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Japanese Energy Policy
IR 739 Dr Hanami
5/19/2008
Robert Silva
Introduction
Abstract
[This paper is about Japanese energy foreign policy. I will begin to look at historical
patterns (theory) of Japanese foreign policy behavior; then determine Japan’s current energy
situation. Second I will be to define Japanese business interactions associated with government
foreign policy; then apply existing theory to determine if Japan is following historical patterns
and which pattern Japan is following ]
The main purpose of the paper is to examine Japanese foreign policy and activities
concerning the oil and the uranium industry. What I hope to derive from the paper is trade
interactions since the cold war is over and the United States is not fighting the communist
menace anymore but is Japan still under influence of the United States foreign policy objectives.
Is the war against communism just transferred from the war against terrorism? Those countries
that are associated with terrorist practices and norms considered states that Japanese should not
do business with. During the cold war, Japan did not assist communist label countries and only
did business with countries that were consider pro liberal practices or anti communist states. Is
Japan still taking foreign policy direction from the United States of America?
The method of the paper is to use existing scholarly articles and books that have already
written about to define historical patterns of Japanese foreign policy behavior and theory. I try to
use as many primary and news sources to gather data about Japanese activity in energy field
which is focused on oil and uranium. The gathering of speech acts and narratives, government
and business documentation and press releases about policy. This is to help discern which
2
direction and possible reasons why they are choosing a certain policy directions and then
compare it to existing theory.
The themes I hope to address with this paper are the interesting interactions that rational
calculations of market activity versus civilization goals of alliances that Japan is associated with.
Is it power seeking, or market rationalization is more important than reaching international
civilization goals, or is it civilization goals more rational and reasonable than the most rationalist
market calculation. The case studies I am looking is the Iranian and Japanese partnership in
regards to oil extraction and refinement and how Japan is integrating into post Soviet bloc
countries such as Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Russia because of uranium reserves. How is
Japan dealing with resource scarcity and resource competition while conforming to international
obligation and alliance obligations? These are some of the themes I hope to clarify not directly
but through nuances of Japan’s behavior. Through these cases I hope to discern if Japan is
following historical patterns or branching off on new trajectories.
The outline of the paper, first I will define the theories that have defined past historical
behavioral patterns. Second begin to create ontology of the contemporary Japanese energy needs
and consumption looking at trade partners and countries in the uranium and oil sectors. Third I
will begin to establish ontology about the international energy industry looking at the sectors of
oil and uranium. Within energy sectors I will begin to look at theories of world consumption and
scarcity about each sector. The fourth section of the paper will begin to look at press releases that
define Japanese foreign policy and Japanese behavior in promoting activity in the given sectors
3
of uranium and oil. The last section I will compare data and theory to do analysis to see if
Japanese behavior is following historical patterns.
Theory of Japanese Foreign Policy Behavior
Major theories about Japanese behavior are called Aikido, Gaiatsu, and Multilateralism.
1 Many authors claim that Japan does not really make its own foreign policy but takes its
directives from the United States. In this section I plan on describing some of the theories about
Japanese foreign policy behavior. The first one is called Aikido is about quiet diplomacy the
interactions are low profile and low risk. The characteristics of this theory that the interaction is
flexible the goals are not short term but long term in nature. It is non-aggressive and defensive
in nature focusing more on economic rather than military.2 This allows for changes and actions
not direct related to achieving the goal but it promotes the end goal and not counter-productive.
