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Turkish-Japanese companies will take the upper hand in Asia with the permission of Tengri

Turkish businessman awarded honorary degree in Japan
Sunday, May 04, 2014

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Ahmet Calik, chairman of Calik Holding, receives honorary degree from Matsumoto University

ISTANBUL – Prominent Turkish businessman Ahmet Calik received an honorary degree from Japan’s Matsumoto University on Sunday, a statement from Calik Holding said.

CEO of the prominent conglomerate, which conducts joint projects with Japanese companies in the Central Asia, Balkans, Middle East and Africa, was celebrated for his role in developing Japan’s business world, the statement said.

The Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's adviser Isao Iijima, deputy Shigeyuki Gotoh, Turkish Ambassador to Japan Bulent Meric and many representatives from Japan’s business and academic world attended the honorary doctorate ceremony.

“The relations between Turkey and Japan are very strong, and Ahmet Calik has very important contributions to the development of our relationship,” said Iijima according to the statement.

Calik said, “I have been working with Japanese companies for 25 years; the Japanese are faithful, reliable and hardworking people.”

Calik Holding is active in multiple sectors including energy, telecoms, textile, construction, finance and mining. It employs about 20,000 people in 17 countries.
 
Allah doesn't approve when you worship your pagan nomad gods. :disagree:
It goes together perfectly. By the way, Chinese labor source could provide comfort to Japanese-Turkish companies.
 
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Japan Defense Academy Recruitment Jumps as China Tensions Rise
By Isabel Reynolds May 14, 2014


National Defense Academy (NDA) cadets stand at attention in the NDA campus grounds in Yokosuka, Japan. Photographer: Yuriko Nakao/Bloomberg

A 6:00 a.m. bugle call summons 22-year-old student Mutsumi Iida to begin a day organized by the minute between study, sports and training until lights out at 10:30 p.m.

She picked the National Defense Academy over the freedom of an ordinary university as the best route to her dream of becoming an officer in Japan’s Marine Self-Defense Forces. The largest number of young people in 26 years followed in Iida’s footsteps to the college this year, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pushes a more active defense posture. Abe today will announce plans to reinterpret Japan’s pacifist constitution to expand the role of the military.

“I want to work on a warship,” she said in an interview in a classroom on the 160-acre seaside campus at Yokosuka, 70 kilometers (43 miles) south of Tokyo. “I want to be at the forefront of national defense. Japan is an island nation, so I think this is the way to get most deeply involved.”

Hemmed in by the country’s charter and lingering resentment over World War II, Japan’s Self-Defense Forces have not traditionally been a route to the top echelons of business or government. Admiration for the defense forces’ role in disaster relief, particularly after the 2011 tsunami, and a deepening territorial dispute with China has fueled national pride and increased interest in the academy even as recruits face an unaccustomed level of danger.

Soldiers Shunned
“In the U.S. and Europe, members of the military are still ordinary members of society,” said Ryosei Kokubun, a civilian China scholar who became president of the academy in 2012. “In Japan, they were not treated as such for many years.”

Kokubun said military uniforms are such a rare sight on Japan’s streets that students often change into civilian dress when they leave campus. He had a planned external lecture canceled when the organizers learned he was working at the academy.

That prejudice is fading, he said. The SDF boasted a more than 90 percent approval rating in a government poll in 2012, compared with 67.5 percent in 1991. The percentage of those seeking to join the armed forces “for the sake of the country” was about 30 percent in 2012, compared with 12 percent nine-years earlier, making it the primary reason given.

Bumper Crop
This year the academy’s dormitories are crowded -- 571 people took up spots, the most since 1978. The numbers of young people taking the entrance exam, which only 1-in-10 pass, have risen for two years, even with the youth population shriveling due to one of the world’s lowest birth rates.

Alongside the standard academic curriculum and an extra dose of security studies, students learn skills like how to dismantle and re-assemble a gun, often marching in formation to class, briefcases in hand. Meals take place in a vast mess hall seating 2,000 and when lectures are over, cadets attend sports clubs, including martial arts such as kendo, judo and sumo.

“I think you get a better education there than at an ordinary university,” said Rear Admiral Umio Otsuka, who graduated in 1983. “You have no free time, so you can’t slack off.”

