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Mitigating Geopolitical Risk – Japan as a Stabilizer in Asia

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In the current tumultuous geopolitical setting, Tokyo may have a very specific, stabilizing role to play.

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Fumio Kishida, Prime Minister of Japan.
Fumio Kishida, Prime Minister of Japan.
Wikimedia Commons
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Japan indeed has, at the same time, very close ties to the United States, due to its long-term alliance, and very tight economic ties with China, due to geographical closeness and a long history of economic and trade relations. As the US-China rivalry becomes more severe, degrading from a trade war to an ideological confrontation and tensions in the Taiwan Strait, Tokyo has to find a way to protect both its security and economic interests.

Tokyo has no choice but to remain pegged to the American camp, while striving to maintain stable and functional relations with Beijing. It must constantly navigate between cooperation and competition in an attempt to preserve its interests. Therefore, Japan is striving to define the conditions for a secured cooperation with its neighbor and to set up, in close coordination with Washington and its other strategic partners, a strict framework of engagement with Beijing. It relies on a heightened deterrence posture in the East China Sea, a counterbalancing policy that also touches geoeconomics, and the implementation of an economic security strategy aimed at protecting technologies and critical sectors, to ensure better resilience of its value chains but also to become an essential center of innovation.

Japan has thus deployed a number of tools to support a positive regional and international order, and to reinforce deterrence against China through closer security ties with the US and other key partners. At the same time, it has tried to mitigate the great power competition and build bridges between like-minded partners such as Europeans and Americans. Finally, it has tried to set up a modus vivendi to continue to trade with China under more secure conditions by establishing a pioneer economic security strategy.

> Read the whole article on the website of Japan Spotlight

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Céline PAJON

Intitulé du poste

Chercheuse, responsable de la recherche Japon et Indo-Pacifique, Centre Asie de l'Ifri

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Asia Map
Center for Asian Studies
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Asia is a nerve center for multiple global economic, political and security challenges. The Center for Asian Studies provides documented expertise and a platform for discussion on Asian issues to accompany decision makers and explain and contextualize developments in the region for the sake of a larger public dialogue.

The Center's research is organized along two major axes: relations between Asia's major powers and the rest of the world; and internal economic and social dynamics of Asian countries. The Center's research focuses primarily on China, Japan, India, Taiwan and the Indo-Pacific, but also covers Southeast Asia, the Korean peninsula and the Pacific Islands. 

The Centre for Asian Studies maintains close institutional links with counterpart research institutes in Europe and Asia, and its researchers regularly carry out fieldwork in the region.

The Center organizes closed-door roundtables, expert-level seminars and a number of public events, including an Annual Conference, that welcome experts from Asia, Europe and the United States. The work of Center’s researchers, as well as that of their partners, is regularly published in the Center’s electronic journal Asie.Visions.

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Taiwan’s Rising Space Program: Building Up Industry, Supporting National Security

Date de publication
13 November 2024
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Taiwan, known for its leadership in semiconductors and information and communications technology (ICT), is now making significant strides in the space industry. While historically modest, Taiwan’s space program has seen a transformation since 2020, driven by President Tsai Ing-wen’s commitment to expanding the country’s space capabilities. Key milestones include the passage of the Space Development Act and the creation of the Taiwan Space Agency (TASA), which has bolstered the resources and visibility of Taiwan’s space ambitions.

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AI and Technical Standardization in China and the EU: Diverging priorities and the need for common ground

Date de publication
31 October 2024
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Given the highly disruptive potential of AI, global cooperation on AI safety and governance is imperative, and yet the deeply transformational potential of AI also ensures that a high level of competition and systemic rivalry is likely unavoidable. How can the EU best manage its complex relationship with China in the field of AI so as to ensure a necessary level of cooperation in spite of competition and rivalry?

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China’s Quest for a Quantum Leap

Date de publication
22 October 2024
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The global race to harness quantum science is intensifying. Recognizing the strategic potential of quantum technology for economic, military, and scientific advancement, China is focusing on quantum breakthroughs as a way to shift the balance of power, especially in its competition with the United States. President Xi Jinping has emphasized the importance of scientific innovation, particularly in quantum fields, to fuel national development and ensure security.

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Taiwan's Energy Supply: The Achilles Heel of National Security

Date de publication
22 October 2024
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Making Taiwan a “dead island” through “a blockade” and “disruption of energy supplies” leading to an “economic collapse.” This is how Colonel Zhang Chi of the People’s Liberation Army and professor at the National Defense University in Beijing described the objective of the Chinese military exercises in May 2024, following the inauguration of Taiwan’s new president, Lai Ching-te. Similar to the exercises that took place after Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taipei in August 2022, China designated exercise zones facing Taiwan’s main ports, effectively simulating a military embargo on Taiwan. These maneuvers illustrate Beijing’s growing pressure on the island, which it aims to conquer, and push Taiwan to question its resilience capacity.

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Fumio Kishida, Prime Minister of Japan.
Wikimedia Commons

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