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Another startling news, Japanese PM resigned over Afghanistan:
The Guardian: Bold populist who seemed an ideal PM
A third generation conservative politician with bold, populist policies and a modern, telegenic appeal, Shinzo Abe seemed an ideal fit to the post of Japanese prime minister.
He even seemed up to the onerous task of succeeding the flamboyant Junichiro Koizumi, whose more than five years in the post had made him the longest serving Japanese PM in three decades.

However, while Mr Koizumi rode out a series of scandals and slumps to repeatedly win back the Japanese public's affections, Mr Abe's prime ministerial trajectory plotted a resolutely downward course. He failed to last even a year.
....
It was a foreign policy issue - Mr Abe's desire to extend Japan's support role for US-led forces in Afghanistan - which eventually undid him, with the opposition threatening to block the legislation in the upper house.

So now Indian communists can do the same with another Bush friend - PM Manmohan Singh - and pull out his shaky chair.

by FarEasterner on Wed Sep 12th, 2007 at 01:13:54 PM EST
Elections of new LDP chief are fixed on Sept 19th, the question now will new PM call for low house elections or not? Abe's rival - former hawkish foreign minister Taro Aso is considered favourite. New elections may well bring end of LDP rule.
Time: After Abe's Exit, Will Japan Retreat
Abe's resignation spells the end of an attempt among more conservative members of the LDP to loosen the bounds of postwar pacifism and forge a true military alliance with the U.S.But the aging Japanese public was more worried about the state of its economy and failing pension system than the war on terror, which was never popular in Japan, and concerns grew that the country had become too close to the U.S. Abe never adjusted his priorities, and he paid the price at the polls. Though he said that the LDP would still fight to renew the Afghanistan bill, insiders have suggested the party may withdraw the bill in the face of opposition from the DPJ and the public. If that happens, Japan will likely return to the arms-length relationship it had with America for most of the Cold War, and the country, consumed by domestic fears, could turn inward. In the end, Abe's "beautiful Japan" may turn out to be the old Japan.
by FarEasterner on Wed Sep 12th, 2007 at 01:32:37 PM EST
[ Parent ]
As if the "old" Japan wasn't "beautiful". They get paid to write this nonsense?

Oye, vatos, dees English sink todos mi ships, chinga sus madres, so escuche: el fleet es ahora refloated, OK? — The War Nerd
by Migeru (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Wed Sep 12th, 2007 at 05:37:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]
imco this is not nonsense M, it is propaganda -- and my bet is someone got paid very big bucks indeed to write those very calculated phrases, designed to instil contempt for (maybe also fear of) Japan in Anglo readers.

the country, consumed by domestic fears, could turn inward

to tell the truth, I wish more countries when consumed with domestic fears would 'turn inward' -- if the American history of 'invade somebody and kill a few thousand civilians to make ourselves feel better' is the alternative.  what country is more consumed with domestic fear than the visqueen/duct-tape happy, Arabs-under-the-bed, security-mad Amurkans?  can we spell "projection and transference"?

well maybe that's a bit too psychological, but anyway, can we spell "a very thinly disguised way of taunting 'Nyah Nyah, Japan is a Sissy'"?  

and maybe also a not so thinly disguised jab at an old scar, i.e. Perry's "gunboat diplomacy" (i.e. armed invasion) which "forcibly opened" (can the patriarchal sex-memes get any more blatant) the "old" isolationist Japan?  surely that violation of national sovereignty has not been forgotten, nor the more than half century of US occupation of Okinawa, and all these taunts imho draw on those memories to add spin and sting (and implicit threat) to Anglo descriptions of Japan as "old," "inward turning," and "isolationist."

... blue-skying off into Anglosphere media generally... this reflexive contempt for any/all nonwhite, nonwestern cultures is not far below the (white) skin anywhwere in Anglocentroid media... recently the Scottish Sunday Herald decided to run an article on "affordable plastic-body cars in India" using a photo of -- guess what -- an inanely grinning (white) toddler in a toy plastic car.  footnote.  subliminal message is not very subliminal:  grownups drive great big powerful wasteful expensive metal automobiles, third world people are toddlers who get cute wittle toy cars to play with?  to be fair it might have been the 'liberal' US website that tacked the stupid image onto the story and not the SH, but either way, the arrogant concescension drips off of it.  to my jaundiced eye anyway.

and my eye is pretty durn jaundiced lately...


The difference between theory and practise in practise ...

by DeAnander (de_at_daclarke_dot_org) on Thu Sep 13th, 2007 at 08:04:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]

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