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- <text id=89TT0812>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: A Deal That Nearly Came Undone
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 70
- A Deal That Nearly Came Undone
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Despite qualms, the U.S. will help Japan build the FSX jet
- </p>
- <p> When it finally flies, Japan's FSX fighter jet (top speed:
- 1,300 m.p.h.) will represent technology at its peak. But the
- aircraft may represent an even loftier accomplishment in
- diplomacy, since it has become a centerpiece in the friendly but
- fierce economic rivalry between the U.S. and Japan. For more
- than four years, the two governments have been negotiating a
- joint effort to develop a new generation of fighter jet that
- would patrol the island nation's shipping lanes and support its
- defense forces in the 1990s. When a tentative deal was first
- reached last November, the project drew heavy fire from
- officials within the Commerce Department, who contended that the
- U.S. would reveal so much advanced aviation technology to
- Japanese defense contractors that they could develop a civilian
- aircraft industry that would compete with such U.S. producers
- as Boeing and McDonnell Douglas.
- </p>
- <p> This month the FSX's proponents at the State and Defense
- departments, who see the deal as an economic and strategic boon
- for the U.S., argued heatedly with critics who wanted to scrap
- the plan. Finally last week, President Bush called an unusual
- National Security Council meeting to thrash out the issues. In
- the end, he decided on a compromise: to go through with the deal
- but to apply safeguards that will prevent Japanese contractors
- from getting access to the most important technology. According
- to presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, Bush has yet to
- decide on "at least three or four basic issues regarding the
- agreement," which he is expected to announce this week.
- </p>
- <p> Japan originally wanted to build its own fighter from
- scratch but eventually agreed to a deal in which the U.S. would
- share more of the F-16 fighter jet's aviation and military
- secrets than it had before with any of its allies. In return,
- the U.S. would acquire some Japanese developments in
- radar-absorbing, or Stealth, materials that would be used in the
- plane's wings and fuselage. General Dynamics, which first
- developed the F-16 in 1972, would design and build 35% to 40%
- of the FSX prototype. Later, U.S. contractors would expect a 30%
- share in the production of 130 to 170 airplanes. The project
- would also ensure that the Japanese and U.S. air forces remained
- fully compatible for the next two decades.
- </p>
- <p> Tempers flared during last week's NSC meeting, which lasted
- more than two hours. U.S. Trade Representative Carla Hills
- argued vehemently that Bush should scrap the agreement in favor
- of persuading the Japanese to buy standard F-16s, minus the
- instructions for putting their most sensitive components
- together. On the other side, National Security Adviser Brent
- Scowcroft and Secretary of State James Baker contended that the
- agreement should proceed unchanged. But the lack of a Defense
- Secretary to argue the Pentagon's side handicapped the pro-FSX
- forces. Covering the middle ground, Commerce Secretary Robert
- Mosbacher thought he could abide the deal as long as the most
- crucial U.S. design secrets were not given away.
- </p>
- <p> Mosbacher's view prevailed. He scored an even greater
- victory by persuading the President to promise that henceforth
- the Commerce Department will be included at the start of any new
- negotiations involving the exchange of military or technology
- secrets.
- </p>
- <p> In deciding this week just how to modify the FSX agreement,
- the President must walk a fine line between foreign-policy and
- economic considerations. If the deal preserves too many
- secrets, the Japanese Defense Agency is likely to scrap it and
- build an advanced fighter without the U.S. "If Japan needed
- outside help, it could turn to the Europeans," says Joel
- Johnson, vice president of the American League for Exports and
- Security Assistance. Currently, the U.S. provides more than 95%
- of Japanese defense imports. Says Johnson: "Not only do we risk
- losing an important share of the FSX program, but we would also
- be assisting our toughest competitors to penetrate one of our
- major defense markets."
- </p>
- <p> Some of Japan's own staunch protectors of their country's
- technology might secretly welcome the demise of a joint FSX
- program. Japan agreed to co-develop the plane only after very
- hard bargaining by the Pentagon. "It's a fallacy to suggest that
- we ever seriously considered buying the F-16 off the shelf,"
- says Ryoji Onodera, director general for international affairs
- in Japan's Defense Agency. "From the beginning we said that it
- had to be something new."
- </p>
- <p> A primary issue is how much of the F-16's computer software
- will be shared. Bush has not yet decided whether to include the
- so-called source codes of the plane's mission computer, which
- integrates radar, navigation and weapons systems. If the
- Japanese fail to receive these codes, they may not share their
- new radar technology. Lacking the codes, Japanese engineers
- would have trouble coordinating the plane's hardware and
- software. The likely result: a less flashy and efficient plane.
- </p>
- <p> In terms of civilian aerospace competition, even outspoken
- critics of the jet deal admit that the FSX's secrets alone are
- not enough to make Japan competitive in commercial aircraft, a
- market it has yet to enter. But, on principle, should the U.S.
- give away its advantages? "The real question," observes Clyde
- Prestowitz, a former Commerce Department negotiator, "is whether
- we actively help Japan cut into our lead in aircraft and
- component design." The battle over the FSX proves that trade
- issues have become just as important as national security or
- foreign relations in determining U.S. policy.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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