Resignation offers US new chance on Japan
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 WASHINGTON — The resignation of Japan’s prime minister offers President Barack Obama a chance for a fresh start, with some asking if the US administration was too obstinate in the face of change in the key ally. With his poll numbers tumbling and elections approaching, Prime Minister Yukio  Hatoyama quit Wednesday just nine months after the center-left leader  broke a half-century of nearly interrupted rule by Japan’s  conservatives. While Japanese premiers have  notoriously short shelf-lives, Hatoyama’s fall was all the more dramatic  because it was tied to one issue — his promise, then failure, to change  a plan on an unpopular US military base on Okinawa island. “I think this is an opportunity, frankly, on both sides  to quietly sit back and evaluate what needs to happen,” said Sheila  Smith, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. Smith said that both Japan and the United States shared  some of the blame for the deterioration in relations between the two  nations, which forged an alliance after World War II. But Steven Clemons, director of the American strategy  program at the New America Foundation, said that the Obama team had been  tone deaf as Japan enters a critical phase of debating its role in the  world. Hatoyama’s Democratic Party of Japan took  office with a pledge to develop a “more equal” relationship with the  United States, while maintaining the alliance. Clemons  said the United States developed an “obsession” with preserving the  previous agreement on the Futenma air base rather than seeing the  dispute as a symbol of a deeper identity issue for Japan, Clemons said. “I think there will be some very real ramifications,”  Clemons said. “The bottom line underneath all of  this is increasing resentment by the average Japanese,” he said. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100604com3.html | 
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