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Viewing cable 08TOKYO888, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 04/01/08

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08TOKYO888 2008-04-01 08:32 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO9822
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #0888/01 0920832
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 010832Z APR 08
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3056
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RHMFIUU/USFJ //J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/CTF 72
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 9379
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 6996
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 0665
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 5454
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 7592
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 2549
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 8578
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 9124
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 10 TOKYO 000888 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA; 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 04/01/08 
 
 
INDEX: 
 
(1) Corrected copy: Opinion column by Atsuyuki Sassa: Wishing for a 
McCain victory (Sankei) 
 
(2) Cutting off his retreat, prime minister on offensive regarding 
integrating road revenues into general account, Ozawa's "betrayal" 
helped him snap out of talks with DPJ (Sankei) 
 
(3) Japan, the civil engineering state, finds itself at turning 
point with Prime Minister Fukuda's proposal to turn tax revenues for 
road projects into general funds (Mainichi) 
 
(4) Economy at standstill with politics casting shadow; 
Repercussions of rapid slowdown of U.S. economy; Appreciation of 
yen, falling stock prices, rise in raw material prices working as 
setbacks (Nikkei) 
 
(5) U.S. sailor admits to investigators that he killed Yokosuka taxi 
driver (Asahi) 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1) Corrected copy: Opinion column by Atsuyuki Sassa: Wishing for a 
McCain victory 
 
SANKEI (Page 13) (Full) 
March 28, 2008 
 
Atsuyuki Sassa, first director of the Cabinet Security Affairs 
Office 
 
Media's biased way of reporting 
 
The way the Japanese media are reporting on the United States 
presidential election campaign lacks fairness. From the beginning, 
the media here have taken it for granted that the likely Republican 
nominee, John McCain, will lose the election because of the Bush 
administration's failure in the Iraq war. Japanese dailies and 
television news programs seem to eagerly focus their reporting on 
this one simple question: Which candidate will be chosen -- Hillary 
Clinton as the first woman president or Barack Obama as the first 
black American president? McCain's full name has rarely been seen 
either in newspapers or on TV here in Japan. He has been treated as 
if he were an unlikely candidate. 
 
I wonder, however, whether McCain is a candidate unlikely to win. I 
don't think that American democracy, which has a mere 200-year 
history, is mature enough to easily accept a woman or black 
president. There might even be a worst-case-scenario reaction to 
Obama down the road. 
 
McCain is a WASP and the ruling Republican Party's likely nominee. 
He fought in the Vietnam War, piloting a carrier-based jet aircraft. 
But he was shot down and captured. After surviving five and a half 
years of torture and maltreatment as a prisoner of war in North 
Vietnam, the former lieutenant commander emerged as a hero. McCain 
also has served in both houses of the Congress and is now a senator. 
He lost a close-fought battle to George W. Bush in the 2000 
Republican presidential campaign. When the 71-year old veteran 
politician John McCain clashes at the polls with either the first 
female or first black presidential candidate, I wonder which 
 
TOKYO 00000888  002 OF 010 
 
 
candidate American voters will choose in the end. 
 
The Japanese media, presuming that McCain will lose the election, 
have been extensively covering the "Obama fever" that started in 
Obama City in Fukui Prefecture. But I whether it extensive space in 
the newspapers or the time on TV devoted to Obama is appropriate. 
 
Media need to give analytical report on candidates' policies 
 
Although the presidential election will take place in another 
country, the outcome over the next four years could greatly affect 
Japan, which is exposed to a number of threats from China and North 
Korea,. Japan has been in effect shut out from the six-party talks 
since it proposed to deal with the nuclear, missile, and abduction 
issues together there. A most desirable scenario for Japan would be 
that a candidate who sides with Japan will be elected as U.S. 
president. 
 
The Prime Minister's Official Residence (Kantei) and the Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs (MOFA) refrain from making comments on any of the 
candidates, because doing so would constitute interference in the 
internal affairs of another country. But it is my belief that the 
role of mass media is to at least give an analysis of each 
candidate's policies toward Japan and China in light of Japan's 
national interests, and then to explain who would be the best for 
Japan in terms of merits and demerits. 
 
Judging from speeches by Clinton and Obama, their policies toward 
Asia attach importance to China. They hardly mention Japan and the 
Japan-U.S. alliance. If either were to win, I presume Japan-U.S. 
relations would become cool. Meanwhile, McCain, who is called a 
maverick, stresses in his speeches the need to strengthen the 
Japan-U.S. alliance, gives support to Japan's bid for a permanent 
seat on the United Nations Security Council, raises opposition to 
Putin's hegemonism, is a strong diplomatic interventionist, and 
emphasizes the importance of resolving Japan's abduction issue from 
a humanitarian standpoint. McCain is the only politician in the 
Republican Party who advocates environmental protection and the 
necessity of measures to prevent pollution. Because he was a 
military officer who had a tough wartime experience, he is realistic 
about the Iraq war. 
 
