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MICHISHITA, NARUSHIGE (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   065615


Alliances after peace in Korea / Michishita, Narushige   Article
Michishita, Narushige Article
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Publication 1999.
Key Words ASian Security  Korea  North Korea  Alliences 
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2
ID:   053798


Calculated adventurism: North Korea's military-Diplomatic campa / Michishita, Narushige Fall 2004  Journal Article
Michishita, Narushige Journal Article
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Publication Fall 2004.
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3
ID:   135932


Changing security relationship between Japan and South Korea: frictions and hopes / Michishita, Narushige   Article
Michishita, Narushige Article
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Summary/Abstract Japan has long played the role as the main operating base for Korean contingencies. It has also provided rear-area logistic support to the US forces fighting in Korea and helped South Korea build up its defense industrial base. However, the Japan-South Korea relationship has deteriorated in recent years due to short-term political and long-term economic and strategic reasons. At this point, South Korea is bandwagoning with China and deemphasizing its relationship with Japan. China-South Korea relations are not without problems, however, and Japan regards South Korea as one of the most important potential strategic partners in maintaining stability in Asia. In the future, the most decisive factor in determining the direction of the security relationship between Japan and South Korea will be China.
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4
ID:   075735


Coercing to reconcile: North Korea's response to US 'hegemony' / Michishita, Narushige   Journal Article
Michishita, Narushige Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract Since 1993 North Korea's response to US 'hegemony' has been a seemingly paradoxical attempt to bandwagon with the United States by means of military coercion. However, after more than a decade of effort, North Korea has failed to normalize its relations with the United States. In the years ahead, it can either pursue more proactively the strategy of bandwagoning with the United States, shift its strategic focus to China, or embark upon a policy of equidistance between the United States and Japan on the one hand and China on the other.
Key Words United States  North Korea  Hegemony 
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5
ID:   162614


North Korea's military-diplomatic campaigns, 1966-2008 / Michishita, Narushige 2010  Book
Michishita, Narushige Book
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Publication Oxon, Routledge, 2010.
Description xviii, 276p.hbk
Series Routledge Security in Asia Pacific Series; 12
Standard Number 9780415449434
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
059561327.5163/MIC 059561MainOn ShelfGeneral 
6
ID:   090955


Playing the same game: North Korea's coercive attempt at U.S. reconciliation / Michishita, Narushige   Journal Article
Michishita, Narushige Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The nuclear and missile capabilities of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) are certainly improving, but that does not mean its strategy has changed. Those who argue that Pyongyang has abandoned diplomacy and chosen a military path risk missing the point: nuclear weapons and missiles are the means, not the ends. North Korea is actually taking necessary steps to prepare for future talks with the United States. In other words, North Korea is playing the same game again.
Key Words Nuclear  Missile  United States  North Korea  Pyongyang 
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7
ID:   097347


Signing a peace agreement: issues for consideration / Michishita, Narushige   Journal Article
Michishita, Narushige Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
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8
ID:   163372


Trump-Kim summit, future scenarios, and Japan’s policy toward the Korean peninsula / Michishita, Narushige   Journal Article
Michishita, Narushige Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract On June 12, 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump and Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (hereafter DPRK or North Korea) leader Kim Jong Un, Chairman of the State Affairs Commission, met in Singapore for the first time. The two men signed a joint declaration and pledged to work toward denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula and improving bilateral relations. These developments raise several questions. What impact will this summit meeting between the two leaders have on regional security? What sorts of opportunities and risks will that impact produce for Japan? How should Japan deal with this fluid regional situation?
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