AMBASSADOR OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TOKYO MESSAGE

Similar documents
Ambassador Walter F. Mondale's Speech to the Jiji Press' Research Institute of Japan

SPEECH OF AMBASSADOR MONDALE TO THE JAPAN CENTER FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH (TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1995)

SPEECH OF AMBASSADOR MONDALE TO THE OVERSEAS ECONOMIC COOPERATION ASSOCIATION MAY 17, 1995 (As Prepared for Delivery)

STATEMENT OF WALTER F. MONDALE

r.,/,/ /1r~.JY-~~ ~Q,~ J~"--

Hearing on the U.S. Rebalance to Asia

Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen Remarks Prepared for Delivery to Chinese National Defense University Beij ing, China July 13,2000

BUILDING BRIDGES: ENCOURAGING INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE AND VOLUNTEERISM

CHINA POLICY FOR THE NEXT U.S. ADMINISTRATION 183

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Prof. Joseph S. Nye, Jr. July 2006

JAPAN-RUSSIA-US TRILATERAL CONFERENCE ON THE SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NORTHEAST ASIA

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA

Japan s s foreign policy. Lecturer: Dr. Masayo Goto

Remarks of Ambassador Locke USCBC Washington, DC Thursday, September 13, 2012

Issue: American Legion Statement of U.S. Foreign Policy Objectives

Strategic Developments in East Asia: the East Asian Summit. Jusuf Wanandi Vice Chair, Board of Trustees, CSIS Foundation

ASEAN and the EU. Political dialogue and security cooperation. Working closely for 40 years. Wednesday, 11 May, :22

Ⅰ Strategic Partnership for Shared Principles and Goals

Overview East Asia in 2006

AUSTRALIA'S ROLE IN THE NEW WORLD ORDER

United States Policy on Iraqi Aggression Resolution. October 1, House Joint Resolution 658

The Washington Post Barton Gellman, Washington Post Staff Writer March 11, 1992, Wednesday, Final Edition

US-Japan Relations. Past, Present, and Future

NORPAC Hokkaido Conference for North Pacific Issues

The Asia-Pacific as a Strategic Region for the European Union Tallinn University of Technology 15 Sep 2016

Australia and Japan Cooperating for peace and stability Common Vision and Objectives

2017 National Security Strategy: Question and Answer

Science and Technology Diplomacy in Asia

The Policy for Peace and Prosperity

Multilateral Security Cooperation in Northeast Asia: Relevance, Limitations, and Possibilities

Trends of Regionalism in Asia and Their Implications on. China and the United States

Workshop on implementation of resolution 1540 (2004) ASEAN Regional Forum 1, San Francisco, February 2007

ASEAN and Regional Security

Conflict on the Korean Peninsula: North Korea and the Nuclear Threat Student Readings. North Korean soldiers look south across the DMZ.

Address by His Excellency Shigekazu Sato, Ambassador of Japan to Australia. Japan and Australia. Comprehensive and Strategic Partnership

Japan s Policy Agenda for East Asia

The OSCE and South Korea

November 14,

Seoul, May 3, Co-Chairs Report

Honourable Minister of State for External Affairs, General VK Singh, Director of USI, LT Gen PK Singh, Distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

Japan s Position as a Maritime Nation

"Challenges and opportunities for cooperation between Russia and the US in the Asia-Pacific region"

Visit of the President of the Republic of Chile, Ms. Michelle Bachelet, to Japan Joint Press Statement

THE NEXT CHAPTER IN US-ASIAN RELATIONS: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE PACIFIC

Japan-Malaysia Joint Statement on Strategic Partnership May 25, 2015, Tokyo

Security Council. Topic A: The Northern Triangle Topic B: Maintaining Stability on the Korean Peninsula. Background Paper

U.S. RELATIONS WITH THE KOREAN PENINSULA: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A NEW ADMINISTRATION

OUR SOUTHEAST ASIA POLICY

CHAPTER 9 The United States and the Asia-Pacific: Challenges and Opportunities

CHAIRMAN S REPORT OF THE 4 th MEETING OF TRACK II NETWORK OF ASEAN DEFENCE AND SECURITY INSTITUTIONS (NADI) April 2011, Jakarta, Indonesia

Instituto de Relaciones Internacionales (IRI) - Anuario 2005

EU-CHINA: PRE-SUMMIT BRIEFING EUROPE, CHINA AND A CHANGED GLOBAL ORDER

ASEAN. Overview ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS

Perception gap among Japanese, Americans, Chinese, and South Koreans over the future of Northeast Asia and Challenges to Bring Peace to the Region

PRESS STATEMENT. BY THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE 9th ASEAN SUMMIT AND THE 7th ASEAN + 3 SUMMIT BALI, INDONESIA, 7 OCTOBER 2003

Firmly Promote the China-U.S. Cooperative Partnership

SUMMARY REPORT OF THE NINTH ASEAN REGIONAL FORUM SECURITY POLICY CONFERENCE PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA, 25 MAY 2012

U.S.-Japan Commission on the Future of the Alliance Interim Report July 14, 2014

JOINT STATEMENT OF THE ASEAN-AUSTRALIA SPECIAL SUMMIT: THE SYDNEY DECLARATION. Sydney, Australia, 18 March 2018

EU-India relations post-lisbon: cooperation in a changing world New Delhi, 23 June 2010

Gary Locke U.S. Ambassador to the People s Republic of China

THE EU AND THE SECURITY COUNCIL Current Challenges and Future Prospects

Michael McDevitt ALLIANCE RELATIONSHIPS

Takashi Shiraishi Professor, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University. There are various kinds of meanings in saying "Japan in Asia".

NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE THREAT ANALYSIS NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM

2009 Diplomatic White Paper

NOTE From : General Secretariat Dated : 15 June 2012 N prev. doc /12 Subject : Guidelines on the EU's Foreign and Security Policy in East Asia

Contents. Preface... iii. List of Abbreviations...xi. Executive Summary...1. Introduction East Asia in

Chapter 2. Japan s Foreign Policy by Region. 1. Asia and Oceania. Japan s Foreign Policy by Region Chapter 2

Chairman s Statement of the 4 th East Asia Summit Cha-am Hua Hin, Thailand, 25 October 2009

Building an ASEAN Economic Community in the heart of East Asia By Dr Surin Pitsuwan, Secretary-General of ASEAN,

External Partners in ASEAN Community Building: Their Significance and Complementarities

Economic Integration in East Asia

Joint Statement of the 22 nd EU-ASEAN Ministerial Meeting Brussels, Belgium, 21 January 2019

Prospects for U.S.-Japan Cooperation in Development

RT HON SIR ALAN DUNCAN MP

JOINT COMMUNIQUE OF THE TWENTY-SIXTH ASEAN MINISTERIAL MEETING Singapore, July 1993

Exploring Strategic Leadership of the ROK-U.S. Alliance in a Challenging Environment

MYANMAR November Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar

EU-ASEAN/ASEAN-EU Relations

Joint Press briefing by Foreign Secretary Shri Shivshankar Menon And U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Mr.

CICP Policy Brief No. 8

KAZAKHSTAN STATEMENT BY H.E. MR. KANAT SAUDABAYEV

Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises. Session III: North Korea s nuclear program

EU-ASEAN: Natural Partners 35 Years of Friendship and Cooperation

Japan s defence and security policy reform and its impact on regional security

Briefing Memo. Forecasting the Obama Administration s Policy towards North Korea

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Amb. Morton Abramowitz September 2006

EU-China Summit Joint statement Brussels, 9 April 2019

nations united with another for some common purpose such as assistance and protection

And I too am honored now to offer my congratulations to this Society in this centennial year.

Tuesday, 4 May 2010 in New York

Keynote Speech by Mr. Shunsuke Takei, Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan at the Raisina Dialogue Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Youen Kim Professor Graduate School of International Studies Hanyang University

Speech by Minister of Defense Inada at IRSEM (The Institute for Strategic Research)

STATEMENT BY HER ROYAL HIGHNESS PRINCESS HAJAH MASNA SPECIAL ENVOY BRUNEI DARUSSALAM AT THE 59 TH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

AUSTRALIA INDONESIA MINISTERIAL FORUM

The Difficult Road to Peaceful Development

CHAIRMAN S STATEMENT OF THE 10 TH EAST ASIA SUMMIT KUALA LUMPUR, 22 NOVEMBER 2015 OUR PEOPLE, OUR COMMUNITY, OUR VISION

17 th Republic of Korea-United Nations Joint Conference on Disarmament and Non-proliferation Issues:

Transcription:

AMBASSADOR OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TOKYO MESSAGE Kevin Kenner's fourteen-concert tour promises to be a delight for music lovers in Japan. Not yet thirty, Mr. Kenner is already one of America's most accomplished pianists. Since graduating from the Peabody School of Music in Baltimore, he has achieved ever-growing international acclaim. Mr. Kenner has won prizes at the Warsaw Chopin competition, the International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, and the Van Cliburn Competition in Fort Worth, Texas. He is the only American to have won the prestigious Polonaise Prize. Mr. Kenner's international tours throughout North and Central America, Europe, North Africa and Asia have have earned glowing praise, and his playing in his 1991 tour of Japan was greeted with unanimous accolades. I am pleased that Mr. Kenner has returned to Japan. Musicians of his superior caliber are our finest cultural ambassadors. I offer my greetings to those who have come to share an afternoon or an evening of music with this outstanding young American artist,.. and extend my appreciation to Tokyo International Music Corporation and all the others who have made Kevin Kenner's Japan concert series possible. Walter F. Mondale

