicated to hard work so that he has more time for creative thinking. Max strongly rejects the idea that ChatGPT does all his homework and that he uses it out of pure laziness. Max says, it’s not that easy.

In May 2022, Max was asked to write a rather technical paper that is AI-supported. Max believes that the program will be a source of inspiration. For that, ChatGPT has already suggested good headlines and arguments which go beyond what Max could come up by himself.

For many students, using ChatGPT is still not that obvious. Most German students believe that using artificial intelligence for a thesis is “not” plagiarism. In one particular view on this, a person’s intellectual property would have to be stolen to make it plagiarism.

Yet there still is a difference between man and machine. However, it is nevertheless rather difficult to pass off an AI-made texts as your own intellectual property. This kind of potential power to deceive brings two additional problems:

1) Even now, there is still no tool that can accurately recognize AI content. Some argue that this will occur in the future as the language AI uses is constantly getting better and more human-like;

2) and all this raises the questions, where does deception begin? Is it a deception when entire AI-generated paragraphs are used? Is it a deception when using only a few words or just getting an idea? Is it a deceitful when just getting a text through a spelling program or when simply using a calculator?

Undeterred, Germany’s sixteen states – responsible for education – do not seem to be planning to ban ChatGPT. At Stuttgart’s Didacta education fair, participants agreed that AI language has too much potential to be banned.

Meanwhile, in the neighboring state of Hessen, its Ministry of Education emphasized that AI applications could support students individually in their learning process. Recently, North Rhine-Westphalia has published a guide on AI in schools. The guidelines do not prohibit working with AI-based text robots.

So far, nobody has written ChatGPT guidelines for schoolteachers. It seems that Germany’s approach might be described as, we see it coming, we know that we have to act – but we prefer to rid it out. On the other hand, is the more optimistic view that argues, AI will simplify a lot of work and replace jobs while simultaneously creating new jobs.

In other words, AI machines can take on the exhausting, monotonous tasks while people concentrate on creativity, meaningfulness, and togetherness. Yet, ChatGPT will have a strong impact on everyday university life. One might realize that ChatGPT programs can do some things well while elsewhere, it fails spectacularly.

It might be argued that strong students will be inspired by arguments produced by AI. On the other hand, ChatGPT might fundamentally change university teaching as well as the prevailing examination “culture”. Already, most students have to hand in their mobile phones before an exam. The university turns off WLAN and students are – literally – locked in a room then to come out after 90 minutes with an exam result.

Universities’ curricula – as increasingly set up by “corporate” apparatchiks and no longer by academics – have become competence-oriented testing regimes focusing on skills and practical implementation. AI can change that.

Potentially, artificial intelligence has the ability of rendering entire lessons obsolete simply because many basics could be accomplished rather easily by an AI program. This also means that professors no longer have to encourage their classes to do stupid tasks which the professors themselves have to correct – rather stupidly – afterwards.

The Digital Divide – Rich and Poor

Worse, ChatGPT and AI also have the potential to further what became known as “the divide”. The digital divide can exist between schools and universities. Both – AI and ChatGPT – have the ability to cement the digital divide.

+ between rich schools with good equipment and poor schools with poor equipment;

+ between the more powerful and weaker students; and

+ between the poor and rich particulary with paid premium access to ChatGPT.

All this applies not just to universities and schools. Today, we all encounter artificial intelligence. The difference is that some do it actively while others encounter it unconsciously. Some people have realized that they are being flooded with commercial, often useless, and even manipulative information – or a combination of all three.

Such a flooding is machine-driven based on artificial intelligence using what is euphemistically known as “persuasive technology”. In short, people are influenced.

In the end and given the stratospheric rise of ChatGPT and artificial intelligence, it will probably soon be normal for us to distinguish between AI/ChatGPT content and a human written texts – as long as we “are still able” to notice the difference.

Israel protests to continue despite Netanyahu’s “pause” of dictatorial legislation

Thomas Scripps


Protests are continuing in Israel, in the largest display of popular opposition in the country’s history.

