Abstract

How Shall We Treat Japan?

Rosinger, Lawrence K. | July 7, 1945 issue

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The article focuses on the book "The Future of Japan," by William C. Johnstone. The book discusses that although the Japanese government's military position grows more difficult from day to day, official U.S. thinking on how to handle a defeated Japan shows no evidence of progress. Dominant State Department circles seem bent on post-war cooperation with so-called moderate elements among Japan's present rulers, including the imperial court and its institution of a divinely descended emperor. Johnstone is concerned not only with the technical aspects of the policy occupation, disarmament, demobilization, reparations and economic controls-but also with the problem of changing Japans social, political and economic structure.

See Also:

FUTURE of Japan, The (Book); JOHNSTONE, William C.; SECURITY, International; CENTRAL planning; ARMS race; ECONOMICS; DISARMAMENT; JAPAN
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