Japan’s SDF have their roots in the Imperial Army that was disbanded after the country’s 1945 surrender. The constitution imposed by the U.S. after the conflict barred Japan from waging war, limiting the military to a purely defensive role. The postwar forces have never fired a shot in battle.

Million-Man Army
Japan’s forces number about 225,000, a fraction of neighboring North Korea’s more than 1 million-man army and about a 10th that of China. While there is no plan to increase troop numbers, Abe is seeking a more proactive stance amid concerns over North Korea’s nuclear capability and China’s military ambitions.

Abe today will announce details of his plan to allow Japan to come to the aid of allies through a reinterpretation of the constitution. The move is favored by the U.S., which maintains 38,000 troops in the country, and could also pave the way for Japan to take a broader role in international peacekeeping. Abe passed a second annual increase in defense spending and has loosened restrictions on arms exports as part of his security push.

The drive comes after China more than doubled military spending since 2006 as it seeks to build a blue-water navy capable of operating far from its ports. Chinese and Japanese ships regularly tail one another around disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Japan Defense Academy Recruitment Jumps as China Tensions Rise - Businessweek
 
Japan Defense Academy Recruitment Jumps as China Tensions Rise
By Isabel Reynolds May 14, 2014


National Defense Academy (NDA) cadets stand at attention in the NDA campus grounds in Yokosuka, Japan. Photographer: Yuriko Nakao/Bloomberg

A 6:00 a.m. bugle call summons 22-year-old student Mutsumi Iida to begin a day organized by the minute between study, sports and training until lights out at 10:30 p.m.

She picked the National Defense Academy over the freedom of an ordinary university as the best route to her dream of becoming an officer in Japan’s Marine Self-Defense Forces. The largest number of young people in 26 years followed in Iida’s footsteps to the college this year, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pushes a more active defense posture. Abe today will announce plans to reinterpret Japan’s pacifist constitution to expand the role of the military.

“I want to work on a warship,” she said in an interview in a classroom on the 160-acre seaside campus at Yokosuka, 70 kilometers (43 miles) south of Tokyo. “I want to be at the forefront of national defense. Japan is an island nation, so I think this is the way to get most deeply involved.”

Hemmed in by the country’s charter and lingering resentment over World War II, Japan’s Self-Defense Forces have not traditionally been a route to the top echelons of business or government. Admiration for the defense forces’ role in disaster relief, particularly after the 2011 tsunami, and a deepening territorial dispute with China has fueled national pride and increased interest in the academy even as recruits face an unaccustomed level of danger.

Soldiers Shunned
“In the U.S. and Europe, members of the military are still ordinary members of society,” said Ryosei Kokubun, a civilian China scholar who became president of the academy in 2012. “In Japan, they were not treated as such for many years.”

Kokubun said military uniforms are such a rare sight on Japan’s streets that students often change into civilian dress when they leave campus. He had a planned external lecture canceled when the organizers learned he was working at the academy.

That prejudice is fading, he said. The SDF boasted a more than 90 percent approval rating in a government poll in 2012, compared with 67.5 percent in 1991. The percentage of those seeking to join the armed forces “for the sake of the country” was about 30 percent in 2012, compared with 12 percent nine-years earlier, making it the primary reason given.

Bumper Crop
This year the academy’s dormitories are crowded -- 571 people took up spots, the most since 1978. The numbers of young people taking the entrance exam, which only 1-in-10 pass, have risen for two years, even with the youth population shriveling due to one of the world’s lowest birth rates.

Alongside the standard academic curriculum and an extra dose of security studies, students learn skills like how to dismantle and re-assemble a gun, often marching in formation to class, briefcases in hand. Meals take place in a vast mess hall seating 2,000 and when lectures are over, cadets attend sports clubs, including martial arts such as kendo, judo and sumo.

“I think you get a better education there than at an ordinary university,” said Rear Admiral Umio Otsuka, who graduated in 1983. “You have no free time, so you can’t slack off.”

Japan’s SDF have their roots in the Imperial Army that was disbanded after the country’s 1945 surrender. The constitution imposed by the U.S. after the conflict barred Japan from waging war, limiting the military to a purely defensive role. The postwar forces have never fired a shot in battle.