The second one is called Gaiatsu foreign pressure on Japan. How much influence does
the Japanese government take into account when making foreign policy decisions? Authors like
Michael Green who wrote the book, Japan the Reluctant Realist, that Japan takes foreign policy
direction from the United States. Japanese foreign policy direction has not change but still
focused on the economy since the ending of the cold war. The major concern of Japan is to
ensure it gets the needed resource to promote economic activity and civil order. The world or the
structure of the international system promotes constraints which causes Japanese foreign policy
1 David Potter and Sudi Sueo Japanese Foreign Policy: No longer Reactive? p.3212 Ibid p. 321
4
makers not to make the most rationalist decision according to market forces but rational in
promoting domestic interests or civilization goals. The constraints of the international system
could be regulative rules such as United Nation mandates and other state’s foreign policy, and
security issues. These issues can sometimes redirect foreign policy when it is not the most
rationalist to the goals of Japan, which is the procurement of resources and commodities. Gaiatsu
is external pressures to have Japan to act in coordination to create a circumstance to contain
possible hostile aggressor states. I think this is derived from old cold war policy of containment.
Multilateralism could be gaining consensus and influencing and building international
coalitions in existing international organizations. Seen historically is using the United Nations
and other international groups to act proactively to promote common interest like global
warming issue. The World Trade Organization could another method of multilateral approach to
interaction with the international system and other states. The goal is to discuss in a transparent
forum to build a universal consensus to address international and domestic issues in a proactive
method.
In the book Japanese Trade Policy Formulation, by Chikare Higashi promotes the
Japanese was using its economic influence to assault the America economy.3 This book was
written in 1983. The counter argument is that the Japanese do not pursue leisure in consumption
but redirects consumption into investments for future development.
3 Chikare Higashi, Japanese Trade Policy Formulation, Praegar, p.15
The major underlying concepts in theories of Japanese foreign policy behavior could be
summed up with the terms proactive and reactionary. The basic theory formula is this, If Japan
and the United States disagree and the Japan acts in American interest.4 The second is the null of
the formula, If United States and Japan disagrees and Japan acts in its own interest. The
implications are that Japan needs to define it image of foreign policy separate from its alliance
with the United States. When conflicts arise and Japan does not follow in its interest which could
be rational calculations of the market when it comes to energy commodities and is following the
security interest of the United States. 5 Is Japan a reactionary decision maker or is Japan
proactive which tries to solve problems before they arise, energy policy should promote which
method Japan leans towards more.
Japanese energy situation
Ninety nine point seven percent of Japan’s energy commodities are imports.6 This
invokes many questions about how much energy commodities does Japan need to run its country
and what energy sources are critical and which ones are abundant. I will begin to explain the
basic energy needs of Japan. How I am going to approach this is describe consumption rates
then domestic production. I will be to look at where Japan gets its energy commodities from.
The focus of the paper is about uranium and oil since oil offers political controversy because of
international common problems such as global warming and resource competition because its
scarcity and uranium because of the international security implications when it comes to refining
and transfer of technology.
4 David Potter and Sudi Sueo Japanese Foreign Policy: No longer Reactive? p.3185 David Potter and Sudi Sueo Japanese Foreign Policy: No longer Reactive?p.3196 Leo Lewis, Japan hot with anticipation after extracting Arctic ‘sorbet’ of natural gas April 15 2008 1-All-round Country edition
6
To begin with Japan’s oil situation, Japan is the third largest consumer of oil in the world.
7 Japan consumes 5.4 million barrels of oil a day. It produces 125,700 barrels of oil a day. The
proven reserves of Japan are 59 million barrels of oil.8 This gives Japan estimate of 12 days of
supply if all oil imports stop coming into Japanese ports. Why oil is important to Japanese
economy because of 48% of Japanese energy source comes from oil.9 The need to secure oil
reserves or switch energy sources is vital because of constraints of the international which would
be market prices. Market prices are subject to production rates, and cost of transportation. What
limits production would be sabotage of production facilities and transportation, resource
competition or international restrictions.
Ninety percent of Japanese oil imports come from the Middle East. The rest of the oil
imports are divided throughout the world. The major import suppliers of Japan are Saudi Arabia
with millions of barrels of oil (MB), United Arab Emirates 387 MB, Sudan, Angola 11 MB, Iraq
15 MB, Qatar 151 MB, Iran 176 MB, Russia 11MB, Azerbaijan, 1 MB, Mexico, China,
Indonesia. Japan has diversified its oil extraction but is still focused on the Middle East.
Japanese companies are exploring and finding fresh reserves such INPEX had holding in Iran
and started to create relationships with Azerbaijan. 10 The current scent in the air is for Japan to
its funds and from the Iranian project to developing Iraq oil reserves which Japan receives
7 EIA short term outlook for 20068 These figure are from the EIA and for the year 20069 Hisane MASAKI, Japan Joins the Race for Uranium Amid Global Expansion of Nuclear Power http:// www.japanfocus.org/products/details/162610 Hisane Masaki Oil-hungry Japan looks to other sources http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/IB21Dh02.html
7
approximately 15 million barrels of oil a year.11 The companies that are promoting cooperation
and development of oil importation are Nippon Oil Corporation, Sakhalin project, Exxon Mobil
Corporation.
Japan’s uranium consumption is around 8,000 and 8,500 tons per year.12 Countries that
are major contributors to the Japan’s uranium needs are Canada, Kazakhstan, Australia, USA,
and Niger. Some of the major uranium companies in Japan that are promoting investment in
foreign uranium supplies are Itochu, the Overseas Uranium Resource Development, Sumitomo
and Kansai Electric Power, Tokyo Electric Power and Idemitsu Kosan. 13 Uranium is not
considered a peak fuel because uranium can be extracting out of the ocean and reused and
recycle through special processing.14
International Energy Structure
Oil seems to be the cheapest liquid fuel source and easiest method to promote
development. The question is the infrastructure being built around a technology that is limited by
production rates and finite access to resources to keep infrastructure operating. The need to
define the oil infrastructure is vital because production outputs do affect the speed ability to
create and maintain infrastructure, and promote trade since oil is related to transportation and
transportation is related to trade. Japan began accelerated growth because of the introduction to
11 Ibid. 12 Hisane MASAKI, Japan Joins the Race for Uranium Amid Global Expansion of Nuclear Power http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/162613 Ibíd.14 http://peakoildebunked.blogspot.com/2006/01/207-uranium-from-seawater-part-1.html
8
oil.15 Trade is the key idea that is running the current ideology and practices of the international
trade regime. Development, growth and maintenance of the infrastructure and economy are
based on energy sources that promote transportation, communications, and production. The
table below shows the production rate of oil and rank of countries that produce the most oil. The
table is broken up in rank, overall production rank in the world and how many barrels per day
which is important because it takes some many barrels of oil to keep daily economic activity per
day per state.
Uranium output for the world
Rank 2004 / (billion barrels, 2006) / production 2004 million barrels (mb)16
1. Saudi Arabia 267 billion bb 10.4 mb/d
2. Russia 60 9.3 mb/d
3. USA 21 8.7 mb/d
Crude oil = <5.2 mb/d
4. Iran 132 4.1 mb/d
5. México 13 3.8 mb/d
6. China 8 3.6 mb/d
7. Norway 8 3.2 mb/d
8. Canada 179 3.1 mb/d
9. Venezuela 79 2.9 mb/d
15 Chikara Higashi, Japanese Trade Policy Formulation Praeger 1983 p.216 Hisane MASAKI, Japan Joins the Race for Uranium Amid Global Expansion of Nuclear Power http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/1626
9
10. United Arab Emirates 98 2.8 mb/d
11. Kuwait 104
(Some sources say 48 billion -
The difference is 5% of world reserves) 2.5 mb/d
12. Nigeria 36 2.5 mb/d
13. United Kingdom 4 2.1 mb/d
14. Iraq 115 2.0 mb/d
15. Other FSU
Kazakhstan + Azerbaijan 47 1.9 mb/d
16. Algeria 12 1.7 mb/d
17. Brazil 11 1.5 mb/d
18. Libya 39 1.5 mb/d
19. Indonesia 4 1.1 mb/d
20. Angola 6 0.9 mb/d17
Theories about oil reserves and production
Most recognize theory about peak production in oil is called Hubert’s Peak. M King
Hubert a geophysicist predicted that United State’s oil reserves would meet the half way point of
exhaustions.18 Hubert’s prediction did come true during the decade of the 1970’s. Hubert is
17 http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0922041.html18 http://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/the-peak.html
10
predictions forecasted that the world oil supply will meet its peak within five years.19 The fact the
oil is depleting and is not infinite. The people promoting alternative energy sources are not just
activist but European leaders. The fact oil promotes transportation and has a direct influence on
the liberal economic system because it was cheap and easy transport and use.20 This had led the
