Sunday, April 5, 2026

Defending Asia Has Gotten Harder

Why Nuclear Deterrence in Asia Is Collapsing

By Patrick M. Cronin, Asia-Pacific Security Chair at the Hudson Institute, Scholar in Residence at Carnegie Mellon University’s Institute for Strategy and Technology (CMIST), and APP Member.

First Published March 31, 2026 on The National Interest

As the 2027 “Davidson window” approaches, Washington appears less concerned about deterrence failure in Asia than at any point in recent years. The phrase, drawn from former US Indo-Pacific commander Admiral Philip Davidson’s warning about China’s timeline for achieving combat readiness for a Taiwan contingency, once became shorthand for fears of imminent conflict, especially in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.


Yet “deterrence” is scarcely mentioned in the US Intelligence Community’s 2026 Annual Threat Assessment, the intelligence community’s capstone document. While it notes that Beijing’s ambitions over Taiwan remain undiminished, it asserts that “Chinese leaders do not currently plan to execute an invasion of Taiwan in 2027, nor do they have a fixed timeline for achieving unification.” The intelligence community appears to have embraced a view of Xi Jinping’s strategy as gradual, positional, and political, aimed at tightening control over what Beijing calls a rogue province, even though the People’s Republic of China has never governed Taiwan.


Admiral Davidson’s warning was never a prediction of impending war. It was a caution about the convergence of two trends: China’s military modernization milestone in 2027 and a potentially declining US force posture, which could create a gap in deterrence. Ironically, on the eve of the People’s Liberation Army’s centenary in 2027, Washington risks becoming overly sanguine about the durability of deterrence in the Indo-Pacific.


Although the Annual Threat Assessment reflects reasonable analytical caution, it risks strategic complacency.


Across both South and East Asia, structural trends are eroding deterrence. A fracturing international order, the expansion of conflict below the nuclear threshold, and the accelerating impact of emerging technologies are together undermining stability. This is no time to slacken efforts to shore up deterrence.


The Failure of Nuclear Deterrence

Recent conflicts suggest the stark lesson that while nuclear weapons may still deter large-scale war, they do not prevent conflict. Indeed, nuclear-armed states appear increasingly willing to incur risk by operating below the nuclear threshold. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine remains the most obvious case. Had Kyiv retained its nuclear arsenal, it is difficult to imagine Russia prosecuting a prolonged war of aggression on its territory.


Iran provides a more recent example of deterrence failure. Tehran exposed its capabilities through premature use, delegated credibility to unreliable proxies, and lingered at a nuclear threshold sufficient to provoke an attack but insufficient to prevent it. What should have imposed caution instead created opportunity for its adversaries. Deterrence did not fail quietly; it collapsed visibly.


More broadly, deterrence is no longer reliably governing the space below major war. This was evident in South Asia in spring 2025.


After a terrorist attack in Pahalgam killed 26 civilians, India launched Operation Sindoor, striking deep inside Pakistan, including near sensitive military infrastructure. The episode demonstrated a higher tolerance for risk on both sides. It reinforced the parlous conclusion that even nuclear-armed rivals believe there is still room to engage in conflict without triggering nuclear escalation. Tensions continue to simmer on the Durand Line between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and last year was not the last time terrorism will prompt military reprisal. India’s subsequent shift toward compellence, outlined in Defence Forces Vision 2047, underscores this trend.


Across recent conflicts, from Ukraine to Iran, states are testing the limits of escalation, probing how far they can go without crossing nuclear red lines. Indeed, a Carnegie Endowment study of nuclear threats in recent years suggests that nuclear-armed governments have grown more adept at manipulating fears of nuclear exchange to pursue conventional aims. Some may think that even a tactical nuclear use might not elicit more than conventional retaliation.


That assumption is profoundly misplaced. As the line between coercion and conflict blurs, and as conventional and nuclear domains become increasingly entangled, ambiguity is rising. And with ambiguity comes a heightened risk of miscalculation. These pressures are global, but nowhere are they more dangerous than in Northeast Asia.


Northeast Asia’s Nuclear Paradox

North Korea has moved beyond deterrence by retaliation toward a doctrine that emphasizes early, limited use to control escalation. Its focus on tactical nuclear weapons, preemption, and potential pre-delegation lowers the threshold for nuclear employment. As Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un made clear in a speech amid the Iran conflict, North Korea’s “nuclear shield…drives the development of all sectors of the country” and guarantees “the dignity of the state, national interests, and ultimate victory.”