Million-Man Army
Japan’s forces number about 225,000, a fraction of neighboring North Korea’s more than 1 million-man army and about a 10th that of China. While there is no plan to increase troop numbers, Abe is seeking a more proactive stance amid concerns over North Korea’s nuclear capability and China’s military ambitions.

Abe today will announce details of his plan to allow Japan to come to the aid of allies through a reinterpretation of the constitution. The move is favored by the U.S., which maintains 38,000 troops in the country, and could also pave the way for Japan to take a broader role in international peacekeeping. Abe passed a second annual increase in defense spending and has loosened restrictions on arms exports as part of his security push.

The drive comes after China more than doubled military spending since 2006 as it seeks to build a blue-water navy capable of operating far from its ports. Chinese and Japanese ships regularly tail one another around disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Japan Defense Academy Recruitment Jumps as China Tensions Rise - Businessweek
Im glad that they are toughening up. They were basically a nation of push overs in my opinion ever since the end of ww2.
 
Im glad that they are toughening up. They were basically a nation of push overs in my opinion ever since the end of ww2.
They were pacified by US because they lost WW2 but now they are militarizing fulltime. Japan needs to protect their sea trading routs and allies in the region at all cost. It is essential for them.
 
They were pacified by US because they lost WW2 but now they are militarizing fulltime. Japan needs to protect their sea trading routs and allies in the region at all cost. It is essential for them.
Right. They cant allow china to pick off each country one by one because then eventually japan would be left alone.
 
Japan is swiftly propping up their military. Some were crying about this. The way of the samurai shouldn't be estimated.

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Japan GDP growth hits 5.9% amid massive shopping spree
By Charles Riley @CRrileyCNN May 15, 2014: 5:25 AM ET

Japan's economy grew at a breakneck pace in the first three months of the year as consumers went on a massive shopping spree to avoid a planned sales tax increase.

Gross domestic product (GDP) grew at an annual rate of 5.9% in the first quarter, Japan's Cabinet Office said Thursday. The expansion was much quicker than the 4% figure expected by economists, and a major rebound from disappointing growth in the fourth quarter of 2013.

On a quarterly basis, Japan's GDP increased by 1.5%. Exports and business investment were particularly strong, and both measures topped analyst expectations.

Private consumption also provided a boost, driven by consumers that rushed to make big purchases before the tax hike took effect.

The consumption tax was increased to 8% in April in a bid to improve the country's fiscal position. If needed, the government has the option to implement an additional increase to 10% by 2015. Consumers responded in a big way -- and all the extra shopping contributed to the strong first quarter numbers. But now that the sugar rush is over, economists expect Japan's growth rate to return to earth in the second quarter.
"Looking ahead, the economy will certainly contract in the second quarter of the year, as consumers rein in spending after the tax hike, and residential investment is set to plunge," said Marcel Thieliant of Capital Economics.

Still, Japan is looking pretty good for the full year as the government presses ahead with its much-ballyhooed Abenomics revival strategy.
"While the first quarter's strong growth will likely give way to contraction in the second quarter, recent positive sentiment surveys suggest that Japanese growth should continue above the pre-Abenomics trend when the volatility caused by the tax increase passes," said Bill Adams, an economist for PNC Financial Services Group.

 
Bloomberg News
Japan Investment Solid as Machine Orders Jump Most Since 1996
By Chikako Mogi and Toru Fujioka May 18, 2014


Japan’s core machinery orders jumped the most since 1996 in March, pointing to a continued recovery in business investment that could help drive growth.

Orders rose 19.1 percent from a month earlier, excluding ships and from electrical power companies, the Cabinet Office said in Tokyo today, more than an median 5.8 percent increase forecast by economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Companies forecast orders to rise 0.4 percent in April to June, a fifth straight quarter of gains.

The data -- a leading gauge of private capital investment - - underline strength in domestic demand that could help drive an economy lacking support from exports. With production rising, companies may need to invest in more facilities to deal with supply constraints.

“The recovery in business investment remains on track,” said Marcel Thieliant, a Singapore-based economist at Capital Economics. “The rising level of capacity usage also suggests that companies will continue to invest in machinery and equipment, despite the likely plunge in aggregate demand this quarter after the consumption tax hike.”

