Japan Chair Forum: What Americans Think of Japan

  • Tuesday, Oct 28, 2008
  • The Japan Chair at CSIS and The Chicago Council on Global Affairs present:

    What Americans Think of Japan
    Analysis of a Survey by The Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Panelists:
    Rachel Bronson
    Vice President, Programs and Studies, The Chicago Council on Global Affairs

    Keiko Iizuka

    Visiting Fellow, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution

    Moderated by
    Michael J. Green
    Senior Adviser and Japan Chair, CSIS
    Associate Professor, Georgetown University

    As Americans prepare to go to the polls to elect their next President and a new Congress, events in Asia have ranked behind more pressing issues such as the economy, energy prices and the war in Iraq. While the U.S. Presidential candidates have gone out of their way to demonstrate their fealty to the U.S.-Japan relationship, many Japanese analysts and commentators have worried that the United States is losing interest in Japan, especially with the rising importance of China. According to a study by The Chicago Council on Global Affairs, the views of the American public suggest that rather than "Japan passing," the rise of China is increasing the importance of the U.S.-Japan alliance. Americans continue to see Japan as an influential partner in the international system.