Russia acts as an accelerant. Its deepening alignment andinvincible alliance” with North Korea, its reliance on nuclear coercion, and its reported support for Pyongyang’s missile programs are contributing to a more interconnected and volatile deterrence environment. North Korean systems tested in Ukraine are already demonstrating improved survivability and maneuverability, as the KN-23 short-range ballistic missiles are increasingly able to evade interception.


China, meanwhile, is undertaking a rapid and opaque nuclear expansion. Whether Beijing seeks parity or something more ambitious, its trajectory, combined with possible movement toward a launch-on-warning posture, introduces new instability into crisis dynamics.


These trends are not isolated. They reinforce one another, creating an interlinked nuclear system that is more complex, less predictable, and harder to stabilize.


At the strategic level, deterrence still holds. The catastrophic costs of nuclear war continue to constrain major powers. But at the operational level, where crises unfold and decisions are made, deterrence is fragmenting. The central paradox of the current moment is that, as destructive capabilities grow, predictability declines.


The US’ Nuclear Credibility Gap

Credibility, the currency of deterrence, is also steadily fading. Allies increasingly question the reliability of US commitments, even as technological advances fail to deliver greater security. US force posture adjustments have compounded these concerns.


Taiwanese officials have warned that the expenditure of long-range strike systems such as Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles (JASSMs) and Tomahawks erodes deterrence across the Taiwan Strait. South Korean officials have voiced similar unease over the redeployment of missile defense assets, including Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) and Patriot systems, especially given the domestic political and economic costs Seoul previously incurred to host them.


At the same time, the credibility of US extended deterrence, the foundation of security for Japan and South Korea, is under growing strain. The longstanding question of whether the United States would risk Los Angeles to defend Seoul or Tokyo is no longer theoretical, but increasingly being asked in allied capitals.


South Korea is hedging by investing in nuclear-powered submarines, expanding its latent nuclear capability while remaining faithful to the nonproliferation regime. Tokyo, constrained by domestic politics, is strengthening its conventional strike capabilities while reassessing old assumptions, including the role of US nuclear weapons on its territory.


Deterrence rests not only on capability but also on trust and belief. And trust and belief are becoming harder to sustain.


Along with a decline in credibility is the questionable assumption that conflicts in Asia can be geographically contained. The Korean Peninsula, Taiwan Strait, and South China Sea are increasingly interconnected. A Taiwan contingency, for example, would draw US and allied assets away from Korea, weakening deterrence on the peninsula and potentially inviting opportunistic action. In a multi-front scenario, even strong alliances can be stretched thin.


Emerging technologies are exacerbating these risks. Artificial intelligence and autonomous systems are compressing decision-making timelines, reducing the space for human judgment. What once unfolded over days may now occur in minutes. Advances in surveillance are making military movements more visible, increasing incentives for preemption. The logic of “use it or lose it” is becoming more salient. Even the undersea domain, long the foundation of secure second-strike capability, may become more transparent, undermining a key pillar of strategic stability.


Crises are moving faster than the institutions designed to manage them.


How to Strengthen US Nuclear Deterrence Without Breaking It

What, then, is to be done? There is broad agreement on the need to strengthen deterrence, but less consensus on how to do so. Some advocate deeper allied integration. For instance, tighter trilateral coordination among the United States, Japan, and South Korea, enhanced missile defense cooperation, and a more unified defense of the First Island Chain are all prevailing lines of effort for bolstering deterrence in East Asia.


Others emphasize preparing for limited nuclear use, ensuring that alliances can absorb and respond without uncontrolled escalation. But there is also a growing recognition that overreliance on preemption and rapid escalation could sow crisis instability. Efforts to strengthen deterrence may inadvertently accelerate the very dynamics that make it fragile. The policy challenge is fortifying deterrence without breaking it.


Defense modernization programs that envision a “spine” of AI-enabled technologies across all domains, with a focus on resilience of the system, could also invite foes to paralyze the spine, or at least lead them to believe that they might be capable of doing so. Deterrence is no longer a slow-moving, bilateral system. It is a fast, interconnected, multi-actor environment shaped by nuclear modernization, technological disruption, and shifting political commitments.


The greatest danger is not that deterrence collapses outright, but that it fails in ways we do not anticipate. A misinterpreted signal. A limited strike. A decision made too quickly.


