Security Policy Options for Japan in Three Time Frameworks
Journal: RUDN Journal of World History (Vol.14, No. 3)Publication Date: 2023-01-07
Authors : Tetsuya Toyoda; Ekaterina Vaseneva; Ryo Takahama;
Page : 410-426
Keywords : Japan; China; Russia; US; Indo-Pacific; FOIP; Japan-Russia relations; QUAD;
Abstract
This paper examines security policy options for Japan at the present stage that may be worth considering in the short term, the midterm, and the long term, respectively. Hence, the aim of the paper is to examine foreign policy security options for Japan in the foreseeable future. While providing a comprehensive overview of the Japanese foreign and security policy at the present stage, the article employs the case study methodological framework to analyze Japan’s foreign policy objectives in case of Tokyo’s relations with the most critical partners in the Asia-Pacific Region - namely, the United States, China, Russia, ASEAN, and Taiwan. Examining the origin and further development of the QUAD, the authors highlight the absence of ASEAN members and India’s hesitation to institutionalize the grouping, while analyzing the Russia-Japan relations they focus on common interests in security cooperation, as well on its limitations. As a result, in the short term, the expansion of the Japan-US alliance to the Indo-Pacific region is the most plausible option. However, without involving the ASEAN countries, the Free and Open IndoPacific (FOIP) strategy can only add Australia and India to the existing Japan-US alliance. In the midterm, an alliance with Russia may be, with some serious limitations, geographically a natural option. In the long term, Japan might need to find a proper place in a China-centered order in East Asia. Therefore, the authors conclude that the relative decline of US influence in East Asia is unavoidable in the coming decades, Japan must adjust or even reconsider its security policy.
Other Latest Articles
- Evolution and transformation processes of China’s educational policy and governance in 1978-2019
- South Korean “Youth Culture” of the 1970s and State-Led Modernization
- Buddhism and Nationalism as Sources of Identity in in Asia of the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries
- Book review: Kayashima, N., Kuroda, K., & Kitamura, Y. (2022). Japan’s International Cooperation in Education: History and Prospects. Springer Singapore, 365 p.
- Book review: Pieper, M. (2022). The Making of Eurasia. Competition and Cooperation Between China’s Belt and Road Initiative and Russia. London, New York: I. B. Tauris, 168 p.
Last modified: 2023-01-07 01:30:26