The gain core orders in March was the biggest since a 25.5 percent increase in October 1996, according to Bloomberg data.

Japan Investment Solid as Machine Orders Jump Most Since 1996 - Businessweek
 
China Flexes Its Muscles in Dispute With Vietnam

BEIJING — China’s escalating dispute with Vietnam over contested waters in the South China Sea sent new shudders through Asia on Thursday as China demanded the withdrawal of Vietnamese ships near a giant Chinese drilling rig and for the first time acknowledged its vessels had blasted the Vietnamese flotilla with water cannons in recent days.

While China characterized the use of water cannons as a form of restraint, it punctuated the increasingly muscular stance by the Chinese toward a growing number of Asian neighbors who fear they are vulnerable to bullying by China and its increasingly powerful military. The latest back-and-forth in the dispute with Vietnam — the most serious in the South China Sea in years — sent the Vietnamese stock market plunging on Thursday and elicited concern from a top American diplomat who was visiting Hanoi.
Political and economic historians said the China-Vietnam tensions signaled a hardening position by the Chinese over what they regard as their “core interest” in claiming sovereignty over a vastly widened swath of coastal waters that stretch from the Philippines and Indonesia north to Japan. In Chinese parlance, they say, “core interest” means there is no room for compromise.
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“I find it quite alarming, because it was not so many years ago that there was a relatively tranquil relationship between China and its neighbors,” said Orville Schell, a China scholar who is the director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society in New York.

“Now we have a picture that’s slowly pixelating, from Indonesia, to Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Japan, up the neighborhood,” Mr. Schell said in a telephone interview. “We begin to get a picture of stress and strain. This is not exactly the peaceful rise of China that we were advertised.”

While Mr. Schell said he did not necessarily foresee an armed conflict — a view echoed by others — he said the Chinese had “created a climate where it will be very hard for China to exist in this state of fraternal relations with its neighbors.”

The tensions with Vietnam began last week when a state-owned Chinese energy company moved the drilling rig into position in waters that Vietnam claims, and intensified this week as ships sent by both countries faced off.

On Thursday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official said that Vietnamese ships had rammed Chinese vessels as many as 171 times over four days. The announcement followed accusations by Vietnam on Wednesday that Chinese ships had rammed its vessels early this week.

The Chinese say Vietnam has dispatched 35 ships to the area, while the Vietnamese say China has deployed about 80 vessels.

The movement of the drilling rig, analysts said, was among the most assertive steps China has taken to solidify claims over both the South China Sea, one of the world’s major trading routes, and the East China Sea.

In November, Beijing declared an air defense zone over a band of the East China Sea, including islands that both China and Japan claim, and demanded that other countries notify the Chinese authorities before their planes pass through the airspace. Although the United States military and Japanese aircraft flouted the demands, analysts have suggested the air defense zone helps China build a case for gaining control over the disputed islands, which Japan administers.


China also appears to have tightened its hold over a reef called Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea, which the Philippines claims.

Continue reading the main story


Map: Territorial Disputes in the Waters Near China

Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story

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The disputes have raised concerns in Washington, which has been trying to calibrate its response to the various territorial claims. The Obama administration has courted countries in Southeast Asia as a counterbalance to China’s power, but it has also been trying not to antagonize the Chinese.

On Thursday, the American assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, Daniel R. Russel, who was on a trip to Hanoi, said that the latest dispute had been a major topic of his discussions there.

“We oppose any act of intimidation by vessels, particularly in disputed areas,” he said. The United States did not take a position on the competing claims of sovereignty, he added, but the disputes need to be “dealt with diplomatically and must be dealt with in accordance to international laws.”

The conflicts center in part on a competition for natural resources, including what some believe are substantial deposits of oil and gas beneath the seabed. China has been particularly eager to find energy reserves to feed its growing industrial needs.

The oil rig in the South China Sea was stationed there by China National Offshore Oil Corporation, or Cnooc, 120 nautical miles off Vietnam.

Yi Xianliang, deputy director general of the Department of Boundary and Ocean Affairs of China’s Foreign Ministry, who acknowledged Thursday that China had used water cannons, said, “They are the most gentle measure we can take when trying to keep the other side out.”

But he added that China’s oil drilling operations were legal because they were in “China’s inherent territory.”