The Davidson window may never have been a countdown to war. But it was a warning about vulnerability, and that vulnerability has deepened rather than disappeared. The danger is not that deterrence collapses. It is that it fails in ways we fail to anticipate.

Asia Policy Events, Monday April 6, 2026

FORGING JUST FUTURES: SOLUTIONS-BASED SCIENCE TO ADDRESS THE CLIMATE GAP. 4/6, Noon-1:15pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School. Speakers: Rachel Morello-Frosch, Professor, School of Public Health and Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley; Moderator: Joseph E. Aldy, Faculty, Belfer Center. 

PRESSURE POINTS: THE IRAN WAR’S GROWING ECONOMIC AND SECURITY IMPACT. 4/6, Noon-1:00pm (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Middle East Institute (MEI). Speakers: Lieutenant General Sam Mundy, USMC (Ret.), President of Once a Marine LLC; Karen E. Young, Senior Fellow, MEI; Moderator: Kenneth M. Pollack, Vice President for Policy, MEI. 

BOOK TALK: JAPAN REBORN: RACE AND EUGENICS FROM EMPIRE TO COLD WAR. 4/6, 5:30-7:00pm (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Modern Japan History Association. Speakers: author Kristin Roebuck, Assistant Professor, Cornell University; Takashi Fujitani, Dr. David Chu Professor in Asia-Pacific Studies, University of Toronto; Moderator: Seiji Shirane, Associate Professor of Japanese History, City College of New York. PURCHASE BOOK

THE TAIWAN RELATIONS ACT AT 47: TAIWAN'S EVOLVING HEDGING STRATEGY AMIDST INTENSIFYING GLOBAL COMPETITION. 4/6, 4:00-5:30pm (PDT), 7:00-8:30pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Hoover. Speakers: David Ta-wei Lee, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan); Admiral O. James Ellis Jr, Annenberg Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Hoover; Larry Diamond, William L. Clayton Senior Fellow, Hoover.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Takaichi Diet Lesson

Takaichi Realizes the Power of the Upper House


By Takuya Nishimura, Senior Fellow,  Asia Policy Point
Former editorial writer for the Hokkaido Shimbun
You can find his blog, J Update here.
March 29, 2026

 
A power play over Japan’s FY2026 budget bill resulted in a defeat for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi by the opposition parties. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) announced on March 30 that it has given up its attempt to pass the budget bill before the end of March. The Cabinet was forced to submit to the Diet an interim budget bill to authorize spending for the beginning of FY2026. Despite this setback, Takaichi continues to be highly popular in recent polls.
 
Looking back at the past few months, Takaichi exercised her constitutional power and dissolved the Lower House on January 23. The House held a general election on February 8. Her decision was fundamentally surprising because the timing of the snap election put at risk passage of the annual budget bill, which must occur before the beginning of the next fiscal year on April 1. Takaichi nevertheless initiated the snap election to reinforce her political support before her approval rating fell.
 
The LDP’s sweeping victory in the election went beyond her expectation. Takaichi and her staff in Prime Minister’s Official Residence (Kantei) came to believe that they were invincible, able to make impossible possible. Takaichi called on the Diet to pass the budget bill before the fiscal year began. The LDP in the Lower House obliged; it passed the budget bill with only 59 hours of discussion, ignoring the established but unspoken agreement between the parties to discuss a budget bill for at least 80 hours.
 
This hard push by the leading party stirred anger in the opposition parties in the Upper House which still outnumber the LDP. The opposition held captive a few bills relating to the FY2026 budget. Two of them were the high school tuition bill and the free school lunch bill which were to take effect in April. These bills also needed to pass the Diet by the end of March.
 
The Committee on Education, Culture and Science in the Upper House was to discuss the bills. The chair of this committee is a member of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ), the biggest opposition party. The chairman delayed discussion of the bills at the request of the opposition parties who first wanted to thoroughly examine the qualifications of the Minister of Education, Yohei Matsumoto [松本 洋平], who had a history of extramarital affairs. The opposition parties threatened the LDP that they would scrap the two bills if the parties did not have enough time to discuss the budget bill in the Upper House.
 
