Yuriko Koike
Northeast Asia on the Brink
TOKYO – China’s refusal to attend this year’s summit with Japan and South Korea as scheduled comes at a trying moment for all three countrie…
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TOKYO – China’s refusal to attend this year’s summit with Japan and South Korea as scheduled comes at a trying moment for all three countrie…
KUWAIT CITY – When the consequences of the United States-led invasion of Iraq ten years ago are fully assessed, the importance of the subseq…
TOKYO – While the world focuses on the gathering of cardinals in Rome to choose a successor to Pope Benedict XVI, a similar conclave is unde…
TOKYO – F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said that “there are no second acts in American lives.” Hillary Clinton’s stunning (and, I trust, unfin…
TOKYO – The Unha-3 rocket launched from Sohae in North Korea on the morning of December 12 passed through Japanese air space over the island…
TOKYO – When an American president’s first overseas trip following his re-election is to Asia, one can be sure that something big is afoot i…
TOKYO – The Korean peninsula is stirring. In December, South Koreans will go to the polls to choose President Lee Myung-bak’s successor in w…
TOKYO – When faced with domestic worries, politicians often resort to foreign diversions – a simple axiom that is highly useful in assessing…
TOKYO – Has Japan’s political paralysis finally lifted? The recent agreement, after a long debate, between the government and leading opposi…
TOKYO – This is a year of presidential elections worldwide, and the last to take place – on December 19 – will be in South Korea. That ballo…
Is China Asia's new hegemon, or is a balance of power emerging among China, India, Japan, and the United States? Is Japan breaking away from American tutelage? Will the rise of the consumer transform Asia’s export-led economies? Can Asia’s giants cope with climate change without choking off growth? Is a cooperative regional infrastructure such as exists in Europe possible?
Forty years ago, the Swedish Nobel laureate economist Gunnar Myrdal entitled his inquiry into Asia’s malaise The Asian Drama. Today’s Asian drama concerns the region’s spectacular race to the top, with a billion people being pulled out of poverty and new global powers emerging.
Indeed, for perhaps the first time in history, Asia is not dominated by a single country or by outside powers. Its giants – China, India, and Japan – are large and economically muscular, with interests and ambitions that span the region and the world. On the fringe stand Russia and the United States, with Indonesia emerging as another economic power.
As global political and economic power shifts from West to East, these countries’ rivalries and shifting alliances will determine the future of the world economy, and of international stability. And that means that understanding Asia’s dynamic societies – and its rival powers’ relations with each other and the world – has never been more important.
In her monthly series Asia Watch, written exclusively for Project Syndicate Yuriko Koike – the first woman to serve as Japan’s Minister of Defense, a former Minister of the Environment, and her country’s first-ever National Security Adviser – meets this need head on. Who better than one of Asia’s leading statesmen, an Arabic-speaking Middle East specialist, and geo-strategist, to explore the often bitter histories dividing Asia’s giants and their neighbors, the likely trajectories of the region’s rising powers, and the impact of their interactions on the rest of the world?
Yuriko Koike famously shook up Japan’s politics, challenging her country’s vested interests and elite bureaucrats. True to form, she pulls no punches in Asia Watch.
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Yuriko Koike, Japan's former defense minister and national security adviser, was Chairwoman of Japan's Liberal Democrat Party and currently is a member of the National Diet.
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