Japan MAJOR FOREIGN POLICY GOALS AND STRATEGIES
A Japanese view of the West, an 1850s woodblock print of
a contemporary American merchant ship by Hiroshige II
Courtesy Chadbourne Collection, Library of Congress
Japan's geography--particularly its insular character,
its
limited endowment of natural resources, and its exposed
location
near potentially hostile giant neighbors--has played an
important
role in the development of its foreign policy. In
premodern times,
Japan's semi-isolated position on the periphery of the
Asian
mainland was an asset
(see Physical Setting
, ch. 2). It
permitted
the Japanese to exist as a self-sufficient society in a
secure
environment. It also allowed them to borrow selectively
from the
rich civilization of China while maintaining their own
cultural
identity. Insularity promoted a strong cultural and ethnic
unity,
which underlay the early development of a national
consciousness
that has influenced Japan's relations with outside peoples
and
cultures throughout its history.
Data as of January 1994
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