The leading parties and opposition parties struck a deal in late March. The leading parties would give up on meeting the March 31 deadline for the FY2026 budget bill, allowing time in the Upper House for discussion for the bill in early April. In the meantime, there would be an interim budget bill for 11 days, by which time the Diet is expected to pass the budget. The opposition parties agreed to pass the related bills, including the high school tuition and school lunch bills by the end of March. Although media reports did not go into detail, the LDP leaders told Takaichi about the deal on March 23. But Takaishi still insisted on passage of the budget bill by the end of March.
 
Takaichi must have known of the LDP’s weakness in the Upper House and of the deal between the parties to pass the bills. In fact, the FY2026 budget bill includes an economic stimulus package. Any delay in the budget bill will frustrate voters who expected assistance in this time of price inflation. Takaichi and her staff mistakenly thought that the opposition parties, afraid of public annoyance, would not be so persistent in opposing the budget bill.
 
She and her staff miscalculated the anger of the opposition parties in the Upper House. An extraordinarily abbreviated discussion on the budget bill brought to the fore a fundamental concern about the existence of the chamber, which has been dubbed “a carbon copy of the Lower House.” Regardless of their positions as either leading or in opposition, the parties in the Upper House felt challenged about their raison d’etre.
 
As a matter of fact, the Upper House sometimes has played a crucial role in the history of the Japanese government. The Ryutaro Hashimoto administration fell to a minority government in the Upper House after a defeat in the 1998 election. On the advice of his mentor, former premier Noboru Takeshita, Hashimoto stepped down as prime minister even though he maintained a majority in the Lower House.
 
In 2007, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe believed that the LDP’s majority in the Lower House could overcome its minority position in the Upper House. The result was terrible. A cabinet reshuffling caught some ministers in scandals related to the mismanagement of political funds. When the Upper House blocked an anti-terrorism bill, Abe’s chronic disease returned, he could not attend a plenary sitting in the Diet, and he decided to resign.
 
Prime Minister Naoto Kan left office in 2011 because a bill to authorize government bonds to fund reconstruction after the East Japan Great Earthquake earlier that year could not pass the Upper House. He asked the LDP, which had a majority in the house, to pass the bill in return for his resignation. These episodes illustrate that the Upper House has the power to destroy an administration.
 
Despite her mismanagement of the budget bill, Takaichi remains highly popular in two polls. Nikkei Shimbun reported a 72 percent approval rating of Takaichi’s Cabinet. She also maintained a high rating in the Mainichi Shimbun poll with 58 percent approval. Although there is skepticism about her attitude to the Diet, a substantial share of respondents preferred her performance in her summit meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump. Her style of relying on popular opinion is still working and may continue for some time.

Embracing Trump

If surviving Trump meeting was goal: 
Takaichi leaves DC a winner

By Mike Mochizuki, Non-Resident Fellow at the Quincy Institute, Japan-U.S. Relations Chair in Memory of Gaston Sigur at the Elliott School of International Affairs in George Washington University, and APP Member.

First Published March 20, 2026 on Responsible Statecraft.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s high-stakes meeting with President Donald Trump began with a warm embrace and opening remarks that established a favorable mood.

Takaichi declared that “Donald” is the only person who can achieve peace and prosperity throughout the world, and that she intends to reach out to other countries to support his efforts. Trump congratulated Takaichi for her historic electoral victory, called her a “powerful woman,” and thanked her for all she has done.

But despite the positive atmosphere, this summit revealed the risks of Japan’s policy of clinging to the United States while allowing its relations with China to deteriorate.
Because of Japan’s assessment of the Chinese security threat, Takaichi seeks to lock-in Japan’s alliance with the United States by flattering Trump and appeasing as much as possible his demands on defense and economic issues.

When Takaichi originally requested a summit with Trump, her aim was to get reassurance from Trump before his scheduled trip to China (which has now been postponed). Last November, Takaichi’s imprudent remarks about how a Taiwan crisis could constitute a “survival-threatening situation” that might warrant a Japanese military response, triggered a sharp downturn in Sino-Japanese relations. Her statements wiped away the improvement in ties with China that had been achieved under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, Takaichi’s immediate predecessor.

Rather than defending Takaichi as Japan-China tensions escalated, Trump reportedly told her in a phone call that she should tone things down because he wanted to avoid a conflict with China over the Taiwan issue. Trump’s cool response prompted Takaichi to seek assurances from Trump that he would not make deals with Xi Jinping that might undermine Japan’s interests. She also wanted to deepen bilateral cooperation to strengthen economic resilience in response to Chinese coercion.