Demonstrations involving hundreds of thousands, of a population of just over nine million, have been held for the last 12 weeks against the far-right government of Benjamin Netanyahu’s plans to stage a coup against the judiciary. His plans, pursued alongside his fascistic coalition partners, are part of a broader project to dramatically escalate the Israeli state’s persecution of the Palestinians, the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and to clamp down on growing social and political opposition in the Israeli working class.

Police uses water cannon to disperse anti government protesters in Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, March 27, 2023. Over Sunday and Monday up to 600,000 people turned out to protest and strikes spread across all sectors, closing universities, grounding flights and shutting ports.protested. [AP Photo/Oded Balilty]

The protests reached a new peak of intensity Sunday night and Monday, after Netanyahu’s firing of defence minister Yoav Gallant. Up to 600,000 people turned out to protest and strikes spread across all sectors, closing universities, grounding flights and shutting ports.

Late Monday evening, 10 hours after he was originally scheduled to make a statement, Netanyahu announced that the legislation would be “paused” to prevent “civil war”. But he did so only after negotiations with the far-right parties in his government, granting them a National Guard controlled by the interior ministry, led by Jewish supremacist Itamar Ben-Gvir.

President of Israel IsaacHerzog and the umbrella organisation of most of the country’s trade unions Histadrut used the “pause” to intervene to prop up the government.

Herzog issued a statement which began, “Stopping the legislation is the right thing. This is the time to begin a sincere, serious, and responsible dialogue that will urgently calm the waters and lower the flames.”

It concluded, “The President’s Residence, the People’s Home, is a space for dialogue and the formation of as broad agreements as possible, with the aim of extracting our beloved State of Israel from the deep crisis that we are in.”

On Tuesday, Herzog hosted talks between representatives of Netanyahu’s coalition and of opposition parties Yesh Atid and National Unity.

Arnon Bar-David, chairman of Histadrut, had been forced to sanction a general strike Monday as workers all over the country began taking action independently. He did so with the aim of stopping “the madness across the country,” saying “employers and workers” would “join hands together” to do so. After Netanyahu’s statement, he declared the strike cancelled.

But protestors have not been swayed. Many have pointed to the fact that the ruling coalition tabled on Tuesday a final reading of a bill giving Netanyahu greater control of the selection of judges.

Demonstrators out in the streets in Tel-Aviv Monday night were attacked by police with water cannon and dozens of stun grenades. Thirty-eight protestors were arrested. One was hurt by a police horse and another by a police grenade.

A participant told Haaretz that she saw the man being hit: “I saw a man lying, bleeding, who suddenly fell in front of me on the floor after a loud boom. It was scary, I’ve been shaking.”

The Umbrella Movement of Resistance against Dictatorship described the prime minister’s announcement as “another attempt of Netanyahu trying to gaslight the Israeli public in order to weaken to the protest movement in order to enact a dictatorship,” adding, “We will not stop the protest until the judicial coup is completely stopped.”

More rallies are planned for Thursday and Saturday, with Al-Jazeera’s Bernard Smith reporting, “Organisers said [former prime minister] Benny Gantz and [opposition leader] Yair Lapid don’t represent them, they want people to still come out and protest until this law is completely abandoned.”

The line of the protests so far has been to criticise Netanyahu for destabilising the Israeli state. Palestinians have been effectively excluded.

Gantz and Lapid have been essentially arguing that the government is unnecessarily compromising the image of the Zionist project when the courts are no real block to their shared programme of apartheid and occupation. If Netanyahu were prepared to modify his agenda, they would happily order the protests dismissed and join in the denunciations of those who stayed out on the streets.

Lapid responded to the prime minister’s statement Monday evening by saying he would be “willing to enter discussions if legislation is truly halted,” his only condition being that “there’s no trick, only if the legislation will be truly stopped.”

Gantz spoke with Netanyahu Monday evening, welcoming his announcement and urging him to keep Gallant in position—saying it was “essential for national security and to calm tensions at this time,” according to Haaretz.

Aides of Gallant claim that he has received no formal notification of his dismissal, with spokespeople for Netanyahu and his Likud party refusing to comment. The former general is an unindicted war criminal, head of Southern Command for the Israel Defense Forces during Operation Cast Lead, the murderous 2008-9 assault on Gaza.

