Japan: From Passive Partner to Active Ally
Abstract
Japan is America’s key ally in the Asia-Pacific, with the US–Japan alliance
the foundation of America’s role as a ‘Pacific’ power. Indeed, the United
States ‘has no better friend in the world than Japan’.
This important alliance emerged from Japan’s defeat in World War II and the subsequent
American-led occupation, but especially from America’s shifting global
strategy in the early Cold War. Increasingly tense relations with the Soviet
Union, the communist victory in China and the Korean War pushed
the United States to secure Japan within the Western bloc. The resulting
strategic bargain between the two countries was for the United States to
provide security for Japan, with Japan offering bases for the US military
in return. The arrangement established Japan for the United States as
a dependent security partner; however, it also allowed Japan to focus on
the important postwar task of economic redevelopment.
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Book Title
Global Allies: Comparing US Alliances in the 21st Century
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Open Access via publisher website