The U.S. and Israeli war against Iran, however, complicated Takaichi’s original game plan and entrapped Japan in a severe dilemma.

On the one hand, Trump wants Japan “to step up” to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz by deploying naval vessels. From Trump’s perspective, Japan should take on this mission because Japan is more dependent on energy supplies passing through the strait than any other country. Given her landslide electoral victory in February, Takaichi ironically does not have the excuse of domestic political constraints to deny Trump’s request. Furthermore, Japan’s acute fear of China makes it hard for Takaichi to say “no” to Trump.

On the other hand, Takaichi faces strong domestic pressures not to comply with Trump. 82 percent of the Japanese public oppose the U.S. attack against Iran, and most Japanese strategic experts — including those who have stressed the importance of the U.S.-Japan alliance — believe that Trump’s war against Iran is an illegal and illegitimate strategic blunder. Japan’s legal and constitutional obstacles for deploying naval ships to a war zone are extremely high.

Furthermore, Iran has indicated that states that send naval ships to the area would be considered to have joined the American and Israeli side in this war and would be seen as hostile. Iran has, however, shown a willingness to allow oil tankers headed for countries that are not involved in the conflict and friendly toward Iran to pass through the strait. It is therefore in Japan’s energy security interests not to deploy naval ships into the area.

Although a joint press conference is usually held after U.S.-Japan summits, for some reason no Takaichi-Trump press briefing took place after their meeting. Instead, Takaichi held a solo press conference with the Japanese media on Thursday. She revealed that there was a discussion of the importance of ensuring the safety of the Strait of Hormuz and that she explained in detail what Japan can and cannot do within its legal constraints.

By refraining from mentioning at all any bilateral differences, she seemed to want to avoid giving the impression that there was any friction between her and Trump. And by not holding a joint press conference, both leaders perhaps sought to prevent the media from probing any discord between the U.S. and Japan.

So what should Takaichi do after this U.S.-Japan summit?

First, she should work energetically with other countries to facilitate an early termination of the Iran war. With the negative impact on gas prices and the strong American public opposition to the war, Trump should welcome such an effort because he wants a good off-ramp well before the November mid-term elections so that he can proclaim victory and mission accomplished.

More challenging will be convincing Iran to end the conflict. Not only does Iran want to avenge the killing of its top leaders and the death and destruction caused by Israel and the United States, it also wants solid international guarantees that it will not be attacked again and that its sovereignty will be protected. Among the G-7 countries, Japan maintains the best relations with Iran. Therefore, Takaichi should use this asset to promote serious diplomacy to explore viable ways to end this war.

Second, Takaichi should engage in proactive diplomacy to stabilize and improve relations with China. Although improving Japan’s own defense capabilities and deepening its ties with like-minded countries in Europe and the Indo-Pacific are important to counter China and to hedge against the uncertainty of the U.S. security commitment, they are no substitute for direct diplomacy with China to stabilize the regional security environment. An emphasis on military deterrence to the neglect of diplomacy will only fuel an arms race that will favor China given the asymmetry in material capabilities and China’s geographic advantages.

As a first step, the Japanese government should publicly clarify its basic stance regarding the Taiwan issue rather than simply repeating that there has been no change in policy. In addition to reaffirming the points about Taiwan made in the 1972 Japan-China normalization communique, Japan should state that it does not support the independence of Taiwan and that it supports any resolution of the Taiwan issue that is peaceful and achieved without coercion and accepted by both sides of the Taiwan Strait.

This is necessary to reassure Beijing that Tokyo is not surreptitiously seeking the independence of Taiwan or the permanent separation of Taiwan from China.

In addition, with an eye on the next Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit scheduled in China in November 2026, Tokyo should expeditiously initiate discussions with Beijing on a broad range of issues. Rather than sticking to its current passive approach of simply leaving the door open for dialogue, Takaichi should dispatch to Beijing an influential political leader who is trusted by China to restart bilateral discussions. The agenda could include maintaining and strengthening a “rules-based” order, restraining the weaponization of economic interdependence, promoting stability and security of critical supply chains, cooperating more to address climate change, and enhancing confidence-building and crisis prevention measures.

