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- WORLD, Page 58AMERICA ABROADJapan and the Vision Thing
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- By Strobe Talbott
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- TOKYO
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- Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu is apprehensive about his
- scheduled meeting with George Bush in New York City this week.
- Both men know that many Americans want Japan to play a larger
- role in the Persian Gulf. After the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
- Kaifu's government dithered for nearly a month before offering
- $1 billion to help finance the multilateral response.
- "Contemptible tokenism!," harrumphed Senator John McCain, an
- Arizona Republican. The U.S. ambassador in Tokyo, Michael
- Armacost, was more diplomatic, but just as tough. Two weeks
- ago, Kaifu raised the figure to $4 billion -- serious money but
- eminently affordable for a country whose GNP rings up almost
- that much every 12 hours.
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- The real issue is not so much the dollar amount as the
- nature of the Japanese contribution. So far it's all treasure
- and no blood, all soft power and no hard. Left to its own
- instincts, Japan's sole instrument of security policy would be
- its checkbook. That isn't good enough in a world menaced by the
- likes of Saddam Hussein. The burden to be shared in the gulf
- is not just financial cost; it is also mortal risk. If U.S.,
- Saudi, Egyptian, British and other soldiers die in the desert,
- Japan's billions will have bought more resentment than
- gratitude from its partners.
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- The Japanese justify keeping their military personnel out
- of harm's way by citing their "peace constitution," which the
- U.S. imposed after World War II and which restricts the
- carefully named Self-Defense Forces to the home islands and
- territorial waters. Still, some of Kaifu's advisers believe the
- government could send communications and logistics experts,
- even minesweepers to the crisis zone. Last week, in an effort
- to blunt the criticism that Japan is wimping out, the Foreign
- Ministry dispatched a small team of volunteer medics to Saudi
- Arabia and promised more may follow. Others advocate dispatching
- combat units under United Nations authority. However, Japanese
- officials worry that even strictly non-offensive deployments
- would arouse anxiety among their neighbors in Asia.
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- An Indonesian diplomat in Tokyo dismisses this concern as
- exaggerated and self-serving. "Sure, we remember the militarism
- and imperialism associated with the Rising Sun in the '30s and
- '40s," he says. "But this is the '90s, and the threat is Saddam
- and his ilk. The Japanese are using our hang-ups as a cover for
- their own."
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- Seizaburo Sato, a foreign policy analyst and adviser to
- former Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, agrees. "The talk of
- constitutional constraints and demons of the past is all one
- big alibi," he says. "We mustn't miss a golden opportunity to
- prove we recognize our responsibilities."
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- Part of the problem is that Japan has its own trouble with
- "the vision thing." Despite its status as an economic
- superpower, the country suffers from global parochialism. The
- closest approximation of a grand strategy is the goal of
- keeping the world safe for Japanese exports and investments.
- The political system depends, sometimes to the point of
- paralysis, on consensus. The prime ministership has rarely been
- a bully pulpit, especially in recent years. After a massive
- stock-trading scandal, the shoguns of the ruling Liberal
- Democratic Party chose Kaifu in 1989 not just because he was
- untainted. He was untested and unthreatening as well, a
- caretaker who would be easy to push around and eventually to
- push aside.
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- Earlier this year Kaifu showed signs of being a lot better
- than that. Demonstrating unexpected skill and boldness, he
- engineered major progress in trade talks with the U.S. This
- week he could advance both his own standing and his country's
- by bringing more than just his checkbook to his meeting with
- Bush.
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