China is prepared to negotiate with Vietnam to solve the dispute, Mr. Yi said, but first Vietnam must end its “disruption” and remove its vessels from the area near the rig. There have been 14 “rounds of communication” between the two sides in the past few days, Mr. Yi added.

In the past, Vietnam and China have resolved some disputes by holding talks, and Mr. Yi said that relations between the two countries had improved in recent years. But the latest conflict has unsettled Vietnam and contributed on Thursday to a 5.9 percent drop in the country’s key stock market index, its biggest one-day decline in 13 years.

The oil rig is about 17 nautical miles from disputed islands known in the West as the Paracels, in Vietnam as the Hoang Sa and in China as the Xisha. Dennis C. McCornac, a professor at Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore, said China’s assertiveness was partly aimed at a domestic audience, and that Beijing’s leaders were not interested in fighting with Vietnam.

“I think China and Vietnam have a lot of economic interests that are tied to each other,” he said. “I can’t see a war. That doesn’t make sense for anyone.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/09/world/asia/china-and-vietnam.html?_r=0
 
bilde


NATO, Japan agree to cooperate more


BRUSSELS
— The U.S.-led NATO alliance and Japan, facing mounting security challenges in their respective neighborhoods, agreed Tuesday to cooperate more.

During a visit by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to NATO headquarters, the two sides signed an “individual partnership and cooperation program” that will serve as a roadmap for future joint activities, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.

In a speech to ambassadors from the alliance’s 28 member states, Abe said: “NATO, which shares our fundamental values, is indeed our natural partner. Together, we triumphed in the Cold War.”

Rasmussen said the new program will affect joint activities like counter-piracy operations, disaster relief and humanitarian aid. He also lauded Japan for spending billions to support alliance operations in Afghanistan and for being NATO’s oldest partner from outside Europe or North America.

“There is no doubt the security and stability in the Euro-Atlantic and Asian-Pacific regions cannot be treated separately,” Rasmussen told a joint news conference. “In this time of crisis, our dialogue with like-minded partners like Japan is key to address global security challenges.”

The program comes at a time when the alliance is greatly concerned about the intentions of President Vladimir Putin’s Russia, which annexed Crimea from Ukraine, and when Japan is beset with security challenges of its own, especially from China.

“In the East China Sea, we have seen persistent intrusions into Japan’s territorial waters surrounding the Senkaku Islands,” Abe said in the non-public portion of his speech, according to a transcript provided by Japanese officials. “The number of times that (Japanese) Self-Defense Force aircraft scramble in response to military aircraft approaching our territorial airspace has now reached the same level as during the height of the Cold War.”

“For Japan, realizing peace and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific is a top priority,” Abe said. “We will act in cooperation with any nation who seeks to play a constructive role toward that end. At the same time, Japan will adhere to the rule of law and defend the maritime order, including freedom of navigation, as well as freedom of overflight.”

Abe, who wants Japan to be a take a more “proactive” foreign and security policy, is on a nine-day visit to Europe. His visit concludes Wednesday with a meeting in Brussels with leading officials of the European Union.
NATO, Japan agree to cooperate more | Army Times | armytimes.com
 
Japanese minister to visit Turkey to reaffirm nuclear cooperation Japanese industry minister Toshimi

Japanese industry minister Toshimitsu Motegi plans to visit Turkey from late June to early July to reaffirm Japan's policy of enhancing nuclear cooperation with the country, government sources said Wednesday.

Motegi will be the first Japanese Cabinet minister to visit Turkey since Japan's parliament approved a bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement in April to enable Japanese nuclear plant exports to Turkey.

A consortium, including Japanese nuclear plant builder Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd., is set to receive a nuclear plant order from Turkey. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his Cabinet have positioned nuclear plant exports as a pillar of the government's economic growth strategy.


During the visit, Motegi is expected to brief senior Turkish officials on Japan's policy of helping Turkey to develop nuclear power generation.

He will also confirm Tokyo's plan to accelerate bilateral free trade negotiations that the top Japanese and Turkish leaders at their talks in Tokyo in January agreed to start within this year.

Motegi intends to visit Israel before or after the Turkey trip to discuss planned bilateral investment agreement negotiations and joint industrial research and development projects, the sources said.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/n...nuclear-cooper
 
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