Negotiating the U.S.–Japan Alliance

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Ambassador Reischauer
American Affairs Bureau
Asia-Pacific foreign policy
Author_Yukinori Komine
Autonomous Defense Posture
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Category=JP
Category=JPS
Category=NHTB
Cold War diplomacy
combat
consultation
conventional
Conventional Combat Operations
East Asian security studies
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Foreign Minister
Foreign Minister Aichi
government
Japan Defense Agency
Japan's Defense Capability
Japan's Defense Effort
Japan's Nuclear Options
japanese
Japan’s Defense Capability
Japan’s Defense Effort
Japan’s Nuclear Options
mofa
MOFA Bureaucracy
MOFA Diplomat
MOFA Official
Non-Nuclear Principles
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NSC Staff Member
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Nuclear Allergy
nuclear deterrence theory
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Okinawa Reversion
Okinawa reversion negotiations
prior
Prior Consultation
Roc
Sato Cabinet
security
Security Treaty
strategic burden sharing
treaty
US-Japan defence policy formation

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138349971
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In recent years, the U.S.–Japan alliance has marked several anniversaries, including 40 years since the 1969 decision on the reversion of Okinawa. These occasions have provided crucial opportunities to reassess the continuing significance of U.S.–Japan security and diplomatic relations, prompting this investigation into major issues in negotiations between the two countries.

This book is the first comprehensive and comparative analysis of the U.S. and Japanese foreign policy formulation and implementation processes from 1961 to 1978, which also explores the long-term strategic significance of the U.S. deterrence in East Asia. It is based on numerous declassified and previously unused U.S. and Japanese documents, oral histories, and the author’s interviews with former officials. The book traces the origins of contemporary security and diplomatic issues back to the 1961–1978 U.S.–Japan negotiations involving secret arrangements in the reversion of Okinawa, Japan’s defense build-up, including the question of Japan’s nuclear option, and U.S.–Japan defense cooperation. Through a systematic assessment of the behind-the-scenes discussions, Dr Yukinori Komine demonstrates that external security calculations were consistently primary factors in U.S.–Japan relations. The book concludes by making policy-relevant suggestions, important for the "Pacific Century".

This book offers crucial contributions to the ongoing debate regarding the increasing need for greater transparency and burden-sharing in the U.S.–Japan alliance. It will appeal to scholars and students of International Relations of the Asia-Pacific region, East Asia–U.S. relations, U.S. Politics and Japanese Politics, as well as Foreign Policy.

Yukinori Komine, PhD, is an Associate in Research of the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies at Harvard University USA and an Associate Professor of International Relations at the School of Security and Global Studies in American Public University. He is the author of Secrecy in US Foreign Policy: Nixon, Kissinger and the Rapprochement with China (2008).

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