http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
JAPANESE REARMAMENT: FUKUDA S LEGACY, O H IRA S CHOICE
Joseph M. Ha 한국학술연구원 1979 Korea Observer Vol.10 No.4
Japanese foreign policy has entered anew phase,reflecting changes within the international system which have altered the paramount assumptions upon which that policy had previously been formulated. Specifically,the leaders of Japan for three decades could rely on the primacy of American military power at the global level and a high degree of interest mutuality between themselves and successive United States’ administrations. Certain corollaries of this perceived reality created a world in which Japanese foreign policy operated without major constraints: (1) the strategic protection o f the United States’ nuclear force made a unilaterally sufficient self-defense capability unnecessary; (2) the availability of raw materials and export markets, combined with the relatively unimpeded flow of goods and capital across international borders safeguarded by the Bretton Woods system, provided Japan with a stable international economic framework within which to reorder and reconstruct its economy; and (3) the maintenance of a semblence of domestic political consensus regarding foreign policy was facilitated by unified perceptions of the international system and the continued dominance of a single political party. By the mid-1970s , however, this overriding assumption and its corollaries had been overshadowed by developments at several levels, causing the leaders of Japan to objectively reevaluate the protection theretofore assumed from United States’ defense pledges. The results of that reevaluation were initiatives on the part of Japan which have put that nation squarely on the road toward a gradual rearmament. Newly-elected Prime Minister Ohira has thusly inherited a legacy of a stronger military policy than seemed conceivable at the beginning of this decade. Perhaps the greatest single choice before his govern ment is the question of how far to proceed down the road followed by his predecessor.
JAPANESE REARMAMENT: FUKUDA'S LEGACY, OHIRA'S CHOICE
Ha, Joseph M. The Institute for Far Eastern Studies Kyungnam Uni 1979 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.3 No.2
Japanese foreign policy has entered a new phase, reflecting changes within the international system which have altered the paramount assumptions upon which that policy had previously been formulated. Specifically, the leaders of Japan for three decades could rely on the primacy of American military power at the global level and a high degree of interest mutuality between themselves and successive United States’ administrations.
THE UNITED STATES' POLICY TOWARD KOREA: "PROCEED AND BE BOLD" OR "MORE OF THE SAME"
Ha, Joseph M. The Institute for Far Eastern Studies Kyungnam Uni 1978 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.2 No.1
The approach we have sketched here will not quickly yield a more durable peace. It will require time, patience, steadiness of purpose and imagination. It will require constant analysis of the situation. Further, success is not assured. Like all major new foreign policy initiatives, it demands that the U.S. free herself of the inertia of the past and proceed boldly.