way for think tanks to promote alternative sources of energy. 21The cost is creating a new fuel
infrastructure has been a barrier to entry for most new fuel sources. Oil is going to be the fuel
source to promote development in the developing world because it is still considered the
cheapest. Hubert’s predictions are based on basic ecological processes, or consumption is
greater than natural oil creation. The oil cycle takes millions of years to go through its process
while it takes months and years to extract and consume oil, thus it will deplete because the speed
of consumption is greater than the speed of replenishment.22 The more oil reserves are discovered
the more oil will be used to build new infrastructure and activity this explains the acceleration in
economic activity and more rapid depletion of new reserves.23 I do not think scientist do not
agree with Hubert’s theory of depletion of reserves, but disagree when the oil is going to meet its
peak, because data to measure oil reserves could be unreliable and maybe there exists more
reserves that we have not found.24
Uranium
19 Ibid.20 Erika McDonald Hubert's Peak http://www.cleanhouston.org/energy/features/huberts_peak.htm21 The Hubbard peak for world oil http://www.hubbertpeak.com/summary.htm22 Erika McDonald Hubert's Peak http://www.cleanhouston.org/energy/features/huberts_peak.htm23 Ibid.24 Ibid.
11
Uranium is sought after because it helps the creation of electricity and transportation.
Transportation sector is limited to military uses. Electricity is associated with transportation,
communication and production and uranium can be a chief an energy source that creates
electricity. Total world consumption of Uranium is 66,000 tons of metal per year,
with approximately 20,000 tons coming from stockpiles, recycling of spent fuel and weapons
decommissioning, see below.25
Uranium is consider quite cheap still and efficient 7 grams of uranium can create as much
energy as 3.5 barrels of oil and 17,000 cubic feet of gas or 1,780 pounds of coal.26 The cost of
uranium per pound is estimated around 103 US$. 27 One pound is equal to 457 grams or 227.5
barrels of oil which can equate in this current market around 22,750 US$ or 115,700 pounds of
coal which equate in a estimated price around 5300 US$. The cost in uranium is the building of
the infrastructure and building the power plant and maintenance and disposal or used uranium to
produce the electricity. The reason for possible price increase in uranium could be because the
world production only produces 40,000 tons per year and the world demand is 65,000 tons per
year. The estimate global reserve of uranium is around 4 million tons in discovered reserves. The
need to create infrastructure to promote extraction and transportation is needed. The table below
is to rank the top producers of uranium and how many tons are produce per year per country.
25 http://www.peakoil.org.au/peakuranium.htm26 Hisane MASAKI, Japan Joins the Race for Uranium Amid Global Expansion of Nuclear Power http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/162627 http://neinuclearnotes.blogspot.com/2007/03/uranium-price-to-peak-around-103-pound.html
12
The Uranium producers in 2006
2006 Annual Uranium Production
(WNA 2007)
1. Canada 9862 tons
2. Australia 7593
3. Kazakhstan 5279
4. Niger 3434
5. Russia 3400 (18)
6. Namibia 3077
7. Uzbekistan 2270
8. USA 1692
9. Ukraine 800 (18)
10. China, 750 (18)
11. South Africa 534 (3)
12. Czech Rep. 359
13. India 230 (18)
14. Brazil 190
15. Romania 90 (18)
16. Germany 50 (7)
17. Pakistan 45 (18)
World Total 3965528
28 Top 20 Uranium Producers for 200613
Theories about Uranium reserves and depletion
The question is does Uranium have a peak like oil? According to Japanese Atomic
Research Institution had perfected a method to extract uranium from sea water.29 The claim is
that there is potential reserve of 4.5 billion tons of uranium in the oceans of the world. The
process to capture uranium take approximately 240 days, but the limited of extraction is about
how many devices are employed during a cycle.30 The next possible solution is creating artificial
uranium through breeder reactors. The breeder reactor takes the output of the fissile material
during the nuclear process and then creates an output that can be use a future fissile material. It is
like a recycling process.31 There are many processes to the reprocessing of uranium it changes
the molecular state of uranium but through another process fuel can be made. It is a process that
promotes a recycled product that can be reused. These process do not promote an infinite supply
of energy resource but allows does promote a potential cornucopia of electrical energy through
electricity.