(NOV. 24, 11 :16 AM THE U.S.-JAPAN SECURITY RELATIONSHIP -- THE BEDROCK OF STABILITY IN EAST ASIA FOR THE 21 ST C~Y J{J(r~ - ~~~ TH~VITING ME TO SPEAK BEFORE YOU F/L-LL TODAY. LAST WEEK, I VISITED KOREA, AND THE WEEK BEFORE W ~ I WAS IN JAKARTA FOR THE APEC MEETINGS. SANDWICHED IN BETWEEN WAS A TRIP TO NIIGATA, AND BEFORE THAT I WENT DOWN TO KYUSHU. SO I AM PLEASED TO BE HOME IN TOKYO AND TO ADDRESS A "HOME TOWN" AUDIENCE SHORT DRIVE FROM THE EMBA~ AT IS ONLY A I WANT TO SPEAK TO YOU TODAY ABOUT OUR SECURITY RELATIONSHIP. BUT BEFORE TAKING UP THAT TOPIC, I WOULD LIKE TO SPEAK FOR A MOMENT ABOUT APEC AND THE U.S.-JAPAN GLOBAL AGENDAS' E SUBJE~ O IMPORTANT AND TIMELY APEC I BELIEVE THAT THE APEC MEETING IN JAKARTA WAS HISTORIC. AS YOU KNOW, APEC BEGAN IN 1989, AS A VERY LOOSE, VERY INFORMAL GATHERING OF FOREIGN MINISTERS AND TRADE MINISTERS FROM THE REGION. THOUGH EUROPE HAS A LONG HISTORY OF THIS KIND OF A MULTILATERAL MEETING, IT IS NEW IN ASIA. OUR FIRST REAL 1

BREAKTHROUGH WITH APEC CAME IN SEATTLE, WHERE AL OF THE APEC LEADERS CAME TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME IN JAKARTA, WE REACHED ANOTHER MILESTONE IN THE BUILDING OF THE ASIA-PACIFIC COMMUNITY: COMMITTING TO FULLY OPEN TRADE IN THE REGION BY THE YEAR 2020. NO ONE EXPECTS~IS;JAPEC TO BE LIKE THE EU OR THE OECD -- IT HAS A DECIDEDLY DIFFERENT TONE, MORE CONSENSUAL, LESS FORMAL, LESS INSTITUTIONALIZED. BUT WE ARE SEEING A GROWING RECOGNITION AMONG ASIA PACIFIC LEADERS IN ALL FIELDS OF THE IMPORTANCE OF REGIONAL COOPERATION AND A GROWING COMMITMENT TO MAKING THIS HAPPEN. THERE IS INDEED AN ASIAN-PACIFIC COMMUNITY, AND IT HAS A VERY BRIGHT FUTURE. I WAS ALSO GRATIFIED THAT THE U.S. AND JAPAN WERE ON THE SAME SIDE OF THE TABLE. WE WORKED WELL TOGETHER AND WITH THE MANY OTHERS THERE WHO ARE COMMITTED TO MOVING APEC FORWARD. THE NEXT MEETING OF APEC WILL BE HOSTED BY JAPAN IN OSAKA. AS CHAIRMAN, JAPAN WILL HAVE A TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY TO LEAD THE WAY TOWARD IMPLEMENTATION OF THE AGREEMENTS REACHED IN JAKARTA AND GIVING GREATER DEFINITION TO APEC BY SETTING FORTH A BLUE PRINT FOR THE FUTURE. PRESIDENT CLINTON HAS ALSO ACCEPTED PRIME MINISTER MURAYAMA'S INVTATION TO MAKE A STATE VISIT TO TOKYO IN CONNECTION WITH THE APEC SUMMIT. 2

I AM DELIGHTED I WILL BE HERE FOR THESE EVENTS, AND I LOOK FORWARD TO THEIR GREAT SUCCESS. SO EVEN THOUGH APEC HAPPENED LAST WEEK, AND I UNDERSTAND THAT THIS MAKES IT OLD NEWS, I BELIEVE THAT APEC IS VERY BIG NEWS INDEED WHEN WE CONSIDER THE FUTURE OF THIS REGION. I AM CONVINCED THAT M9RE THAN ANY OTHER BOB APEC WILL BE A KEY FORUM FOR SHAPING THE ASIA-PACIFIC COMMUNITY FROM HERE ON QUi. t fl/ -rh.l r- 01 cj 12--( OUR COMMON AGENDA I ALSO WANT TO TALK BI ABOUT THE SUMMIT AT JAKARTA BETWEEN PRESIDENT CLINTON AND PRIME MINISTER MURAYAMA. THIS WAS A PRODUCTIVE AND VERY POSITIVE ENCOUNTER. THE TRADE AGREEMENTS WE REACHED AT END OF SEPTEMBER SET A VERY POSITIVE TONE FOR THE MEETING, AND BOTH LEADERS HAD A CHANCE TO FOCUS ON THE MANY AREAS OF COOPERATION IN OUR RELATIONSHIP. AT THE VERY TOP OF THIS LIST WERE THE INITIATIVES THE U.S. AND JAPAN ARE MAKING TO PROMOTE OUR "COMMON AGENDA" ON GLOBAL ISSUES IN THE PACIFIC REGION AND THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. I AM AFRAID THAT THE "COMMON AGENDA" IS ONE OF THOSE "GOOD" NEWS ITEMS THAT RARELY GETS THE ATTENTION IT DESERVES. LET'S FACE IT: "GOOD" NEWS 3