But whatever the intentions of Lapid, Gantz and the rest, the split in Zionist forces is an expression of a deeper crisis of the Israeli state and world capitalism which has blown apart the myth of a common Jewish people unaffected by the deep class divides and social tensions which scar the country. As the World Socialist Web Site wrote Monday, it has “brought Jewish workers and youth face to face with the historical necessity of a political reckoning with Zionism.”

Al-Jazeera, based in Qatar and generally dismissive of the protests like all Arab nationalist commentators, published an article Monday drawing attention to the growing dissent among Israel army reservists—cited by Gallant as a reason for his opposition to Netanyahu’s judicial coup.

Tal Sagi, a member of the Breaking the Silence group of ex-soldiers (Israel drafts 18-year-olds for at least two years) which collects testimony from military occupations in the Occupied Territories, told how “the anti-occupation bloc has felt growing acceptance from other anti-judicial reform protesters as the protests progressed over the past months, particularly since the pogrom in Huwara,” in Al-Jazeera’s words.

Sagi explained, “At first, in the anti-occupation bloc, there were a lot of attacks on people who held Palestinian flags. Now I see less and less violence. It’s like the protest became more comfortable with the fact of the flag’s presence.”

Another anti-occupation protester, Jacob Abolafia, told the broadcaster, “Over the course of three months, and especially after the pogrom in Huwara, the consciousness is growing that what is going on in the occupation, the occupied territories and the Israeli streets are tied.

“You would hear at least 10,000 people chant: ‘Where were you at Huwara?’”

While Netanyahu and his coalition play for time, they are mobilising far-right forces like those who rampaged through Huwara to intimidate protestors.

Likud distributed a poster through WhatsApp groups on Monday calling on supporters “Emergency—Going up to Jerusalem! They won’t steal our election!” and providing details of transport available across the country. Hevron Regional Council, representing 10,000 settlers in the West Bank, funded busses to Jerusalem.

WhatsApp and Telegram groups of fascist organisations like The Unapologetic Right, the Jewish Defence League and La Familia, football ultras linked with Beitar Jerusalem, circulated calls to “run them [anti-Netanyahu protestors] over with a jeep”, bring “gasoline, explosives, tractors, guns, knives” and attack “these shits… blocking the road. We will keep them in their kibbutz.”

At the far-right rally, the fascistic Finance Minister Bezalal Smotrich told protestors, “The left has taken over the centres of power of Israel. The time has come for us to return the country to the nation.” Ben-Gvir added, “We are a right-wing government, and we will demand the reform now.”

Demonstrators chanted “treacherous leftists” and threw objects including flag poles at anti-Netanyahu protestors. Journalists for Channel 13 News and Walla News were spat at and assaulted with sticks. One suffered a broken rib. A Palestinian taxi driver was also attacked, escaping in his car.

Japan, South Korea normalize intelligence sharing agreement

Ben McGrath


Japan and South Korea are rapidly moving to repair bilateral relations following recent years of trade and diplomatic disputes. The purpose is to increase coordination between the two governments and their militaries, both allies of the United States, in preparation for launching a war against China.

Seoul officially announced on March 21 that it had “normalized” a 2016 intelligence sharing agreement with Japan. Known as the General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA), it allows for the bilateral transfer of sensitive military information between South Korea and Japan, which have no formal military alliance.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida shake hands following a joint news conference in Tokyo, Japan, Thursday, March 16, 2023. [AP Photo/Kiyoshi Ota]

South Korea’s right-wing President Yoon Suk-yeol pledged to normalize the agreement at a summit with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on March 16. Yoon’s predecessor, Moon Jae-in, nearly cancelled GSOMIA in November 2019 following disagreements with Tokyo over trade and historical issues. Under pressure from Washington, Moon agreed not to suspend GSOMIA, but tensions continued, raising fears among military planners that the agreement was not being fully utilized.

