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HATOYAMA (6) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   095750


Disturbing development under DJP / Heizo, Takenaka   Journal Article
Heizo, Takenaka Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Japan  Public Finance  Hatoyama  Private Postal Service 
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2
ID:   096100


Futenma issue: implications for US - Japan alliance / Xiaoju, Fan   Journal Article
Xiaoju, Fan Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The US - Japan alliance is undergoing a quiet crisis over the plan to relocate the US marine Corps Air Station at Futenma. While it is the Japanese side that is hesitating over the relocation, relations between the two countries are also affecting how this issue is being tackled and will impact the formal alliance in the long run
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3
ID:   095143


Hatoyama's quiet revolution / Harris, Tobias   Journal Article
Harris, Tobias Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Key Words Agriculture  United States  United Kingdom  Japanese Government  Hatoyama  Ozawa 
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4
ID:   095746


Hatoyama's US foreign policy: an unsteady hand on the tiller / Shinichi, Kitaoka   Journal Article
Shinichi, Kitaoka Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
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5
ID:   094472


Japan in 2009: a historic election year / Arase, David   Journal Article
Arase, David Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Election  LDP  DPJ  Hatoyama  U S - Japan Alliance 
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6
ID:   098398


Race to judge, rush to act: the sinking of the Cheonan and the politics and national insecurity / Suh, Jae-Jung   Journal Article
Suh, Jae-Jung Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract On 26 March 2010, the Republic of Korea (ROK) Navy corvette Cheonan broke in half and sank near Baekryong-do Island off the coast of North Korea. Forty-six sailors lost their lives. Mysterious as the cause of the incident is, the ROK government's responses-the Navy's failure to communicate through the chain of command, the military's incompetence in rescue and salvage operations, the Ministry of National Defense's efforts to cover up basic facts, and the government's rush to blame North Korea as the culprit and take punitive measures-all added confusion and heightened already high tensions on the peninsula. This articles argues that the ROK government's report failed to substantiate its claim that North Korea attacked and sank the ship. Moreover, the author shows, its claim was based on internally inconsistent logic and likely fabricated data. The government's rash, and unsubstantiated, judgment was accompanied by saber-rattling against the North and scare tactics intended to silence domestic critics immediately before local government elections. Amidst the heightened tension caused by the incident, the U.S. administration succeeded in pressuring the Japanese prime minister Hatoyama to cave in to its demand to keep the Futenma base within Okinawa. Also it agreed to postpone the transfer of the wartime command control over the Korean military to the ROK until 2015. The United States, economically wounded by the financial crisis of 2008, found the heightened state of insecurity created by the Cheonan incident an opportune excuse to strengthen its allies and its military, if not political, influence in Northeast Asia, although its success may prove Pyrrhic in the long run.
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