Synopses & Reviews
Since 1985 Japan has been reorienting its foreign policy by placing greater emphasis on its relationship with the countries of East Asia. By expanding production networks overseas and advocating open regionalism, Japan is positioning itself to maximize the commercial benefits of East Asias dynamism. Nevertheless, while its economic future is shifting to East Asia, Japan faces an uncertain and in many ways perilous security environment after the end of the Cold War. In response, Japan is reinvigorating its security relationship with the United States while pushing multilateral and bilateral dialogues with its neighbors. Although Japans socio-cultural influence in East Asia is growing, it continues to have difficulty dealing with its militarist past-- something that makes it difficult for Japanese leaders to reassure the region about the countrys long-term intentions. Consequently, Japan is doing its best to avoid having to choose between East Asia and the West. Moreover, it prefers to exert regional leadership from behind--getting other countries to promote its agenda. In this major new book, Mike Mochizuki explains that it is still too soon to judge whether this new Japanese approach will succeed. He shows how Japans reorientation also poses new challenges for the United States, which must strike the right balance between promoting its regional economic interests and harnessing its alliance with Japan on behalf of regional security. Mike M. Mochizuki is a senior fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies program at the Brookings Institution. He is the editor of Toward a True Alliance: Restructuring U.S.-Japan Security Relations (Brookings, 1997) and author of Japan: Domestic Change andForeign Policy (RAND, 1995).