Iran and Japan’s historical relationship
29URANIUM FROM SEAWATER (PART 1) http://peakoildebunked.blogspot.com/2006/01/207-uranium-
from-seawater-part-1.html Saturday, January 07, 2006 207
30 Ibíd.31 http://www.3rd1000.com/nuclear/nuke101g.htm
14
Iran and Japan has been working together in the petrochemical industry. 32 Petrochemicals
are the use of oil in the fabrication of goods such as plastics and other chemical products.33 It was
1979 Japan and Iran was working out a joint own company to refine oil into petrochemicals in
Iran. This project was called the Iran Japanese petrochemical company. The Japanese invested
close to 2 billion dollars of Japanese capital into the venture.
The background to the interaction with Iran; the oil suppliers to Japan began to reduce
shipments of oil by 1 million barrels a day which is significant reduction to Japanese energy
demands in context in the era.34 This promoted the Japanese to look for alternative partnerships
to access oil reserves to meet resource consumption needs. This behavior corresponds with the
concept of Official Development Assistance that Japanese promote development of need
resources in less develop countries which the Japanese government have been pursuing.
The crux to this situation is that the Iranian had ties with Soviet Union, because Iran was
going through a revolution. The other aspect is the United States nationals were taken hostage
by the revolutionary government of Iran, which the Shia movement had strong communist
undertones in their ideology. The advancement of Soviet troops in the neighboring Afghanistan
in Kabul created tensions for the Japanese.35 The problem was Japan had almost finished 85% of
the project, when the Secretary of the State Cyrus Vance, criticized the Japanese being
insensitive to the United States.36 This was done in a foreign capital and in public to draw 32 Michael M Yoshitu Iran and Afghanistan in Japanese Perspective Asian Survey Vol.21 No.5 May 1981 pp.501-514 University of California Press p.501-50233 Virtual Chembook http://www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/vchembook/325petrochem.html34 Michael M Yoshitu Iran and Afghanistan in Japanese Perspective Asian Survey Vol.21 No.5 May 1981 pp.501-514 University of California Press p. 511
35 Ibid. p.51236 Ibid. p513
15
international pressure. The United States wanted to put sanctions against Iran for transgressions
in the month of December in 1979 veto by the Soviet Union in January 1980. This was the same
time the Japanese firms and Iran were discussing oil contracts. The Japanese did not to give up
investment, future oil resource and they had thousand national living in Iran that could be
subjected to reprisals.37
How the situation was resolve Japan began to receive the needed shipments of oil from
Kuwait, Qatar and Mexico. The Japanese refused to purchase Iranian oil above market price, and
had fears that Iran would fall under Soviet influence, or be annexed.
This falls under certain past foreign policy objects of Japan to support America foreign
policy objectives, even though it goes against economic needs of Japan. When the Soviet
influence became apparent in the region, then it became a security issue, and a cold war issue
about containing Soviet influence and not promoting states that lean towards Soviet alignment.
The main argument of the Japanese was because of the Iranian price for the oil was too high and
the Japanese had reserves to sustain and other options.
