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Japan’s vision for the East Asian security order

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Author: Ryo Sahashi, Kanagawa University

The regional order in East Asia is in flux. The relative decline of US power in Asia has led to new challenges. The principles, rules, norms and methods for managing the international agenda are being questioned. The willingness of the United States to maintain an active role in East Asia, alongside the behaviour of China and key groupings such as ASEAN will define the future of the region. How these key actors respond to the changing security environment will be crucial in determining the future of the security order in East Asia.

So, what does this mean for Japan?

Japan today seems to be the strongest supporter in the region for maintaining a US-led order in both the security and economic realms. After the short tenure of former prime minister Yukio Hatoyama, who served from September 2009 to June 2010, Japan lost its desire to be an architect of the regional order. Instead, Japan has focused on integrating its Asian policy with its bilateral relationship with the United States.

Japan has not always relied on US primacy in Asia. In the past Japan has emphasised the role of regional groups, including the ASEAN+3 and ASEAN+6 mechanisms. Japan also actively pursued its own bilateral diplomacy with Southeast Asian nations as part of the Fukuda doctrine, first established in 1977, which focused on building peaceful and cooperative relations with ASEAN members.

But during the last decade, Japanese foreign policymakers have increasingly viewed Japan’s relations with Southeast Asia through the prism of the US alliance. Regardless of the ruling party, Japanese foreign policy has clearly aimed to strengthen US leadership in the region.

To bolster the US alliance framework, Japan enhanced its security cooperation with most of the ASEAN countries, upgrading the substance of bilateral relations with ASEAN countries to include more robust defence exchange. Japan’s stance on the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations — which it has prioritised above other economic partnerships in the region — also signifies its strong commitment to ensuring continued US engagement in the region. Tokyo policymakers have calculated that it is in their strategic interests to enhance the US position in the region. This view is perhaps more entrenched in Japan than in any other country, including Australia and the United States itself.

In April 2015, Japan and the United States published a new joint statement and updated guidelines on US–Japan defence cooperation, which emphasised bilateral and trilateral collaboration in security capacity-building efforts for Southeast Asian nations. Also, the Abe administration succeeded in a substantial deepening of Japan–India security cooperation, particularly in relation to defence and civil nuclear cooperation. This is indicative of how Japan has ‘securitised’ its Asian diplomacy.

Japan’s behaviour is aimed at complementing the so-called American ‘pivot’ or ‘rebalance’ to Asia. But this shift in Japanese foreign policy actually predates the US pivot strategy — the first signals of this new foreign policy orientation started under the first Abe administration in 2006–7.

And tensions still remain between the US and Japanese approaches to security in East Asia. Japan is more assertive than its partners in its desire to guard against increasing Chinese influence and to address maritime challenges by implementing rules-based mechanisms. This stance is rooted in Japan’s perception of China, which has shifted in response to China’s growing political influence and the crises over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands.

While some elements of Japan’s traditional Asian diplomacy persist in its bilateral engagement, the increasingly prominent role given to security in Japan’s Asian diplomacy is the defining development of the last decade. The weight given to security concerns in Japan’s foreign policy has led Japanese diplomats to push for a common Japan–ASEAN stance on maritime disputes with China.

The expected role of ASEAN in Japan’s foreign policy vision is largely unchanged.

Japanese behaviour suggests that, in its own strategic re-calculation, maintaining American influence is the key to preserving the regional order. Tokyo recognises that Japanese power alone is insufficient to shape the regional order. It is therefore crucial for Japan to build coalitions with regional partners that have similar political objectives, such as Australia.

Japanese diplomacy towards East Asia has experienced a fundamental transformation. As part of this transformation, the strategic vision that underpins the US–Japan alliance has been stretched to underpin Japan’s diplomacy for the entire East Asian region. This extension of the logic of the US–Japan alliance undermines the ability of Japan to pursue a truly inclusive regional order. It is high time that Japanese foreign policy embraced the advantages of inclusive multilateralism.



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Ryo Sahashi is an associate professor of International Politics, Kanagawa University and a research fellow at the Japan Center for International Exchange.

Japan’s vision for the East Asian security order | East Asia Forum
 
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After WWII, East Asia is always dominated by the triangular relations among China, USA and Soviet/Russia. While USA dominates Seas and China/Soviet/Russia dominates lands. The rise of China will weaken USA sea power by consolidating SCS and unifying Taiwan. Sooner or Later, USA will reduce its activities within 1st island chain.

In the era of domination by nuclear missiles, Japan is just too small area to compare to China/USA/Russia. Japanese futures lies on its ability to balance China/USA/Russia. A stable and prosperous North East Asia rely on stable balance of China/USA/Russia triangles with the help of peaceful Koreas/Japan. Japan's current policy deprives itself from Russian resources and Chinese markets while still limited access to USA technology. Japan's economy will become weaker and weaker.