JUST CANNOT COMPETE FOR MEDIA ATTENTION WITH "BAD" NEWS. IT'S A FUNNY THING, BUT SOME SEEM TO RELISH A FIGHT MORE THAN THEY WOULD LIKE TO HEAR THAT OUR TWO COUNTRIES TOGETHER ARE SAVING LIVES AROUND THE WORLD. BUT THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT WE ARE DOING THROUGH THE "COMMON AGENDA." WHEN PRESIDENT CLINTON MET WITH PRIME MINISTER MIYAZAWA IN JULY OF 1993, THEY AGREED NOT ONLY ON A FRAMEWORK TO ADDRESS OUR TRADE PROBLEMS, BUT ALSO TO MOVE FORWARD ON A "COMMON AGENDA" TO TACKLE MANY OF THE WORLD'S MOST PRESSING LONG-TERM GLOBAL ISSUES SUCH AS THE ENVIRONMENT, POPULATION GROWTH, THE PREVENTION OF DISEASE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNOLOGY AND HUMAN RESOURCES. OUR "COMMON AGENDA" HAS BEEN A GREAT SUCCESS. IN THE AREA OF POPULATION AND HEALTH ASSISTANCE ALONE, OUR TWO NATIONS WILL SPEND $1 2 BILLION BY THE YEAR 2000 ON POPULATION AND AIDS-RELATED ASSISTANCE FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES. WE ARE WORKING TOGETHER TO WIPE OUT POLIO WORLDWID BY THE YEAR 2@ AND WE ARE COLLABORATING ON THE "CHILDREN'S VACCINE INITIATIVE," A PROGRAM TO IMPROVE VACCINES FOR THE WORLD'S NEEDY CHILDREN. ON THE ENVIRONMENT, W ARE WORKING TO PROTECT THE WORLD'S FORESTS - IN THE PHILIPPINES, ONE 4

PROTECTING THE OCEANS AND CORAL REEFS, DEVELOPING ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE, ENERGY-EFFICIENT TECHNOLOGIES AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TO NAME JUST A FEW. NEXT WEEK, OUR UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE FOR GLOBAL AFFAIRS, TIM WIRTH, WILL BE HERE MEETING WITH SENIOR JAPANESE OFFICIALS ON THE "COMMON AGENDA." I HOPE ALL OF YOU WILL TAKE NOTE OF THIS VISIT AND GIVE OUR COMMON AGENDA THE ATTENTION I BELIEVE IT DESERVES. THE U.S-JAPAN SECURITY RELATIONSHIP THE OTHER TOPIC I WANT TO TALK ABOUT WITH YOU TODAY IS ANOTHER AREA OF GOOD NEWS THAT DOES NOT SEEM TO GET THE ATTENTION IT DESERVES -- AND THAT IS OUR SECURITY RELATIONSHIP. OUR REGIONAL PRESENCE WITH THE END OF THE COLD WAR AND THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION, I SENSE A CERTAIN DEGREE OF CONFUSION IN BOTH THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN AS TO 5

THE CONTINUING RATIONALE FOR AMERICA'S FORWARD DEPLOYED PRESENCE IN EAST ASIA. THIS IS UNDERSTANDABLE GIVEN THE FACT THAT FOR FORTY YEARS OUR PRIMARY OBJECTIVE WAS CONTAINING THE SOVIET THREAT AND THE SPREAD OF COMMUNISM, OBJECTIVES THAT BY THEIR VERY SUCCESS HAVE LARGELY LOST THEIR RELEVANCE. BUT I BELIEVE THE REASONS FOR AMERICA'S MILITARY PRESENCE IN ASIA ARE AS COMPELLING AS EVER: AMERICA IS A PACIFIC NATION, WITH A STAKE IN THE SECURITY OF THE REGION. STABILITY AND SECURITY IN THE ASIAN-PACIFIC THEATRE IS ESSENTIAL FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. ECONOMIC PROGRESS, IN TURN, PROMOTES DEMOCRATIC CHANGE. AND PROSPEROUS DEMOCRACIES MAKE FOR PEACEFUL NEIGHBORS. AMERICA IS A PACIFIC NATION. THIS IS NOT SIMPLY POLITICAL RHETORIC, IT IS A GEOGRAPHIC, DEMOGRAPHIC, AND CULTURAL FACT. PACIFIC WATERS LAP THE SHORES OF FIVE OF OUR FIFTY STATES. OUR POPULATION IS INCREASINGLY CENTERED IN WESTERN STATES THAT LOOK MORE TO ASIA THAN TO EUROPE. AND ABOUT SEVEN AND A HALF MILLION AMERICANS TRACE THEIR ANCESTRY TO THE ASIA-PACIFIC AND THE NUMBERS ARE GROWING -- OUR ASIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY TODAY IS DOUBLE WHAT IT WAS ONLY TEN YEARS AGO. 6

