Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain

This article reassesses the 2006 and, tentatively, the 2014 reset in Sino- Japanese relations to argue in favour of an increasingly state-centric understanding of Japanese diplomacy. By making use of a narrative account and a variety of primary sources—including personal memoirs, elite interviews, p...

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Main Author: Pugliese, G
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Pacific Affairs 2017
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author Pugliese, G
author_facet Pugliese, G
author_sort Pugliese, G
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description This article reassesses the 2006 and, tentatively, the 2014 reset in Sino- Japanese relations to argue in favour of an increasingly state-centric understanding of Japanese diplomacy. By making use of a narrative account and a variety of primary sources—including personal memoirs, elite interviews, participatory observation, and leaked State Department cables—this article finds that Abe Shinzō's foreign policy confidante, Yachi Shōtarō, embodied the unmatched influence of government actors in Japan's political landscape. The article provides a close-up portrait of Yachi, with an emphasis on his preference for geopolitics, strategy, and secret diplomacy. Yachi and the institutional apparatus he represented sought détente with Japan's main strategic adversary, while pushing for geopolitical initiatives that targeted China. The article concludes by arguing that the Abe administration's insistence on, and institutionalized practice of, conducting public affairs in secret will likely further strengthen the role of the nation-state and of government actors in Japan, also in light of growing geopolitical tensions in East Asia.
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spelling oxford-uuid:09ec20c7-3890-4a46-a667-8a8587186ce02022-03-26T09:21:03ZJapan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtainJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:09ec20c7-3890-4a46-a667-8a8587186ce0EnglishSymplectic ElementsPacific Affairs2017Pugliese, GThis article reassesses the 2006 and, tentatively, the 2014 reset in Sino- Japanese relations to argue in favour of an increasingly state-centric understanding of Japanese diplomacy. By making use of a narrative account and a variety of primary sources—including personal memoirs, elite interviews, participatory observation, and leaked State Department cables—this article finds that Abe Shinzō's foreign policy confidante, Yachi Shōtarō, embodied the unmatched influence of government actors in Japan's political landscape. The article provides a close-up portrait of Yachi, with an emphasis on his preference for geopolitics, strategy, and secret diplomacy. Yachi and the institutional apparatus he represented sought détente with Japan's main strategic adversary, while pushing for geopolitical initiatives that targeted China. The article concludes by arguing that the Abe administration's insistence on, and institutionalized practice of, conducting public affairs in secret will likely further strengthen the role of the nation-state and of government actors in Japan, also in light of growing geopolitical tensions in East Asia.
spellingShingle Pugliese, G
Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title_full Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title_fullStr Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title_full_unstemmed Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title_short Japan's Kissinger? Yachi Shōtarō: The state behind the curtain
title_sort japan s kissinger yachi shotaro the state behind the curtain
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