North East Asia's peace will be available when the following are achieved:
1. peaceful solution of Korean pennisula
2. Chinese unification of Taiwan
3. Nuclear-free zone for Koreas and Japan

North East Asia security are critical to the three most important countries in this planet (China/USA/Russia). It will determine the fate of this planet

Based on my understanding of USA, USA will give SCS and Taiwan to China sooner or later. SCS and Taiwan are not geopolitical critical to USA. For this kind of cases, USA like to try hard first. If it hits resistance, it simply withdraws. Korean Wars, Vietnam Wars, Afghanistan Wars are solid proof. USA doesn't like to get into long time tug of wars with a major power without much profit.
 
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North East Asia's peace will be available when the following are achieved:
1. peaceful solution of Korean pennisula
2. Chinese unification of Taiwan
3. Nuclear-free zone for Koreas and Japan

Yes, absolutely. Perhaps also explore a joint strategic command between Beijing, Tokyo, Seoul/Pyongyang , eventually.

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:)

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Yes, absolutely. Perhaps also explore a joint strategic command between Beijing, Tokyo, Seoul/Pyongyang , eventually.
You also need to explore a joint strategic partnership with Russia and United States. A fully pro-China or fully pro-USA Japan is not helpful. If Japan can establish constructive partnership with all of three China/Russia/USA, this will help North East Asia peace and give Japan more political powers since Japan is the crucial one to balance the most important three. It is must easier for Japan to establish such relations economically first, and then politically and then militarily. But Japan government policy is try to solidify USA-Japan military alliance first.

Japan lacks strategic leaders such as Mao and Deng. In 1980s, China almost gave up military development and gambled that there would be at least one decade of peace. This gamble worked very well and allowed China to have economic power to go through Tienanmen Sanctions by the west and collapse of Soviet Union. If Japan gambled this during last decade, Japanese economic situation would be much better since it was clear that there would be no war as China had no interest to unify militarily at that time. Now China really have such an intention.

Japan lacks of leaders to push for ultimate solutions of Japanese troubles in economics and security. All leaders just want to have quick effects. Something is wrong in Japanese political system. Japan need to establish term leaderships such as China and USA. You need to at least give a leadership 4-5 years to try difficult solutions.
 
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The author makes a very realistic point of an inclusive regional order. I'd say it is the natural progression of affairs, not only with regards Sino-Japanese-Korean relations, but also with ASEAN, yes, that means Vietnam & Philippines relations with China too. We must be clear that territorial issues - East China Sea or South China Sea, SHOULD NOT be confused with FON, that the US exaggerate time & time again. Given the massive volume of trade between the respective nations in the region, it is ludicrous assumption that any one nation would strangle itself. :lol:

I suppose that Japan would use "China threat" as a means to increase it's political, military, cultural stature to ultimately commensurate it's position as the 3rd world economy Thereafter, it would be in a position of strength to not only say bye bye to America from it's soil, but also, be in a "balanced" position to seek a partnership role vis a vis China as a security provider in the region. In the mean time, it would in their favor to continue to harness American presence in the region as a bulwark against China.
 
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The author makes a very realistic point of an inclusive regional order. I'd say it is the natural progression of affairs, not only with regards Sino-Japanese-Korean relations, but also with ASEAN, yes, that means Vietnam & Philippines relations with China too. We must be clear that territorial issues - East China Sea or South China Sea, SHOULD NOT be confused with FON, that the US exaggerate time & time again. Given the massive volume of trade between the respective nations in the region, it is ludicrous assumption that any one nation would strangle itself

Obviously it is a façade. The US simply seeks an excuse for its regional military dominance. It is obvious that China would not even think of hampering regional trade; because, a growing regional wealth means more customers and more potential business partners for China. Also, as the author mentions within the context of Japan, inclusive growth suggests one's gains should not necessarily come at the cost of another's.

I suppose that Japan would use "China threat" as a means to increase it's political, military, cultural stature to ultimately commensurate it's position as the 3rd world economy Thereafter, it would be in a position of strength to not only say bye bye to America from it's soil, but also, be in a "balanced" position to seek a partnership role vis a vis China as a security provider in the region. In the mean time, it would in their favor to continue to harness American presence in the region as a bulwark against China.

War is 70 years past now. Japan should no longer maintain the same excuse to keep US military presence as a check against China. For once, Japan should be already convinced that China is not seeking to challenge Japan's territorial integrity or independence. For another, Japan is capable of dealing with its own security. Even of it faces threats, it should face it by itself as a sovereign nation. Alliance with the US is proving to be costly to Japan, as @Abacin said above, because it misses out on fully utilizing the world's largest market and keep stuck in the saturated and increasingly protectionist US market.
 
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