The Japan Program is part of the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center.
This op-ed by Kiyoteru Tsutsui was originally published in The Hill.
With the specter of a cold war with China arising, allies in Asia-Pacific are increasingly important for the United States, whether in fighting pandemics, negotiating trade deals, or containing territorial disputes. Japan historically has been one of the most important partners for American interests in the region and a steadfast ally in the post-World War II era.
For Japan, too, the U.S.-Japan security alliance has been the cornerstone of its foreign policy for decades, and the Japanese public clearly understands that. Reflecting this understanding, every new security decision in Japan, from the relocation of a U.S.-base in Okinawa to the recent cancellation of Aegis Ashore deployment, spurs intense public debates about the future of the U.S.-Japan alliance. (Continue reading the full article at The Hill.)
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The recent escalation of diplomatic and trade disputes between South Korea and Japan has alarmed
“For seven decades our thinking about Indo-Asia-Pacific security and international