OUR ECONOMY'S HEALTH INCREASINGLY DEPENDS UPON TRADE WITH OUR ASIAN-PACIFIC PARTNERS. ALREADY, 40 PERCENT OF OUR TRADE IS IN THIS REGION. JAPAN IS OUR LARGEST OVERSEAS TRADING PARTNERS. WE SELL MORE TO SINGAPORE THAN TO ITALY OR GREECE; AND MORE TO MALAYSIA THAN TO RUSSIA. ALMOST TWO AND A HALF MILLION AMERICAN JOBS ARE DIRECTLY RELATED TO OUR EXPORTS TO THIS MARKET. BY THE YEAR 2000, IT IS ESTIMATED THAT OUR TRADE AND INVESTMENT FLOWS ACROSS THE PACIFIC WILL BE DOUBLE THE TRANS-ATLANTIC VOLUME. IN THE YEARS AHEAD, THIS REGION WILL HAVE A CRITICAL IMPACT ON MY COUNTRY'S ECONOMIC GROWTH -- ON TRADE, JOBS AND OUR NATIONAL PROSPERITY. AMERICAN SECURITY DEPENDS ON ASIAN SECURITY. BECAUSE OF OUR GEOGRAPHIC, CULTURAL, AND ECONOMIC TIES, MY COUNTRY HAS ALWAYS HAD AN ENDURING INTEREST IN STABILITY IN THIS REGION, AND THIS STAKE IS GROWING, NOT DIMINISHING. OUR NATIONAL SECURITY DEPENDS ON PREVENTING THE RISE OF ANY HEGEMONIC POWER OR COALITION AND IN STOPPING THE PROLIFERATION OF NUCLEAR, CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS, AND BALLISTIC MISSILE SYSTEMS. WE HAVE A STRONG INTEREST IN FOSTERING THE GROWTH OF DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS -- VALUES SO NECESSARY FOR LONG TERM PEACE AND PROSPERITY. 7

THESE INTERESTS HAVE DEEP ROOTS. OUR DESIRE TO TRADE WITH ASIA PROMPTED US TO SEND ADMIRAL PERRY TO NEGOTIATE WITH JAPAN TO OPEN HER ECONOMY TO THE WORLD IN THE 19TH CENTURY. OUR STRATEGIC STAKE LED US TO MEDIATE THE END OF THE RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR IN 1905, TO RESPOND TO AGGRESSION IN THE 1940S, TO DEFEND THE ROK IN THE 1950S AND TO ASSIST SOUTH VIETNAM IN THE 1960S. AND THESE INTERESTS ACCOUNT FOR THE COMMITMENT WE HAVE MADE TO ARRIVE AT A PEACEFUL RESOLUTION OF THE NORTH KOREA NUCLEAR PROBLEM AND TO REMOVING TRADE BARRIERS IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION. SINCE THE END OF WORLD WAR TWO, TO SECURE THESE INTERESTS, MY COUNTRY HAS MAINTAINED A STRONG DEFENSE CAPABILITY IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC THROUGH A SERIES OF BILATERAL ALLIANCES, MOST PROMINENTLY WITH JAPAN AND KOREA, WHERE WE STATION MOST OF THE 100,000 MILITARY WE HAVE IN THE REGION. IN THE POST COLD WAR ERA, WE MUST TAKE THE EXISTING SECURITY FRAMEWORK IN EAST ASIA THAT HAS BEEN BUILT UP OVER THE PAST FIFTY YEARS AND BUILD ON THIS TO CREATE A STRONGER BILATERAL, REGIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY FRAMEWORK THAT CAN MAINTAIN STABILITY AND CONTRIBUTE TO REGIONAL INTEGRATION. 8

LET ME SHARE WITH YOU MY SENSE OF HOW I SEE OUR TWO NATIONS WORKING TOGETHER ON SECURITY ISSUES IN THIS NEW ERA -- BILATERALLY, REGIONALLY, AND GLOBALLY. THE CENTRALITY OF THE U.S.-JAPAN SECURITY ALLIANCE I WANT TO BEGIN WITH THE CENTRAL COMPONENT, OUR BILATERAL SECURITY ALLIANCE. SINCE THE END OF WORLD WAR II, JAPAN HAS BEEN THE CORNERSTONE OF OUR ENGAGEMENT IN ASIA. OF ALL OF OUR BILATERAL SECURITY TIES, NONE IS STRONGER OR MORE IMPORTANT TO AMERICA THAN OUR BILATERAL SECURITY RELATIONSHIP WITH JAPAN. AND I THINK THAT THE SAME HOLDS TRUE FOR JAPAN. THE SUPPORT WITHIN JAPAN FOR OUR SECURITY RELATIONSHIP IS STRONGER THAN EVER. WITH PRIME MINISTER MURAYAMA'S ENDORSEMENT OF THE TREATY THIS YEAR, AND THE SHIFT IN THE POSITION OF THE JAPAN SOCIALIST PARTY, THERE IS NOW A PUBLIC CONSENSUS HERE THAT THE U.S.-JAPAN SECURITY TREATY SERVES JAPAN'S INTERESTS AND IS A SOURCE OF REGIONAL STABILITY. FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1960, THE EXISTENCE OF OUR ALLIANCE IS NO LONGER AN ISSUE IN JAPANESE DOMESTIC POLITICS. 9