I believe McCain is the person Japan needs to have as U.S. 
president. He may be a second Theodore Roosevelt, who opposed the 
Russian Empire's hegemonistic policy at the time of the 
Russo-Japanese War 100 years ago. 
 
McCain broad-minded enough to accept advice 
 
When the Taft-Katsura Agreement was signed in 1905, Theodore 
Roosevelt was supportive of Japan. In contrast, the present-day 
Bush-Rice-Hill appeasement policy toward China and North Korea that 
allows China control over Korean Peninsula matters, appears to be 
just the opposite of that agreement. Coincidentally, McCain cites 
Roosevelt as the politician he respects the most. If McCain wins, 
pro-Japanese Republicans, including former Deputy Secretary of State 
Armitage, will return to the official political scene. The vice 
president, the secretary of state, the secretary of defense, and 
other key officials for the White House and Pentagon would be chosen 
from among those who attach importance to Japan. 
 
On Jan. 8, 1990, as a former chief of the Cabinet Security Affairs 
 
TOKYO 00000888  003 OF 010 
 
 
Office, I attended a meeting of high-level defense officials from 
Japan and the U.S. held at the official residence of then Ambassador 
to Japan Armacost. There, I argued with McCain, who participated in 
the meeting as chair of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee. 
McCain, who was short in stature but had a tough, masculine face, 
sharply criticized Japan's lack of efforts to defend itself. He even 
posed this question to the Japanese side: "What if the U.S. Congress 
resolved to abandon the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty?" 
 
I then told McCain: "I support the security treaty, but if the U.S. 
notifies Japan it is scrapping it, Japan would without delay amend 
the Constitution introduced by General MacArthur and go nuclear." 
McCain said, "Well, what do you think I should do?" I answered him 
bluntly: "Stay out of this matter." To my surprise, McCain, who is 
known as a person of violent temperament, accepted my impolite 
advice, saying, "That is a frank opinion. I'll do so." I was struck 
by his broad-mindedness. Since then I have had a high opinion of 
him. 
 
(2) Cutting off his retreat, prime minister on offensive regarding 
integrating road revenues into general account, Ozawa's "betrayal" 
helped him snap out of talks with DPJ 
 
SANKEI (Top play) (Abridged slightly) 
April 1, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda held a press conference yesterday 
evening in which he reiterated that the government "will integrate 
all road-related tax revenues into the general account starting in 
fiscal 2009." Since his assumption of office, Prime Minister Fukuda 
has been fixated on talks with Democratic Party of Japan President 
Ichiro Ozawa. Nevertheless, given little hope that that approach 
will produce any positive result in view of the DPJ's intention to 
topple the Fukuda administration, the prime minister made the first 
move by jettisoning his humble attitude to go on the offensive. At 
the same time, pressed by the need for containing the junior LDP 
members who attempted to revolt against the party decision for a 
review of road-use revenues and for restoring his grip on the party, 
the prime minister has "cut off his retreat," according to a senior 
LDP member. Turbulent developments are likely to unfold in the 
second round of the "gasoline Diet." 
 
The selection of a new Bank of Japan governor prompted Fukuda to 
shift away from his "modest attitude." 
 
On March 20, Spring Equinox Day, the prime minister met at his 
official residence with former Chief Cabinet Secretary Kaoru Yosano 
and former LDP Secretary General Hidenao Nakagawa -- his private 
advisers -- and separately exchanged views with them. 
 
In the meetings, Fukuda revealed that he had discussed with Ozawa on 
the phone the appointment of the new BOJ governor, adding that he 
repeatedly confirmed that the DPJ would endorse the government's 
nomination of Muto. Much time was spent on grumbling about Ozawa's 
last-minute about-face, saying: "Mr. Ozawa promised that he would 
unify views in the party on appointing former Administrative 
Vice-Finance Minister Toshiro Muto." 
 
The day before, on March 19, Fukuda dined with LDP Policy Research 
Council Chairman Sadakazu Tanigaki and others in which the prime 
minister said: "I nominated Mr. Muto because a certain DPJ 
heavyweight said that he would pull the four top DPJ executives 
 
TOKYO 00000888  004 OF 010 
 
 
together on his nomination." The heavyweight apparently was Ozawa. 
 
"The prime minister has been on the offensive since that day," 
Nakagawa said. 
 
On the night of March 24, Fukuda invited LDP executives to his 
official residence. 
 
When the subject turned to the fate of road-use revenues, Election 
Strategy Council Chairman Makoto Koga, the "don" of the road policy 
clique in the LDP, said: "We must build the highways that are 
necessary." