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Japan and the United States: Seeking Security


Article # : 14537 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 3 / 1988  3,383 Words
Author : Michael W. Chinworth
Michael Chinworth is project director and senior program associate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Japan Program on Science and Technology. He also is editor of the Japan Economic Survey.

       Relations between the United States and Japan may not be at a critical juncture, but certainly they are facing a very delicate phase of development. The baggage of the Occupation era has long since passed, as has the time when the United States could dictate economic and political relations to Japan. With Japan's emergence as the second largest economic power in the world--and perhaps soon to be the first--the United States can no longer demand and expect prompt responses. Japan has a considerably different view of the world, and as its economic power grows, it will have more leverage to exercise its own options. This is particularly true since Japanese economic dominance is evident in so many critical industrial areas.
       
        On a more immediate level, both nations are undergoing political transformations that promise to change the outlook for management of the relationship. The Reagan administration is nearing the end of its existence. The combination of election year politics, Iran-Contra problems, and failures on the domestic political front--recent Supreme Court nominations come to mind--long ago led many Japanese observers to conclude that it is in fact a lame duck.
       
        On the other side of the Pacific, newly installed Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita is trying to convince his countrymen that he is worthy of the task before him. Not a bold leader in the Nakasone mold, Takeshita is sill trying to grasp control over a government that often places intraparty factional considerations above policy problems. The stronger members of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and the new cabinet have been tempted by this temporary political void to assert their own mold on government policies. In terms of U.S. relations, this has manifested itself in ... (2000 of 21587 Characters)
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