Chapter 4 Explaining Japan’s threat perception
Proposal review
Abstract
Oren re-examines Japan’s threat perception during the first two decades of the Cold War, using a wide range of source materials, including many unavailable in English, or only recently declassified. There is a widely shared misconception that during the Cold War the Japanese were largely shielded from threats due to the American military protection, the regional balance of power, Japan’s geographical insularity, and domestic aversion to militarism. Oren dispels this, showing how security threats pervaded Japanese strategic thinking in this period. By dispelling this misconception, Oren enables us to more accurately gauge the degree to which Japan’s threat perception has evolved during and after the end of the Cold War and to enhance our understanding of Tokyo’s strategic calculus in the current situation of rivalry between China and the United States. This book will be of great value to both scholars of Japanese history and contemporary international relations.
Keywords
SDF Personnel,West Germany,Indirect Aggression,Cold War Japan,Motivated Biases,SCAP,Large Scale Rearmament,Threat Perception,Military Security Issues,ICBM,LDP,Japan’s Threat,JDA Director General,Higher Personal Exposure,Early Cold War,Organizational Vulnerability,Nuclear Warheads,United States,Japanese Leaders,UN,Secretary Of State,NPTDOI
10.4324/9781003241324-4ISBN
9781032148298, 9781032148304, 9781003241324Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2023Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Asian history
General and world history
Regional / International studies