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This text traces the evolution of Japan's alliance relationship
with the United States from 1951 to the post-Cold War era with
particular reference to the politics of defence production and
related technology-sharing. The status and role of the alliance in
the post-Cold War regional security environment are also addressed.
Trade tensions and the politicisation of defence technology-sharing
are symptomatic of a deeper malaise in the relationship. The
central theme of the study is the potential danger of significant
tensions arising in the relationship from the continued play of
parallel rather than identical national interests. The parallel and
widening gap between the respective interests of the allies has the
potential to form a fatal flaw in the relationship. A failure to
move beyond bilateralism to new multilateral approaches to mutual
security issues threatens to undermine the contemporary search for
peace in Northeast Asia.
In this volume, Japan's alliance with the US is examined with
reference to defence production and technology-sharing. The
alliance's post-Cold War relevance is considered, and it is argued
that there is a danger of significant tensions arising in the
relationship from parallel rather than identical national
interests. A widening gap between the respective interests forms a
potentially fatal flaw in the relationship. Failure to move beyond
bilateralism to multilateral answers threatens to indermine the
search for regional peace.
What is America's national identity? This study offers a new
perspective into this question. It argues that this identity is
'constructed' rather than 'essential' and reflects the politics of
exclusion. This identificatory exclusion has been globalized
through American economic, cultural, political and military
expansion. The study provocatively draws upon poetry, literature,
art, architecture, gangsta rap, landscape and cityscape to
illuminate the construction of America's national identity and
illustrates how this has been globalized in an increasingly
post-modernist condition.
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