For more than three decades, the multifaceted alliance between
the United States and Japan has contributed significantly to the
security of Japan and the maintenance of peace and security in the
Far East. With the end of the Cold War, new sources of potential
threats have arisen at a time when Japan's national self-confidence
has been shaken by nearly a decade of economic stagnation, a highly
fluid political situation, and an inadequate institutional
structure for crisis management and strategy formulation. Osius
examines how Japan is trying to redefine its identity from a nation
whose constitution renounces war as a sovereign right to a normal
country involved in United Nations peacekeeping operations and
regional military relationships.
In his initial chapters, Osius focuses on the purpose of the
security alliance and argues that U.S.-Japanese interests coincide
enough not only to sustain the alliance, but also to warrant
strengthening and promoting it. He then examines the challenges and
opportunities for an enhanced alliance over the next decade.
Together, he maintains, the United States and Japan can address
broadly defined security concerns, such as energy supply, weapons
of mass destruction proliferation, transborder crime, piracy, and
illegal narcotics, as well as environmental issues, infectious
disease, economic development, and humanitarian and disaster
relief. However, if it is to thrive, the U.S.-Japan alliance must
remain dynamic rather than static and must be nurtured, sustained,
and enhanced by both parties. An important analysis for policy
makers, scholars, and students of U.S.-Japanese political and
military relations and Asian Studies in general.
General
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