Takaichi has touted that “Japan is back.” By engaging the above two diplomatic challenges, she can establish herself as one of the world’s most important leaders and upgrade Japan’s international status and influence.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Asia Policy Events, Monday March 30, 2026

THE THREE SEAS INITIATIVE: AMBASSADOR ROMANA VLAHUTIN ON EUROPE’S NEW GEOGRAPHY OF POWER. 3/30, 8:00-9:00am (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Hudson Institute. Speakers: Zineb Riboua, Research Fellow, Center for Peace and Security in the Middle East; Romana Vlahutin, Government of Croatia Special Envoy, Strategic Connectivity, National Coordinator, Three Seas Initiative. 

TECHNOLOGICAL TRADE PATTERNS: BRICS AND ASEAN. 3/30, 10:00-11:30am (SGT), 3/29, 10:00-11:30pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Yusof Ishak Institute (ISEAS). Speaker: Jennifer Pédussel Wu, Professor of Economics, Berlin School of Economics and Law.

WINNERS AND LOSERS: RUSSIA, CHINA, AND EUROPE RESPOND TO THE IRAN WAR. 3/30, 10:15-11:00am (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Carnegie. Speakers: Aaron David Miller, Senior Fellow, American Statecraft Program; Rosa Balfour, Director, Carnegie Europe; Evan A. Feigenbaum, Vice President for Studies, Carnegie; Alexander Gabuev, Director, Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. 

BIODIVERSITY IMPLICATIONS OF LAND-INTENSIVE CARBON DIOXIDE REMOVAL. 3/30, 11:00am-Noon (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Institute for Responsible Carbon Removal. Speakers: Ruben Prütz, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK); Moderator: Wil Burns, Co-Director, Institute for Responsible Carbon Removal, American University.

HOW THE HUNGARIAN ELECTION WILL CHANGE EUROPE. 3/30, 5:00-6:00pm (CET), 11:00am-Noon (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Carnegie Europe. Speakers: Rosa Balfour, Director, Carnegie Europe; Peter Hefele, Policy Director, Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies; Zsuzsanna Szelényi, Research Fellow, Central European University Democracy Institute.

CHINA’S ECONOMIC SLOWDOWN: RISKS, REALITIES, AND STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS. 3/30, 11:00am-Noon (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Hudson Institute. Speakers: Miles Yu, Senior Fellow and Director, China Center; Thomas J. Duesterberg, Senior Fellow; Leland Miller, Member, U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, Co-Founder and CEO, China Beige Book. 

POWERING ENERGY DOMINANCE THROUGH INNOVATION: THE STRATEGIC ROLE OF U.S.-KOREA COOPERATION. 3/30, Noon-1:00pm (EDT), IN PERSON ONLY. Sponsor: Global America Business Institute (GABI). Speakers: Chang-Keun Yi, President of the Korea Institute of Energy Research (KIER), John Howes, Principal, Redland Ener    gy Group; Jae Yong Lee, Principal Researcher, KIER; Barbara Tyran, Senior Advisor, GABI. 

THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION SHIFTS THE GLOBAL TRADING SYSTEM: IMPLICATIONS FOR JAPAN AND “MIDDLE POWERS. 3/30, Noon-2:00pm (EDT), IN PERSON ONLY. Sponsor: Association of Women in International Trade (WIIT); Japanese Women in the Professions in Washington DC (J-WIP). Speaker: Barbara Weisel, Nonresident Scholar, Asia Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Former Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific. FEE. Lunch will be served.

IRAN WAR NEGOTIATIONS: WHAT’S ON THE TABLE? 3/30, 12:30-1:30pm (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Middle East Institute. Speakers: Barbara A. Leaf, Distinguished Diplomatic Fellow, Middle East Institute, Senior International Policy Advisor, Arnold & Porter; Alan Eyre, Distinguished Diplomatic Fellow, Middle East Institute, Founder and President of EyreAnalytics LLC; Moderator: Kenneth M. Pollack, Vice President for Policy, Middle East Institute. 

HOW CAN THE US ENGAGE CHINA IN ARMS CONTROL? STRUCTURAL OBSTACLES TO SINO-US NUCLEAR STABILITY. 3/30, 1:30-3:00pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Harvard Kennedy School. Speaker: Tianjiao Jiang, Assistant Professor, Fudan Development Institute.

REPORT LAUNCH: HOW THE WEST LOST THE POST-COLD WAR ERA. 3/30, 2:00pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Atlantic Council. Speakers: Daniel Fried, Weiser Family Distinguished Fellow, Atlantic Council; Brian Whitmore, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Eurasia Center, Atlantic Council; Moderator: John Herbst, Senior Director, Eurasia Center, Atlantic Council.

