Encounter At Shimoda

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Act III
alliance cooperation
ASEAN Nation
Category=JP
Domestic International Sales Corporation
East Asian security
economic diplomacy
Energy Policies
Energy Resources
Energy Source
energy strategy Asia
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Fourth Shimoda Conference
Fukuda Doctrine
GNP Growth
Ground Forces
High GNP.
IMF Agreement
IMF Surveillance
International Nuclear Fuel Cycle Evaluation
international relations
Japan's Southeast Asian Policy
Japanese-U.S. relations
Japan’s Southeast Asian Policy
LDP.
legislative perspectives
mutual cooperation
Mutual Security Treaty
NATO Ally
OECD Import
Older Fields
OPEC Nation
Pacific democracies
President Carter's Policy
President Carter’s Policy
Southeast Asian Policy
United States Japan Security Treaty
United States's Nuclear Umbrella
United States’s Nuclear Umbrella
US Japan policy conference proceedings
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367020880
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The United States and Japan are the two largest democracies in today’s world. The United States is still a superpower economically, militarily, and intellectually, but its traditional independence has changed to a position that requires cooperation and mutual understanding with its major allies and especially with Japan. Japan, also an economic super-power, enormously rich in human, economic, and intellectual resources, but very weak in natural resources, has an equal need for cooperation, military support, and teamwork on all levels. Both nations accept an obligation to contribute their resources fully toward the solution to the world’s problems. Consequently, new forms of dialogues and new instruments of cooperation must be devised based on a sophisticated, mutually agreed upon data base. These discussions from the Fourth Shimoda Conference (September 1-4, 1977) explore some of those new directions.