Biden visits Japan
August 23, 2011 2 min. read

American Vice President Joe Biden, near the end of his Asian tour, met with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan for an hour Tuesday. Biden is the highest ranking U.S. official to visit Japan since the March 11 quake and tsunami. “I am honored and truly humbled to have an opportunity to visit this place, to […]

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Summer of Protest
August 22, 2011 7 min. read

The fireworks celebrating India’s Independence Day on August 15 illuminated shifting political terrain.  Appropriating the motifs of the anti-colonial struggle against the British Raj, the anti-corruption movement that has been gathering momentum for months erupted in full force, staging the most widespread popular demonstrations in decades.  The protests presented Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s seven-year-old government […]

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Toxic Peninusla
August 21, 2011 4 min. read

Historian Brett Walker, in his disturbingly important new book, Toxic Archipelago: A History of Industrial Disease in Japan, draws important historical linkages between economic development, industrial pollution, pain, and the body in service of the nation-state. Though singularly focused on the toxic ramifications of Japan’s modern developmental state, his treatment holds important lessons for societies […]

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Amigo: An Independent Film Review
August 20, 2011 4 min. read

Last night I attended the New York premier of Amigo (trailer above), the independent film and brainchild of John Sayles about the Philippine-American War. The film supplements Sayles’ novel A Moment in the Sun (McSweeney’s Books, 2011), which details a small chapter in American history but also one of utmost significance as a comparison to […]

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India Against Corruption Campaign and the Middle Class
August 19, 2011 6 min. read

Given the recent developments, it was difficult to avoid commenting on the India Against Corruption (IAC) campaign led by Anna Hazare. Let me clarify at the onset that I don’t support Anna’s version of the Jan Lokpal Bill and the intransigent campaign through which he seeks to get the proposal implemented. However, I support the […]

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Ex-Envoy Says Nobody in Japanese Government Took Charge in Nuke Crisis
August 19, 2011 3 min. read

Washington officials thought no one in the Japanese government took charge during the early stages of the nuclear crisis in Fukushima, former envoy Kevin Maher said Thursday. Maher said that Naoto Kan’s administration treated the crisis as the plant operator’s problem, not the government’s. “There was nobody in charge. Nobody in the Japanese political system […]

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Tokyo Gov Calls PM “Not Japanese”
August 17, 2011 2 min. read

Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara accused Prime Minister Naoto Kan, along with his cabinet, of being “not Japanese” for not visiting the controversial Yasukuni Shrine on Monday to honor Japan’s war dead. Kan and his cabinet visited a different, non-controversial shrine instead. Ishihara went on to comment on Japan’s current political turmoil, saying: “The Japanese race […]

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Defense Dysfunction
August 16, 2011 7 min. read

Much of the commentary about India’s elimination of the Boeing and Lockheed Martin bids from its hotly-contested, highly-lucrative Medium Multirole Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) competition has focused on its meaning for U.S.-India relations.  The air force is the largest beneficiary of the country’s burgeoning military budget and a number of foreign companies were looking to snap […]

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50 Conservative Politicians Visit Yasukuni Shrine
August 15, 2011 4 min. read

More than 50 members of Japan’s conservative opposition party, the Liberal Democratic Party, including leader Sadakazu Tanigaki and former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, visited Yasukuni Shrine Monday. The August 15 visit marks the 66th anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II, and by coincidence is the beginning of the Obon, a Buddhist festival that […]

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Judging Success in the “War on Terror”
August 14, 2011 4 min. read

This past week, Umar Patek, the Jemaah Islamiyah militant responsible for assembling the explosives used in the 2002 bombings in Bali, was extradited to Indonesia after being captured in Pakistan in late March. Patek is also believed to have been behind the attacks on Christian churches in cities across Indonesia on Christmas Eve, 2000. His […]

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Japanese TV Show: Become a Good Speaker by Imitating Hitler
August 12, 2011 2 min. read

A Japanese TV show that aired Tuesday advocated imitating Adolf Hitler to become an influential speaker. In a new low, even for Japanese TV, the show, “Kyokasho ni nosetai!” (“Let’s put it on the TEXTBOOK!”), looked at how Hitler “brainwashed the populace,” and how these techniques can be “applied to school and the workplace.” Other […]

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Japan Ignored Own Radiation Forecasts
August 11, 2011 1 min. read

Japan has a state-of-the-art forecasting system that predicts the trajectory and magnitude of radiation leaked into the air, but Japan didn’t act on its own information, according to the Associated Press. The forecasting system, SPEEDI, was built in 1986 at a cost of 11 billion yen ($140 million). The system uses weather conditions and the […]

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