HOW THE WEST LOST THE POST-COLD WAR ERA. 3/30, 2:00pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Atlantic Council. Speakers: Daniel Fried, Weiser Family Distinguished Fellow, Atlantic Council; Angela Stent, Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute; Brian Whitmore, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Eurasia Center, Atlantic Council; Moderator: John Herbst, Senior Director, Eurasia Center, Atlantic Council. 

IRAN AT THE ENDGAME: WAR OR NEGOTIATION? 3/30, 3:00pm (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA). Speakers: Eric Edelman, JINSA Distinguished Scholar; Former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy; Elliott Abrams, JINSA Gaza Futures Task Force Member, Former United States Special Representative for Iran; Stephen Rademaker, JINSA Senior Advisor; Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for International Security & Nonproliferation; Blaise Misztal, JINSA Vice President for Policy. 

EXHIBITING JAPAN IN MID-CENTURY NEW YORK. 3/30, 6:00-8:00pm (EDT), IN PERSON ONLY. Sponsor: Digital Museum of the History of Japanese in NY. Speaker: Dr. Angus Lockyer, Author, Exhibitionist Japan: The Spectacle of Modern Development and Japan: A History in Objects.

A NUCLEAR RENAISSANCE? 3/30, 5:30pm (CDT), 6:30pm (EDT), HYBRID. Sponsor: Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Speakers: Robert Rosner, William E. Wrather Distinguished Service Professor, Astronomy & Astrophysics and Physics, University of Chicago; Doug Scott, Chair, Illinois Commerce Commission; Rachel Bronson, Lester Crown Senior Nonresident Fellow, Energy and Geopolitics, Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

DRUMMING UP CHANGE: ELECTIONS IN JAPAN, SHIFTING POLITICS, AND THE IMPACT ON OKINAWA. 3/30, 7:30pm (EDT), VIRTUAL. Sponsor: Okinawa Collection and Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University (GWU). Speakers:  Dr. Mike Mochizuki, GWU; Dr. Fumiaki Nozoe, Okinawa International University; and Dr. Shawn Harding, Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA. 

Protected by the Constitution

Escaping from Trump’s Request to Dispatch Troops


By Takuya Nishimura, Senior Fellow,  Asia Policy Point
Former editorial writer for the Hokkaido Shimbun
You can find his blog, J Update here.
March 23, 2026

 
The White House might have turned into a haunted house for Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Luckily, she managed to leave without infuriating the resident, U.S. President Donald Trump. She explained the legal requirements that limit Japan’s ability to send troops to the Strait of Hormuz. This work left no time for Takaichi to rebuild a common strategy with the U.S. and against China. After all was said and done, the summit meeting produced no obvious progress.
 
Pushing the Legal Constraints Forward
The greatest challenge for Takaichi in the meeting with Trump was how to deal with his demand for U.S. allies to help protect ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Trump had previously called on countries, including Japan, to send warships to keep the strait open.
 
Takaichi deliberated with her diplomatic staff on how to respond to Trump at the meeting. Their conclusion was that Japan could not send its Self-Defense Force to the Strait. They considered three options: 1) a determination that events in the Strait present a “survival threatening situation” in which Japan can deploy its armed forces to assist the U.S. forces in the region; 2) a determination that Iran’s activities in the strait were a “significant influence situation,” in which case Japan could provide logistic support; and 3) a determination that activities in the strait warranted “maritime security operations” under Article 82 of the Self-Defense Forces Act, in which Japanese forces  take necessary action to protect life and property.
 
None of these theories work for action in the Strait, however. The situation in Iran does not threaten Japan’s survival, at least not so far. Japan cannot provide logistical support (on the basis of a significant influence situation) in any area where actual battle is ongoing. Maritime security operations extend only to Japanese vessels. Takaichi and her staff realized that, with the limits on their use, she could do little to satisfy Trump.
 
After her meeting with Trump, Takaichi explained to the press that she had told him what Japan “can and cannot do” in the Middle East. What she could do was to join with the U.S. in refusing to tolerate Iran’s nuclear development, blame Iran for its de facto blockade of the Strait, and promote a joint Japan-U.S. project for oil reserves. What she could not do was to send troops to the Strait. Asahi Shimbun reported that she cited Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan as the constraint on dispatching self-defense forces.
 