The current Japanese Policy goal on the use of oil is to reduce the use of oil by 80% by
the year 2030. 38 This is to reduce the current uses of oil by 80%. This can be look at two ways
to reduce overall consumption of oil to 9.6% of the all of consumption or reduce the current 5.4
million barrels of oil per day to approximately to 1.29 million barrels a day. This would require a
shift of energy sources and conservation on Japans part. The current situation of Japan now in
2008 what is Japan to do with the current situation with rising prices in oil and competition for
37 Ibid. p.51138 Japanese Atomic Energy www.jaea.go.jp/04/turuga/tief5/images/TIEF5-S1_4E.pd slide 5
16
oil to develop new infrastructures and economies. In the past Japan went to undeveloped sources
an offered financial assistance to acquire goods.
The current situation I am looking at in Japanese energy foreign policy is about Iran and
Azedegan oil field. This could be considered an echo from the past when Japan and Iran was
working on a joint petrochemical plant. This oil field is claim to the second largest know reserve
in the world. The problem is that Iran is again the focus of international controversy with its
non-compliance with the International Atomic Energy Association and the accusations of
promoting terrorism in Iraq, or promoting war. Currently Japan receives 14% of its oil from
Iran.39 The problem with this is Japan is funding Iran giving them the ability purchase goods
from the international market, which the goal is quarantine Iran, so any thing that can help
development of a nuclear fuel cycle and to fund military operations. The second problem is the
Japanese funds for oil had been associated with an exchange triangle or commodity chain. The
exchange triangle is Japan buys oil from Middle East oil suppliers, the oil suppliers invested in
Europe and America and then America and Europe buy manufacture goods from Japan and
Japan buys oil from the middle, and the cycle repeats.40 The problem Iran does not promote this
relationship because they are not integrated trade partners and not members of the World Trade
Organization. Plus Europe and America does not want Iranian nationals investing in America
and European markets thus creating a greater influence in their economies and the world. The
goal is to stop Iranian soft and hard power because they are deemed a threat to international
tranquility because they do not follow international norms. 39 Calev BenDavid Why Iranian oil is the fuel propelling Olmert's visit to Japan February 25, 2008, Monday
40 J Kaoru Sugihara and Ja Allan, Japan in the Contemporary Middle East, Routledge 1993 chapter 117
Japan was seeking to develop the Azedegan oil field in Iran it had a 90% percent claim
through a development company name INPEX.41 As seen in 1979 Japan withdrew from the
project because of international pressure, such as they did with Azedegan project cited “The
project has been handled fully by Iranian experts as the Japanese company, INPEX42, under US
pressure, declined to invest in the huge project.” 43 The question what is the Japanese motivation
connected with its long term goals and or Giaiatsu pressure stemming from possible security
issues in the international system.
As stated in Japanese foreign policy is that Japan is moving away from oil as a source of
energy and investing in a large reserve does not meet long term goals. Plus Japanese foreign
policy has been known to be flexible. The old cold war concept of containment does come into
play here, as Japanese did in the past with communist nations did not promote development
through foreign aid and investment, because the notion of economic power can equate into
military power. -The question that is raised is all economic issues are becoming military
potential issue?- Does the Japanese decision not develop the second largest oil reserve in the
world to have 90% claim was the most rationalist decision for the Japanese to make in a pure
market perspective or own foreign policy goals. As stated in Japanese energy policy is that they
41 BC Monitoring Middle East – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring March 6, 2008
42 INPEX homepage states mission statements http://www.inpex.co.jp/english/43 BC Monitoring Middle East – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring
March 6, 2008
18
will maintain a good reliable partner with the United States, which this could be interpreted as
economic and security partner. Through a realist perception to maintain a relative advantage over
Iran in economics and limit the ability for Iran to gain soft and hard power does promote security
but does interfere with other pressuring issues of human rights of citizens. From a realist
perception if Japan did go through with the Azedejan Project it would secure oil reserves and
affect the relative economic influence of Europe and the United States, plus reduce dependency
on current trade partners. Japanese policy has known to be long termed and has worked around
domestic issues to conform to international alliances objectives. The decision could be
interpreted to conform to Japanese stated foreign policy objectives. This also conforms to the
Japanese belief about using economics over military in interstate relations. If the stated long
term goal of Japan is to move away from oil to uranium then the Japanese is complying with own
stated goals.
