Our guest is Sheila A. Smith, a senior fellow for Japan studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, and the author of books including “Japan Rearmed: The Politics of Military Power” and “Japan's New Politics and the U.S.-Japan Alliance.”
Sheila joined us from Washington earlier this week to give her take on what a Biden presidency might mean for Japan going forward, where the U.S. and Japan might find new areas for cooperation, and the growing pressure on the alliance from an increasingly demanding China.
Read more:
• After sending congratulatory note, Suga ponders his approach to Biden • (Satoshi Sugiyama and Jesse Johnson, The Japan Times)
• Suga says he got Biden's backing on Senkakus in first phone talks • (Satoshi Sugiyama, The Japan Times)
• Blunt claim on Senkakus overshadows progress in China-Japan meeting • (Satoshi Sugiyama, The Japan Times)
• Japan’s ‘misunderstanding’ about a Biden administration • (Shin Kawashima, The Japan Times)
• Japan looks to past ties with Trump and Biden for glimpses of the future • (Eric Johnston, The Japan Times)
• After unpredictable Trump, Biden may keep Japan in trade quagmire • (Kyodo via The Japan Times)
On this episode:
Sheila A. Smith: Twitter | Website
Oscar Boyd: Twitter | Articles | Instagram
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Photo: Then U.S. Vice President Joe Biden delivers a speech in front of people affected by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, at Sendai Airport on Aug. 23, 2011. | KYODO
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