Two hours before the White House meeting, European leaders together with Takaichi issued a joint statement expressing their willingness to make “appropriate efforts” to ensure safe passage through the Strait. The statement ensured that Takaichi was not seen as acting alone but rather as a member of a group of U.S. allies although their rationales differed. The Europeans take the position that the conflict in the Strait is not their war while legal requirements preclude Japan from participating in the conflict. 
 
Takaichi returned to Japan with homework: how to define “appropriate efforts.” The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Toshimutsu Motegi, suggested sending self-defense forces for mine sweeping in the Strait after a ceasefire. Obviously, Takaichi will need to find a reason to explain to the opposition parties in the Diet why Japan would take on this chore.
 
The China Issue Is Left Behind
For Japan, the summit meeting was originally set to discuss China. Takaichi made a careless comment last November on a “Taiwan contingency,” which exacerbated Japan-China tensions. As Trump scheduled his visit to Beijing in April, Takaichi had to talk with Trump beforehand to encourage him to keep the U.S. engaged in security activities in the Asia-Pacific region. Japan is afraid that Trump would lose interest in Asia if he were to reach a deal with Xi Jinping. In the event, the Trump-Xi meeting was postponed, as Trump continued to grapple with the war.
 
At the White House, Takaichi and Trump reconfirmed that they would closely consult with each other on with issues relating to China, based on the time-honored concept of a “Free and Open Asia-Pacific (FOIP).” Takaichi said that Japan would always be open to China, and Trump replied that he would be “speaking Japan’s praises” when he visits Beijing. But nobody knows when that will be.
 
It is notable that the Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community took Takaichi’s Taiwan comment seriously. “Her comments represent a significant shift for a sitting Japanese prime minister,” the document said. Takaichi does not seem to have been successful in impressing on the president that her position on the Taiwan contingency is the same as that of her predecessor prime ministers.
 
Takaichi and Trump did reach three economic agreements. A joint announcement on bilateral investment included a commitment by the Japanese to construct small module reactors in Tennessee and Alabama and natural gas generation facilities in Pennsylvania and Texas. These proposals constituted the second wave of Japan’s promised investments that were part of the Japan-U.S. agreement in July 2025, related to Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs on Japanese products.
 
The agreement for certain Japanese investments must have been the biggest souvenir of Takaichi’s trip to the U.S., regardless of whether Trump was satisfied with it or not. Japan announced the first wave of investments in February, which included the manufacture of industrial synthetic diamonds, construction of the U.S. crude oil export infrastructure, and natural gas generation. Takaichi tried to demonstrate Japan’s willingness to implement the July 22 agreement. The two waves represent about 20 percent of the promised $550 billion investment.
 
Charming, Flattering, and Ignoring
Takaichi presented her unique style of her diplomacy during the trip. Video footage of Takaichi’s arrival at the White House entrance was repeatedly broadcast in Japan. She approached Trump, who was standing at the entrance, and hugged him with her arms embracing his shoulder and waist. It was closer to tackling than hugging. Although she might have been trying to charm Trump, a former Japanese diplomat described it as “embarrassing.” One would have to search long and hard to find any evidence of another world leader hugging Trump.
 
At the beginning of summit meeting, Takaichi praised Trump as a distinguished leader. “Donald is the only person who can bring peace and prosperity across the world,” said Takaichi. In view of the U.S. military operations to replace the Venezuelan leader and to launch a surprise attack on Iran, most Japanese recognized her remarks on Trump-as-peacemaker as explicit flattery.
 
Japanese leaders have sometimes used “haragei (腹芸),” a performance dealing with issues not based on words or actions but on guts, in its relations with the U.S. Former prime minister Eisaku Sato was renowned for his haragei, as seen in his negotiations for the return of the U.S.-occupied Okinawa and in the textile deal. But Takaichi has yet to reach his skill level: the audience in Japan could easily perceive that she just did not want to piss Trump off.
 
Asked by the press why the U.S. did not give Japan advance notice of the first attack on Iran, Trump reached back 85 years, five years before he was born. “Who knows better about surprise than Japan, OK? Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor?” Trump answered. Takaichi – who understands the English language just fine – waited for the interpreter’s translation and made no verbal reply. She ignored Trump’s irrelevant joke; a surprise attack would not be announced to the target.
 
Takaichi has not had much diplomatic or international negotiation experience over trade deals before becoming prime minister. It is not easy for the leader of a country to conduct negotiations with national interests at stake by acting like a girl in love with a strong man.