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Rusty Shackleford
11th September 2009, 20:50
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/japan/6174814/Incoming-Tokyo-government-threatens-split-with-US.html


Yukio Hatoyama, the leader of the Democratic Party of Japan, has caused alarm in Washington after publishing an article blaming the US for the ills of capitalism, the global economy and "the destruction of human dignity".
He also intends to examine an agreement that permits US warships to dock at Japanese ports, in violation of the nation's non-nuclear principles. Mr Hatoyama says he will also look again at the $6 billion cost faced by Japan to transfer thousands of US troops from their base in Okinawa to the Pacific island of Guam amid a wide-ranging review of the American military presence on Japanese soil.
His election campaign promised a more "independent" foreign policy from Washington and closer relations with Asian neighbours, including China. On Thursday, he repeated his intention to defy the US and end the Maritime Self-Defence Force's resupply mission in the Indian Ocean.
Mr Hatoyama will be sworn in on Wednesday after an historic victory that ended decades of near unbroken rule by the Liberal Democratic Party. He will have his first meeting with Barack Obama, the US president, at the United Nations on Sep 22.
The Pentagon reminded Japan of the expectations it faced as a "great power and one of the world's wealthiest countries". Geoff Morrell, a spokesman, said: "There is an international responsibility, we believe, for everyone to do their share, as best they can, to contribute to this effort to bring about a more peaceful and secure Afghanistan."
The Defence Department would not "prejudge" Japan's new political leadership, he added.
"We think that when the responsibility of governing comes about that people will appreciate, as we have every reason to believe they do, the importance of this alliance and the importance of working together on these [security] agreements," he said.
Makoto Watanabe, a professor of media and communication at Hokkaido Bunkyo University, said: "The US has been critical of new trends in Japan, but we are not a colony of Washington and we should be able to say what we want.
"The Japan-US relationship will remain our most important bilateral link, but while under previous governments Japan had become a yes-man to the US, this suggests to me that healthy change is taking place."


i got rather excited when reading this. i also read japan is scrapping its missile defense program and seeking better ties with china.

Crux
12th September 2009, 01:03
Well, from what I understand the Democratic Party are trying to sit on all chairs at the same time.

ToxicSoil
12th September 2009, 01:11
It doesn't really matter because Japan is never going to be able to climb out of the economic hole that it's been stuck in since World War II.

KarlMarx1989
12th September 2009, 02:16
Great news! :)

Rusty Shackleford
12th September 2009, 02:42
Well this is a definite signal of the United States' weakeness if japan, the nation they nuked, is now going against america's wishes.

RotStern
12th September 2009, 02:46
Fantastic :D

Bankotsu
12th September 2009, 03:16
This is great exciting news, Japan finally decided to play its proper role as one of the poles of power in the world and stop being U.S' yes man in asia.

This will help contribute to a multipolar world which I support.

Great great trends happening in the world right now. Very hopeful.:D

Rusty Shackleford
12th September 2009, 04:01
heres the article about missile defense (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aruidIvvQ2bc)

New Tet
12th September 2009, 04:36
Disconcerting, to say the least.

Rusty Shackleford
12th September 2009, 05:08
:ohmy:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/sep2009/japa-s11.shtml




The touting of Fujii as finance minister is clearly aimed at reassuring big business that the new government will protect their interests. Hirotaka Kusaba, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute, told the Wall Street Journal: “Fujii is the best card that the DPJ has as a finance minister, so markets, including stocks, would react positively to his appointment.” He added that Fujii’s experience in the finance ministry could help smooth cost-cutting.

Former Democrat leader Naota Kan has already been chosen as minister in charge of the new National Strategy Bureau that aims to ensure that the government, rather than Japan’s powerful state bureaucracy, sets domestic and foreign policy directions. Kan is known as a proponent of pro-market restructuring. During the election campaign, he attacked alleged waste by ministries, saying: “This kind of irrational thing is not done in the private sector.”

The appointment of Kan and probably Fujii to key posts underscores the DPJ’s conservative, pro-business character. The party, formed in 1998, is an unstable amalgam of ex-Liberal Democrats and former Socialist Party factions, but the leading positions are firmly in the hands of ex-LDP figures, including party leader Yukio Hatoyama and former leader Ichiro Ozawa, who has been appointed as DPJ secretary general.near the end



The Hatoyama government will be heavily dependent on former Socialist Party figures and their associated trade unions to suppress resistance in the working class to its policies. Moreover, after several days of haggling, the DPJ has concluded a coalition agreement with two small allies—the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the Peoples New Party (PNP). The SDP was formed in 1996 from the remains of the former Socialist Party after it entered a grand coalition with the LDP in 1994 and its support collapsed.

The Democrats need the support of the SDP and PNP to maintain control of the parliamentary upper house. More importantly, however, the Social Democrats in particular will be called upon to contain and quell any anti-government opposition among workers. The same role will be played by the Japanese Communist Party. While it is not part of the ruling coalition, the JCP’s leader, Kazuo Shii, has already promised to act as a “constructive opposition”. :ohmy: indeed!

how can they actually do this? do the japanese socialists have any principle at all? this is hardly a left shift if they are indeed cutting public spending and using socialists to quell worker unrest!

The only good news so far is that Japan is distancing themselves from the US but this is horrible.