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Informationen zum Autor NEIL RENWICK is Co-Director of the Centre for Asia-Pacific Studies and Reader in International Relations at The Nottingham Trent University. Klappentext Japan's alliance with the United States is examined with reference to defence production and technology-sharing. The alliance's post-Cold-War relevance is considered. It is argued that there is a danger of significant tensions arising in the relationship from parallel rather than identical national interests. A widening gap between the respective interests forms a potentially fatal flaw in the relationship. Failure to move beyond bilateralism to multilateral answers threatens to undermine the search for regional peace. Zusammenfassung Japan's alliance with the United States is examined with reference to defence production and technology-sharing. It is argued that there is a danger of significant tensions arising in the relationship from parallel rather than identical national interests. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Tables and Figures - Acknowledgements - List of Abbreviations - Japan's Alliance Politics - Japan's Secondary Alliance Dilemma - Japan's Self-Defence Forces and the Alliance - 'Defence Inc' - Alliance Techno- nationalism - Japan's Alliance after the Cold-War - Notes - Index
List of contents
List of Tables and Figures - Acknowledgements - List of Abbreviations - Japan's Alliance Politics - Japan's Secondary Alliance Dilemma - Japan's Self-Defence Forces and the Alliance - 'Defence Inc' - Alliance Techno- nationalism - Japan's Alliance after the Cold-War - Notes - Index