Yoon and Kishida presented their summit and its results as necessary to address the so-called North Korean “threat.” Yoon stated at a press conference following the summit, “We also agreed that in order to respond to the North’s nuclear and missile threats that are getting more sophisticated by the day, cooperation among South Korea, the United States and Japan, and between South Korea and Japan, is extremely important, and that we should continue to actively cooperate.”

In reality, Tokyo and Seoul are lining up behind Washington’s war preparations as the US builds a series of alliances throughout the Indo-Pacific region aimed at China. US ambassador to South Korea Philip Goldberg praised the summit’s results in comments made March 20, stating, “We greatly value Korea’s commitment to promote trilateral and bilateral ties with Japan as witnessed in the ROK-Japan summit.”

The US considers Tokyo and Seoul’s bilateral relations and agreements like GSOMIA as key components of its military planning and the ballistic missile system it is building throughout East Asia. South Korea and Japan are being placed on the frontlines of a future US-instigated war while the war preparations are being consciously hidden from public view. Both the Yoon and Kishida governments, however, are promoting anti-Chinese sentiment.

The coordination of the vast military apparatus in East Asia requires close collaboration between Washington, Tokyo and Seoul. The US bases approximately 28,500 troops in South Korea as well as a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery. There are numerous air bases from which US aircraft are capable of launching strikes on China or Russia. South Korea has its own military of approximately 500,000 troops.  

Japan also hosts numerous US bases and personnel, including approximately 56,000 troops, nearly half of which are in Okinawa Prefecture, neighbouring Taiwan. Japan also has two US X-band radar systems in the north and south of the country—vital components of US anti-ballistic missile systems.

On March 24, US Forces Korea announced it had carried out its first deployment training exercise of a THAAD “remote” launcher in South Korea. The drill took place during the massive US-South Korean Freedom Shield/Warrior Shield joint war games that ran for 11 days from March 13-23.  

THAAD, which includes an AN/TPY-2 X-band radar capable of spying deep into Chinese territory, is also being integrated with the US’s Patriot missile system. These surface-to-air missiles are capable of attacking advanced aircraft and incoming missiles. The target is not North Korea’s fleet of decades-old fighter jets, but Chinese fighters in the event of war.

Yoon’s trip to Japan to meet Kishida was the first bilateral summit there in 12 years. In addition to Yoon’s pledge to normalize GSOMIA, the two countries will resume reciprocal diplomatic visits. Seoul’s Foreign Ministry stated that it is currently arranging for Prime Minister Kishida to visit Seoul later this year.

Kishida has also invited Yoon to the upcoming G7 summit set to begin on May 19 in Hiroshima. As the host nation, Japan can invite additional attendees. Undoubtedly in coordination with Washington, invitations have been extended to South Korea, Ukraine, India and Australia, among others. The basis for the invitations is the supposedly shared “universal values”, a thinly veiled jab at China and Russia.

The Yoon administration paved the way for improved relations with Tokyo by announcing on March 6 that it would essentially nullify a 2018 South Korean Supreme Court decision against Japanese firms Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Nippon Steel that used forced labour during Japan’s colonization of Korea from 1910 to 1945. The companies were ordered to pay compensation to 15 Korean plaintiffs or risk having their assets in South Korea seized. Since the original ruling, 12 of the plaintiffs have passed away, with their families representing their cases.

Japan responded in 2019 by imposing export restrictions on certain products to South Korea and removing the latter from a list of favoured trading partners. This led to the Moon administration nearly suspending GSOMIA. At the time, Moon and his Democratic Party of Korea (DP), currently the main opposition party, worked to whip up anti-Japanese sentiment to distract from worsening economic and social conditions domestically.

In nullifying the 2018 court decision, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry announced that it would compensate the forced labour victims through a fund established domestically in 2014 without the involvement of Tokyo or the companies in the lawsuit.

The Democrats are continuing to resort to anti-Japanese chauvinism to create a political scandal for the Yoon administration. The DP stated on March 24 that it would open a parliamentary investigation into the Yoon-Kishida summit. While President Yoon comes from the ruling People Power Party, the DP remains the largest party in the National Assembly with 169 seats of out 300.