At a time when security and political relations between the United
States and Japan are exhibiting renewed confidence and strength,
this study provides a timely analysis and reassessment of the early
Cold War’s trans-Pacific bilateral alliance. Taking issue with
studies that have characterized the United States as largely
dismissive of Japanese national interests, the book reveals an
engaged and pragmatic leadership working to develop an active
partnership with America's former adversary. Drawing on the latest
scholarship in both Japan and the United States, exhaustively
reassessing the diplomatic record, and relying on a wealth of newly
released archival material, the author offers a reinterpretation of
key issues in the early Cold War relationship. The work also casts
dramatic new light on Japan's importance as a target of covert
diplomacy and Soviet espionage—and the significance, in this
context, of Japan's internal conflict between progressive and
conservative values and the wider debate over national identity and
political legitimacy.
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