ABSTRACT

Rozman and Glosserman follow a momentous decade in the transformation of Japanese foreign policy from 2013 to 2023 that unveils Japan in a new light as a leading power more closely aligned with the United States than ever before but with distinct aspirations.

The book presents a comprehensive chronology, a broad sweep of relations with regional partners, and an unprecedented look at new relations with Europe. Zeroing in on the legacy of Abe Shinzo, it pays special attention to the leadership of Kishida Fumio in response to the Biden administration, the Ukraine war, the growing alarm about China, the swings in ties to South Korea, and the hopes to be a bridge with Southeast Asia and India.

It is a vital read for students of international relations in the Indo-Pacific and of Japan and advanced undergraduate courses on Japanese foreign policy, Asian regional studies and comparative international.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

A Momentous Decade: 2013–2023

part II|52 pages

Regionalism

chapter 4|23 pages

Tracking the Swings in a “Virtual Alliance”

Japan's Policy toward the Korean Peninsula over a Decade

chapter 6|13 pages

Tracking the Pathway to a “Quasi-Alliance”

Japan's Policy to Australia, 2013–2022

part III|53 pages

Beyond Regionalism

chapter 7|17 pages

Japan and Europe

A Marriage of Convenience Matures

chapter 8|18 pages

Japan's Economic Turn to Europe

chapter 9|16 pages

The Impact of the Ukraine War

Japan's Thinking on Russia, China, and India in 2023