International Journal of Contemporary Iraqi Studies

Publisher: Intellect Books

E-ISSN: 1751-2875|2|2|209-224

ISSN: 1751-2867

Source: International Journal of Contemporary Iraqi Studies, Vol.2, Iss.2, 2008-10, pp. : 209-224

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Abstract

With critical input from Japan's culture and guidance from theories of international relations, this article addresses in a limited way some of the issues in the current debate about Japan's foreign policy by examining how its major assumptions fared under Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (200106) who, in the post-September 11 setting, presided over the government during the US invasion and occupation of Iraq. The widely known assumptions about the foreign policy model of Japan, examined in this essay, pertain to decision-making by consensus; pacifism and anti-militarism; centrality of the United Nations; and the role of public opinion. I argue that the foreign policy of Japan has undergone major changes during this period, and that the significance of the changes, inspired by domestic and external variables, lies in the far-reaching implication they carry for the Japanese state.