To support assumptions about Japanese switching from oil to uranium as stated in
documents that define Japanese energy foreign policy. “Japan will send a big delegation of
around 100 government officials and business people to Kazakhstan on April 29-30 in a bid to
secure uranium supply amid an intensifying global race for the key nuclear fuel.”44… “Japanese
firms, Kansai Electric Power Co. and trading house Sumitomo Corp. are planning to start
uranium test production in Kazakhstan within this year.”45 This document is about a year before
the Azedegan decision was made, this was occurring in April 10, 2007 and the Azedegan
decision was made in March 10 2008. The Japanese foreign policy statement was created in
June of 2006. This does support a notion that Japan is following a pattern set done in a goal; the 44 BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitor April 10, 2007 Tuesday
45 Ibid.19
exploration of uranium and expand its use and begin to decrease the use of oil. The problem is
terrorism influencing the supply of oil in which increase demand, which is followed by an
increase of price because of scarcity. 46 This could be a motivation of Japan in the short term to
develop oil reserves that have not been tapped into. Like in the 1980’s oil shortage and Iran
became off limits because of security issues, Japan had reserves and began to seek other
supplies. In this situation Japan began to look at Malaysia and Indonesia to meet need short term
oil needs.47
Conclusion
The question what is the pattern of Japanese behavior, I would argue that the Japanese are
proactive with their stated goals. As seen in the past, Japan is quick to give Official Development
Assistance to countries with undeveloped energy reserves, and is quick to joint ventures to
develop reserves. When security issues come up and it is needed for Japan to enforce
international mandates, they do act in a reactionary manner, but always keep their long term
objective in mind. Could Japan be considered a reactive state, I would argue they are not because
they seek to overcome obstacles before they arise, they do not seem to be consumed by the
moment. Can their foreign policy be considered Aikido, or Gaiatsu? The Japanese foreign policy
behavior does not change the world but does influence the world by promoting development and
trade, is sculpted by external actors I would argue no, but it is influence by the constitutive rules
of the structure, the limitation of resources of Japan, and the scarcity level of the world
resources. The realist perception of Japanese behavior could be that they do not develop states
46 Russell Hotten The Daily Telegraph (LONDON) April 22, 2008 Tuesday OIL World warns Opec as prices rocket
47 Malaysian oil plan gets partners http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6697969.stm20
that are not promoting the same civilization goal as them, this would be to promote relative
power and limit the country’s ability to create a military and promote reach but I think this is not
a stated goal but a result of economic policy but Japan does not want to hinder all states but the
ones that could be perceived as hostile. The Japanese foreign policy appears to be proactive in
nature but has the flexibility to overcome obstacles as they appear, but stays on the track to meet
long terms goals.
Book Review
Japan’s Reluctant Realism by Michael Green
21
The book was easy to read it was laid out to promote an understanding for each subject covered.
The major themes covered in the book are Identity, Domestic institutions and foreign policy,
relations with China, Korea, Russia Southeast Asia, and Finance. The book was written in 2001.
The overarching themes in the book were United States influence on the trajectory on Japanese
foreign policy, that economic is the primary subject, and Japanese foreign policy has no new
direction.
There was an interesting discussion about internationalizing the Yen and lessons from the Asian
crisis, which were that there needs to be more monitoring of movement of capital, technical
assistance to strengthen financial sectors in countries that need strengthening and IMF resources
to deal with future crisis. The way to make this work is through frameworks in the international
system, thus either International government organizations to promote proper financial flows.
This follow along with Japanese belief of development of institutions and helping the
development happen through expertise consulting. This could be attributed to Japanese idealism
according to the author.
The book was full of case studies supporting notions about Japanese foreign policy behavior.
