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  1. Japan after the Cold War. Makoto Iokibe. June 1997. The views of prominent Japanese thinkers on current policy issues, which are not normally accessible to an international audience because of the language barrier, have been translated and made available through JCIE’s Global Thinknet Insights. This piece is by Professor Makoto Iokibe of Kobe ...

  2. 10 The Cold War in the Balkans, 1945–1956; 11 The birth of the People’s Republic of China and the road to the Korean War; 12 Japan, the United States, and the Cold War, 1945–1960; 13 The Korean War; 14 US national security policy from Eisenhower to Kennedy; 15 Soviet foreign policy, 1953–1962; 16 East Central Europe, 1953–1956

  3. 23. Jan. 2017 · The three decade-old U.S.-Japan alliance faced a major turning point in 1990, as the Cold War wound down and a central pillar of the relationship—containment of the Soviet Union—began to fall away just as bilateral trade competition was peaking. Despite this, the allies deepened security cooperation throughout the next quarter century, in addition to broadening collaboration in economics ...

  4. Since the end of World War 11, the close U.S.- Japan security relationship has benefited both nations. The United States has been able to anchor its East Asian military presence in Japan, helping to contain communist influence and lending stability to the region. Japan has been able to concentrate on rebuilding its economy with relatively little concern (and cost) for its own defense. But both ...

  5. Japan, along with Germany, played a central role in the Cold War. Both countries fought against the United States and its allies during World War II, and both emerged as key objectives and participants in the contest between the Soviet- and American-led blocs. As early as 1947, Under Secretary of State Dean Acheson declared that Western ...

  6. National security -- United States: Subject: National security -- Japan: Subject: Japan -- Military relations -- United States: Subject: United States -- Military relations -- Japan: Call number: UA23 .F837 1993: Other copies: Look for editions of this book at your library, or elsewhere.

  7. 1. Mai 1994 · This policy has gained Japan a number of advantages: low-cost security, regional stability, and the pushing of Japans burden-sharing contribution into nonmilitary areas. Pharr does not see this fundamental foreign policy approach being undermined either by the end of the Cold War or by Japans new status as an economic superpower.