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Japan PM candidate Koizumi talks of modification, however rivals could alter United States diplomacy

In the race to become Japan's. next leader, young contender Shinjiro Koizumi has actually placed. himself as a change candidate, however his seasoned competitors Shigeru. Ishiba and Sanae Takaichi are the ones pressing policies that. might rock the boat diplomatically.

The Liberal Democratic Celebration, which has ruled Japan for. almost all of the post-war period, will on Friday pick a new leader. to change Fumio Kishida as prime minister.

That comes at a pivotal moment for Tokyo as it seeks to. deepen ties with long-time ally Washington and strengthen a. perennially testy relationship with South Korea, in an effort to. present an unified front against a significantly assertive China.

Koizumi, 43, the U.S.-educated successor to a popular LDP. dynasty, is guaranteeing to usher in a generational shift in. political management, however one that stays at ease with a U.S. relationship that shapes Japan's foreign policy.

Koizumi is in a carefully fought race with 2 skilled. prospects who appear more willing to push back against. Washington - previous defence minister Ishiba, 67, who is fighting. his fifth and he states his last leadership election; and. Takaichi, 63, the country's economic security minister.

Amongst the existing leading three prospects, Koizumi would. probably be the most beneficial if the U.S. had a say, stated. Jeffrey Hornung, Japan Lead for the RAND National Security. Research Department. He is young, and he does not have the. governing experience and so the most convenient path is to move on. with what's currently working.

Koizumi demonstrated his close relations with Washington in. July when he invested a day surfing with U.S. Ambassador to Japan,. Rahm Emanuel.

While experts state Koizumi would seek connection, Ishiba. could seek to strike a more independent diplomacy from. Washington while Takaichi could restore historic bitterness with. Seoul.

Some current opinion surveys show them ahead of their younger. rival amongst the LDP's celebration members who will decide Friday's. election, one of the most unpredictable in decades because of. the waning influence of effective factions within the celebration and a. record nine candidates.

Whoever wins, the U.S. election in November could have a. bigger influence on Japanese-American ties, specifically if any. second term for Donald Trump restores pressure on allies to pay. more for U.S. protection or topics them to trade tariffs.

A representative for the State Department said the U.S. was. anticipating working with the next Japanese leader.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, who has actually faced. political backlash for pursuing security cooperation with Japan,. informed Reuters he is confident that Kishida's successor will. agree on continuing to more establish our bilateral relations.

A representative for China's foreign ministry said Beijing was. going to work with a prime minister that would promote a. steady China-Japan relationship.

CONTROVERSIAL PROBLEMS

None of the prospects are likely to desert Kishida's strategy. to double Japan's defence costs to discourage China from using. military force in East Asia, or step back from an alliance with. the U.S. that has actually guaranteed Japan's security for decades.

However both Ishiba, an uncommon dissenter within the LDP, and. Takaichi, a hardline conservative, could make complex U.S. ties at. a sensitive time.

Washington is upgrading its military command structure in. Japan for the first time in decades, widening security. cooperation into semiconductors and military innovation, and is. pressing Japan-South Korea detente to assist include Chinese power.

Ishiba might attempt to forge ahead on controversial. problems, said Nick Szechenyi, a Japan specialist and deputy director. for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Researches.

Amongst them is an arrangement that governs the status of U.S. bases in Japan that host the most significant overseas concentration of. U.S. forces.

On the project path in Okinawa, Ishiba stated he would look for. more oversight over how Washington utilizes those bases. He also. desires Washington to provide Japan a say in how it would utilize nuclear. weapons in Asia.

Another of Ishiba's project propositions for Japan to lead the. creation of an 'Asian NATO' has actually already been dismissed as hasty. by the assistant U.S. secretary of state for East Asia and the. Pacific, Daniel Kritenbrink.

In an interview with Reuters, Ishiba also criticized U.S. opposition to Nippon Steel's bid for U.S. Steel,. a politically sensitive handle an essential election swing state,. saying it unjustly cast Japan as a national security danger.

Kishida has declined to resolve a concern he says is a matter. for the business included to deal with and Koizumi has actually advised his. celebration associates to prevent making comments that could be viewed as. interfering in the U.S. presidential election.

If Takaichi wins the leadership race and ends up being Japan's. initially female prime minister she might develop issues for the. U.S.-led effort to pull Tokyo and Seoul closer together with her. promise to go to the controversial Yasukuni war shrine.

Japanese leaders in 2013 stopped going to the shrine, which. commemorates war dead consisting of those founded guilty by an Allied. tribunal of war crimes after The second world war. That followed. criticism from the U.S. and condemnation from South Korea and. other countries that view the website as a sign of Japan's wartime. aggression.

She's the hope of the conservative LDP members now, stated. Tetsuo Kotani, senior fellow at The Japan Institute of. International Affairs, a Tokyo-based think tank. They are still. very much doubtful about the future of the Japan-Korea. relationship..

(source: Reuters)