October 4, 2012

Japan's Coming Political Earthquake

Masahiro Matsumura, Project Syndicate

AP Photo

Japan is now confronting challenges at home and abroad that are as serious as any it has had to face since World War II’s end. Yet the Japanese public is displaying remarkable apathy. The country’s two major political parties, the governing Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) and the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) recently chose their leaders, yet ordinary Japanese responded with a collective shrug. But Japan’s political system is unlikely to remain a matter of popular indifference for much longer.

Read Full Article ››

TAGGED: Japan

RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

September 29, 2012
It's Time for Japan to Step Up
Kyle Mizokami, The Atlantic
Fifty-two years ago, the United States and Japan signed the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security. Forged just 15 years after a brutal, racially charged war between the two nations, the treaty was an exercise in realpolitik.... more ››
September 29, 2012
China Would Win a War with Japan
James Holmes, Foreign Policy
In recent weeks, Japan and China have squared off over who owns a minor group of islands in the East China Sea. The unthinkable -- a perilous maritime war for seemingly trivial stakes -- no longer appears unthinkable. So how do... more ››
September 28, 2012
Forget Europe, Japan's Crisis Will Be Worse
Boone & Johnson, Atlantic
This summer, many government officials and private investors finally seemed to realize that the crisis in the euro zone was not some passing aberration, but rather a result of deep-­seated political, economic, and financial... more ››
September 27, 2012
Chinese Media Ignored Anti-Japan Protests
Sandra Huang, The Atlantic
It's already entered the annals of China's brief but rich Internet history: On Sina Weibo, China's Twitter, posts showing massive anti-Japan protests in China went viral on September 15th and 16th. Out in the real world,... more ››
September 27, 2012
Beijing Worrying Many Neighbors
Greg Sheridan, The Australian
Something very strange is happening at the moment in the East China Sea and in the South China Sea, and Australia should be taking serious notice of these developments. In both areas Beijing is pushing disputed Chinese... more ››