THERE IS NO GREATER MANIFESTATION OF JAPAN'S SUPPORT FOR OUR MILITARY PRESENCE THAN THE VERY GENEROUS HOST NATION SUPPORT WE RECEIVE. JAPAN ASSUMES MORE THAN HALF THE COST ASSOCIATED WITH OUR BASES -- SOME $4 BILLION DOLLARS. WE ARE NOW IN THE PROCESS OF DISCUSSING A RENEWAL OF THE HOST NATION SUPPORT AGREEMENT, AND WE EXPECT THIS TO GO SMOOTHLY. OUR BILATERAL ALLIANCE IS THE HEART OF STABILITY IN EAST ASIA AND MAKES POSSIBLE OUR FORWARD DEPLOYED PRESENCE IN THE REGION. FROM OUR BASES IN JAPAN, AND WITH THE ROUGHLY 47,000 AMERICAN SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN HERE, WE CAN CONTRIBUTE BOTH TO THE SECURITY OF JAPAN AND MORE BROADLY TO MAINTAINING INTERNATIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY IN THE FAR EAST. IN THE YEARS AHEAD, OUR GOVERNMENTS ARE DETERMINED TO STRENGTHEN THIS STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP. WE HOPE TO FIND WAYS TO MAKE IT EASIER FOR OUR FORCES TO WORK TOGETHER IN PEACETIME. WE WANT TO ENHANCE THE INTEROPERABILITY OF OUR FORCES BY TOGETHER DEVELOPING AND PRODUCING MILITARY SYSTEMS. WE ARE LOOKING INTO POSSIBLE COOPERATION ON THEATER MISSILE DEFENSES, AND WE ARE EXPLORING WAYS TO WORK TOGETHER ON PEACE-KEEPING OPERATIONS. 10

AT THE SAME TIME, WE ARE ADDRESSING BASE ISSUES AND OTHER CONCERNS OF THE JAPANESE PUBLIC. I AM VERY MUCH AWARE OF THE IMPACT OF OUR PRESENCE ON OKINAWA. WITH THE SUPPORT OF THE GOVERNMENT OF JAPAN, WE ARE DISCUSSING THE CONSOLIDATION AND REALIGNMENT OF CERTAIN FACILITIES THERE. WE ARE ALSO WORKING WITH THE GOVERNMENT OF JAPAN TO REDUCE THE INTRUSIVENESS OF OUR TRAINING ACTIVITIES IN OTHER PARTS OF THE COUNTRY, CONSISTENT WITH THE NEED TO MAINTAIN READINESS. REGIONAL COOPERATION BUT OUR SECURITY TREATY AND OUR MILITARY PRESENCE IN JAPAN IS ONLY ONE FACET OF HOW OUR TWO COUNTRIES COOPERATE IN PROMOTING REGIONAL AND WORLD PEACE AND SECURITY. HISTORICALLY, THIS DIVERSE REGION HAS BEEN ONE OF THE MOST UNSTABLE PARTS OF THE WORLD. BUT IN THE LAST TWENTY YEARS, THIS REGION HAS BEEN REMARKABLY AT PEACE. I BELIEVE THAT AMERICA'S STRATEGIC, POLITICAL, AND ECONOMIC ENGAGEMENT IN EAST ASIA AND OUR COMMITMENT TO ASIAN SECURITY HAVE BEEN THE MAJOR CONTRIBUTOR TO THIS STABILITY. IN DEFENDING OUR OWN INTERESTS, AMERICA'S STRATEGIC PRESENCE IN THE REGION HAS ALSO BENEFITED 11

THE REST OF THE ASIA-PACIFIC COMMUNITY, INCLUDING JAPAN. THE STABLE ENVIRONMENT THAT WE SO VERY MUCH NEED HERE IS ALSO WHAT JAPAN AND OTHERS IN THE ASIA- PACIFIC HAVE COUNTED ON FOR THEIR ECONOMIES TO FLOURISH. THIS REGION IS NOW HOME TO SOME OF THE WORLD'S MOST PROMISING ECONOMIES -- ECONOMIES THAT ARE NOW COMMITTED TO CREATING THE WORLD'S LARGEST AREA OF FREE TRADE AND INVESTMENT AND THAT WILL LIKELY LEAD WORLD GROWTH INTO THE NEXT CENTURY. IN THE DIPLOMATIC ARENA WE ARE WORKING TOGETHER MORE CLOSELY THAN EVER TO MAINTAIN THIS STABILITY. I SEE OUR COORDINATION IN HANDLING THE NORTH KOREA NUCLEAR PROBLEM AS A MODEL OF HOW, BY WORKING TOGETHER FROM THE VERY START, WE ARE ArLE TO MAKE HEADWAY IN SOLVING A TREMENDOUSLY COMPLEX AND DELICATE PROBLEM. YOU KNOW, WE SHOULD NOT FORGET HOW TENSE AND VOLATILE THE SITUATION WITH NORTH KOREA WAS LAST MAY. NORTH KOREA HAD DENIED IAEA INSPECTORS ACCESS TO KEY NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR FACILITIES AND WAS REFUSING TO LIVE UP TO ITS IAEA COMMITMENTS. WE SEEMED TO BE HEADED TOWARD UNITED NATIONS SANCTIONS AND A VERY DIFFICULT SITUATION INDEED. 12