Interview
I had the chance to speak with Professor Tsygankov about Russian and Japanese relations and
some parts of Central Asia. The main points of the interview were about the territory dispute and
22
how this hindered and created tensions between Russia and Japanese. The Sakhalin Island
dispute and upcoming new projects, that included the joint building of nuclear facilities and the
possible far east pipeline that would be close to Japanese homeland.
He gave me a couple of policy papers about Japanese foreign policy from think tanks that mostly
explain about primordial myths, and Waltz assumption about mutual assured destruction.
The interview was informative, but most of information I could not really use for the paper but
did give more insights about Japanese trade relations and certain projects. It did support the
notion that Japan works hard in developing needed relations to promote development of energy
reserves in other countries.
The interview was about fifteen minutes.
Bibliography
Books
1. J Kaoru Sugihara and Ja Allan, Japan in the Contemporary Middle East,
Routledge 199323
2. Glenn D Hoo Harukyo Hasegawa, Japanese Response to Globalization Palgave 2006
3. Chikara Higashi, Japanese Trade Policy Formulation Praeger 1983
4. Jun Morikawa, Japan and Africa African World Press Theron NJ 1997
5. Michael Green, Japan’s Reluctant Realism Palgrave 2001
6. Reinhard Drifte, Japan’s Foreign Policy for the 21st Century from Economic Superpower to What Power? St. Anthony’s Series 1998
7. Thomas Berger, Japan in International Politics Lynne Rienner Publishers
8. Nakao, The Political Economy of Japan Money University of Tokyo Press 1995
Websites
1 Mitsubishi Motors www. _motors_delivers_ele.html
2 CIA Fact Book https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ja.html
3. International Energy Association Key World energy Statistics2007
4. Japanese Atomic Energy www.jaea.go.jp/04/turuga/tief5/images/TIEF5-S1_4E.pd
5. Virtual Chembook http://www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/vchembook/325petrochem.html
6. Japanese Nuclear Energy Policy in 2007 Shunsuke KONDO, ChairmanJapan Atomic Energy Commission Government and industries to follow
7. INPEX homepage states mission statements http://www.inpex.co.jp/english/
8. Malaysian oil plan gets partners http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6697969.stm
Journals Articles
1.Iran and Russia in 'Strategic Alliance' Author(s): Adam Tarock Source: Third World Quarterly, Vol. 18, No. 2, (Jun., 1997), pp. 207-223 Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3993220
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2.Three Years on a Path to Nowhere: The Hashimoto Initiative in Russian-Japanese Relations Author(s): Alexei V. Zagorsky Source: Pacific Affairs, Vol. 74, No. 1, (Spring, 2001), pp. 75-93 Published by: Pacific Affairs, University of British Columbia
3.Japanese Foreign Policy: No Longer Reactive? David Potter and Sudo Sueo Nanzan University
4. Michael M Yoshitu Iran and Afghanistan in Japanese Perspective Asian Survey Vol.21 No.5 May 1981 pp.501-514 University of California Press
5. Mira Wilkins Japanese Multinationals in the United States: Continuity and Change, 1879-1990 The Business History Review, Vol. 64, No. 4, (Winter, 1990), pp. 585-629
News Articles
1. The Jerusalem Post February 25, 2008, Monday Why Iranian oil is the fuel propelling Olmert's visit to Japan Calev BenDavid
2. Uzbek agency seeks to draw Japanese firm in uranium prospecting BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring April 30, 2007 Monday
3. Russell Hotten The Daily Telegraph (LONDON) April 22, 2008 Tuesday OIL World warns Opec as prices rocket 4. Kazakhstan uranium deal, BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitor April 10, 2007 Tuesday
5. Azedegan Iranian oil field BC Monitoring Middle East – Political Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring March 6, 20086. http://peakoildebunked.blogspot.com/2006/01/207-uranium-from-seawater-part-1.html
7. Petroleum Economist November 1, 2006 Competition heats up for uranium; Central Asia Pg. 26(1) Vol. 73 No. 11 ISSN: 0306-395X
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