This study examines how Japanese policy toward Middle East security issues is shaped by the need to both maintain Japans security alliance with the US and its oil relationship with states in the Middle East. Yukiko Miyagi introduces the historic roots of Japans policy, and then focuses on the major contemporary cases the Iraq war, the Iranian nuclear crisis, and the Arab-Israeli conflict, to expose and explain how clashing interests and dilemmas were negotiated to arrive at policy outcomes.
The author also sheds light on the utility of mainstream International Relations theories for understanding Japans behaviour. How do we understand the policy of a self-declared anti-militarist state forced to operate in a realist world and for whom energy supplies are a matter of vital national security? This study shows how neither realism nor its rivals, such as constructivism, can wholly explain Japans behaviour and suggests a theoretical framework for doing so.
Filling a major gap in our understanding of an increasingly important area of study Japans Middle East Security Policy is an essential read for those interested in Japans International Relations, Middle East politics, security studies and foreign policy.
1.Introduction: Aims, Debates and Theoretical Framework 2. Japan's Policy Towards Middle East Security Issues: An Overview 3. Policy Determinants and the Policy-making Process 4. The Iraq War 5. The Iranian Nuclear Crisis 6. Syria Under US Hostility 7. Conclusion: Findings and Implications
Yukiko Miyagi's volume fills a major gap in the literature on Japan's relations with the Middle East. This volume makes a major contribution in expanding our theoretical understanding of Japan's engagement of the region, by providing an integrated framework of analysis combining international systemic factors, US-Japan allianlÓÕ