YET, WORKING CLOSELY WITH JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA, AND WITH IMPORTANT SUPPORT FROM CHINA, WE HAVE NEGOTIATED A BREAKTHROUGH AGREEMENT THAT AVERTS THE THREAT OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND POTENTIAL CONFLICT. DIPLOMACY HAS BEEN THE KEY, BUT I BELIEVE THAT DIPLOMACY WAS ONLY SUCCESSFUL BECAUSE OF OUR SECURITY COMMITMENTS AND OUR MILITARY PRESENCE IN EAST ASIA. BUILDING ON THE UNPRECEDENTED AND VERY TIMELY EFFORTS OF FORMER PRESIDENT CARTER, WE HAVE ACHIEVED WHAT I BELIEVE IS AN HISTORIC AGREEMENT THAT WILL HELP PROTECT AND PROMOTE NOT ONLY REGIONAL STABILITY BUT ALSO THE INTERNATIONAL NON- PROLIFERATION REGIME. WE ARE NOW IN THE IMPLEMENTATION STAGE OF THE NORTH KOREA AGREEMENT, AND THE SUCCESS OF THIS PHASE ALSO WILL REQUIRE US TO CONTINUE TO WORK TOGETHER CLOSELY. JAPAN'S EXPANDING ROLE I THINK THAT COOPERATION BETWEEN OUR TWO COUNTRIES, WORKING WITH OTHER STATES AND INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS SUCH AS THE UN, WILL BE INCREASINGLY IMPORTANT IN SOLVING OTHER REGIONAL AND GLOBAL PROBLEMS. 13

IN THIS INTERDEPENDENT WORLD, WE MUST ALSO LOOK AT EXPANDED MULTILATERAL COOPERATION. IN THIS REGARD, I BELIEVE THAT THE FORMATION OF THE ASEAN REGIONAL FORU~S AN IMPORTANT STEP. WITH THE ARF, THE NATIONS OF THE REGION FOR THE FIRST TIME HAVE A MULTILATERAL FORUM IN WHICH TO DISCUSS WAYS TO ENHANCE REGIONAL SECURITY. WE FULLY SUPPORT THIS DIALOGUE, AND WE BELIEVE THAT OVER THE LONGER TERM THE ARF WILL CONTRIBUTE SIGNIFICANTLY TO EAST ASIAN SECURITY AS A SUPPLEMENT TO, BUT NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR, OUR BILATERAL SECURITY COMMITMENTS. SIMILARLY, AS YOU KNOW, WE VERY MUCH SUPPORT JAPAN'S EFFORT TO GAIN A SEAT ON THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL AND WE SUPPORT THIS UNCONDITIONALLY. WE DO NOT BELIEVE THAT A PERMANENT SEAT FOR JAPAN IS DEPENDENT UPON HER ABILITY TO PARTICIPATE IN ALL ASPECTS OF U.N. PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS. THAT IS AN ISSUE FOR JAPAN TO DECIDE. THAT SAID, MY GOVERNMENT WELCOMES JAPAN'S ENGAGEMENT IN HUMANITARIAN AND PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS. JAPAN HAS MADE AN IMPORTANT CONTRIBUTION TO PKO OPERATIONS IN CAMBODIA, MOZAMBIQUE AND NOW ZAIRE. WE HOPE THAT THE JAPANESE GOVERNMENT WILL BUILD ON THE MOMENTUM ACHIEVED FROM THESE SUCCESSFUL DEPLOYMENTS TO JOIN OTHER PKO 14

ACTIVITIES IN THE FUTURE. A MORE PROMINENT ROLE FOR JAPAN IN THE U.N. WOULD DEMONSTRATE THAT JAPAN IS SHOULDERING RESPONSIBILITIES COMMENSURATE TO HER INTERNATIONAL STATURE. NEED FOR CONTINUED U.S. ENGAGEMENT WHILE I EXPECT THAT THE BURDEN FOR PROTECTING THE SECURITY OF THE REGION WILL BE MORE WIDELY SHARED IN THE COMING YEARS, I DO NOT SEE THIS AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN LEADERSHIP OR A FORWARD-BASED U.S. MILITARY PRESENCE. I AM CONVINCED THAT FOR THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE, ONLY A CONTINUING AMERICAN MILITARY PRESENCE, CENTERED ON THE U.S.-JAPAN SECURITY TREATY AND SUPPLEMENTED BY OUR OTHER BILATERAL ALLIANCES, WILL BE ABLE TO MAINTAIN REGIONAL STABILITY. THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION, AND NOW THE RECENT AGREEMENT WITH NORTH KOREA, SUGGEST THAT THE "THREAT" IN EAST ASIA IS CLEARLY RECEDING. BUT MANY UNCERTAINTIES REMAIN. LET ME GO OVER JUST A FEW: -- WE ARE FACING THE PROSPECT OF A NUMBER OF POTENTIALLY DE STABILIZING POLITICAL TRANSITIONS 15

