In this edited collection diplomats, academic researchers, and
journalists survey modern Russian-Japanese relations. An attempt is
made to go back to the origins of the conflict in their relations,
to analyze their current status, and to propose an agenda for the
future. The authors argue that the problems Moscow and Tokyo
inherited from the decades of the Cold War cannot be resolved
through a narrow bilateral approach and will require constructure
U.S. participation. The problem of the Northern Territories is
examined in the context of the North Pacific regional security
environment. The authors explore the prospects for cooperative
regional engagement, a nuclear build-down in the North Pacific, and
possible involvement of the UN in the resolution of the territorial
dispute.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union raised hopes for a rapid
improvement of Japanese-Russian relations. This is important to
both global and regional stability, peace, and security in
Northeast Asia, and to Russia's transition to new relations with
the West. Both Russia and Japan are in the process of domestic
change and have weak political leadership. Yeltsin's visit to Tokyo
in October 1993 was a cause for relief and for hope as the two
nations discussed their common concerns. However, the Northern
Territories remains a serious obstacle to improved relations. In
this book an attempt is made to go back to the origins of the
conflict in Japan-Russia relations, to discuss their current
status, and to propose an agenda for the future.
There was a broad consensus among the diplomats, academic
researchers, political analysts, and journalists whose writings are
part of this collection. First, the problems Moscow and Tokyo
inherited from the decades of Cold War cannot be resolved through a
narrow bilateral approach and will require constructive U.S.
participation. Second, the interconnection between bilateral,
regional, and global trends created a new context for Moscow-Tokyo
dialogue and cooperation. Third, the problem of the Northern
Territories cannot be separated from the realities of the North
Pacific regional security environment, which is still under the
residual influence of the Cold War. The authors explore the
prospects for cooperative regional engagement, a nuclear build-down
in the North Pacific, and possible involvement of the UN in the
resolution of the territorial dispute. Among the problems that
require immediate attention, the writers focus on defense
conversion, and dismantlement and disposing of nuclear weapons, and
prospects for trilateral partnership that will serve the purpose of
multilateral cooperation in the North Pacific/Northeast Asian
region.
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