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Washington continues to see Japan slipping away

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In Brief

Writing on the nuclear summit, Al Kamen, who pens a Beltway gossip column in the Washington Post, had the following to say about Japanese Prime Minister Hatoyama:

By far the biggest loser of the extravaganza was the hapless and (in the opinion of some Obama administration officials) increasingly loopy Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama. He reportedly requested but got no bilat. The only consolation prize was that he got an ‘unofficial’ meeting during Monday night's working dinner. Maybe somewhere between the main course and dessert?

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A rich man’s son, Hatoyama has impressed Obama administration officials with his unreliability on a major issue dividing Japan and the United States: the future of a Marine Corps air station in Okinawa. Hatoyama promised Obama twice that he’d solve the issue. According to a long-standing agreement with Japan, the Futenma air base is supposed to be moved to an isolated part of Okinawa. (It now sits in the middle of a city of more than 80,000.)

But Hatoyama’s party, the Democratic Party of Japan, said it wanted to reexamine the agreement and to propose a different plan. It is supposed to do that by May. So far, nothing has come in over the transom. Uh, Yukio, you’re supposed to be an ally, remember? Saved you countless billions with that expensive US  umbrella? Still buy Toyotas and such?

Ignoring the snide and demeaning comments about Hatoyama’s being ‘increasingly loopy’ and ‘a rich man’s son’ (what does this have to do with anything?) or the comment suggesting that the ‘expensive US nuclear umbrella’ and US consumers’ purchases of Toyotas are acts of charity, Kamen managed to sweep aside all the complexity of the Futenma dispute in the course of a few paragraphs.

This item may be another sign of what I referred to last month as the ‘losing Japan’ narrative. Indeed, I changed the original name of this post to reflect the fact that Kamen’s column reflects not just a narrative popular at the Washington Post — although the Post has thus far been its main mouthpiece — but a narrative increasingly popular in Washington and in the Obama administration.

Due to Hatoyama’s ‘loopiness,’ the US is losing an important ally and increasingly finding it necessary to ‘bow’ to China (see the first paragraph of the column). Naturally media outlets inside Japan have already reported on Kamen’s comments, with the subtext that Hatoyama is embarrassing Japan abroad even as the US and China move closer together.

For the record, Mr. Kamen: Japan is a sovereign, democratic nation allied to the United States, not a vassal. However poorly Hatoyama has managed the problem, he is trying to balance the concerns of his country’s most important ally with the concerns of the voters who elected him. He certainly deserves better than to be denigrated in this fashion.

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