THROUGHOUT THE REGION, BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY IN CHINA AND NORTH KOREA; -- ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA, NORTH KOREA'S RECENT AGREEMENT TO FREEZE AND THEN DISMANTLE ITS WORRISOME NUCLEAR FACILITIES IS EXTREMELY WELCOME NEWS, AND A VERY POSITIVE STEP BRINGING US CLOSER TO REAL STABILITY ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA. BUT WE ARE NOT THERE YET AND STABILITY WILL NOT BE IN SIGHT UNTIL THE AGREEMENT IS FULLY IMPLEMENTED, AND NORTH AND SOUTH KOREA RESOLVE A NUMBER OF OTHER OUTSTANDING ISSUES. NORTH KOREAN TROOPS STILL REMAIN FIRMLY ENTRENCHED ALONG THE DMZ; -- THE REGION ALSO MUST CONTEND WITH A HOST OF UNRESOLVED TERRITORIAL DISPUTES INCLUDING THE SIX- WAY DISPUTE OVER THE SPRATLEYS AND CONCERNS ABOUT A REGIONAL ARMS RACE. THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE UNCERTAINTIES FACING THE REGION IN THE POST-COLD WAR ERA. AS ASIAN-PACIFIC POWERS, WE ALL HAVE A STAKE IN THEIR SUCCESSFUL RESOLUTION. BUT AMERICA'S STRATEGIC ENGAGEMENT IN THE REGION, IN PARTICULAR, REMAINS VITAL IF WE ARE TO SOLVE THESE PROBLEMS. 16

OUR ACTIVE ENGAGEMENT WILL STILL BE ESSENTIAL NOT ONLY TO MEET OUR EXISTING SECURITY COMMITMENTS BUT ALSO TO MOBILIZE AD HOC INTERNATIONAL COALITIONS ON SECURITY AND OTHER ISSUES AS WE DID IN THE GULF WAR. THE U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT WILL SHORTLY BE ISSUING A REPORT ON U.S. SECURITY STRATEGY IN EAST ASIA THAT WILL RECONFIRM OUR COMMITMENTS AND UNDERLINE OUR INTENTION TO MAINTAIN CURRENT FORCE LEVELS IN THE REGION. THE AMERICAN PEOPLE UNDERSTAND THAT IN ORDER FOR AMERICA TO PLAY A CONSTRUCTIVE ROLE IN ENSURING THE STABILITY OF EAST ASIA AS WE MOVE INTO THE NEXT CENTURY, WE MUST REMAIN FULLY ENGAGED IN THE REGION - ECONOMICALLY, POLITICALLY, AND STRATEGICALLY. HISTORY HAS SHOWN THAT WITHOUT SUCH ENGAGEMENT, WE RISK OF OUR OWN PEACE AND PROSPERITY. I BELIEVE THAT ALL NATIONS OF EAST ASIA WELCOME OUR STRATEGIC ENGAGEMENT AND SEE IT AS A FORCE FOR PEACE AND STABILITY. MY COUNTRY FULLY INTENDS TO CONTINUE TO FULFILL THIS ROLE WHICH BOTH PROTECTS AMERICAN INTERESTS AND BENEFITS JAPAN AND THE REGION AS A WHOLE. WE WILL DO SO BY CONTINUING TO WORK CLOSELY WITH OUR ALLIES, PARTICULARLY JAPAN, TO UPHOLD AND STRENGTHEN THE EXISTING SECURITY FRAMEWORK IN EAST ASIA THAT HAS BEEN SO SUCCESSFUL 17

AND TO LOOK FOR OPPORTUNITIES TO BUILD ON THIS FRAMEWORK. OUR APPROACH WILL BE ONE OF UNDERSTANDING, RESPECT, AND PARTNERSHIP. WE MUST LISTEN AS WELL AS SPEAK. ABOVE ALL, WE MUST RECOGNIZE AND HONOR THE GROWING SELF-CONFIDENCE AND UNDERSTANDABLE PRIDE OF THE NATIONS OF THE REGION. ONLY BY FOLLOWING THIS COURSE WILL WE BE ABLE TO BUILD A LASTING FRAMEWORK FOR PEACE AND STABILITY IN EAST ASIA. 18

MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Copyright in the Walter F. Mondale Papers belongs to the Minnesota Hi storical Society and its content may not be copied without the copyright holder's express w ritten permi ssion. Users may print, downl oad, link to, or email content, however, for individual use. To request permission for commercial or educational use, please contact the Minnesota Historical Society. 1 ~ W'W'W.mnhs.org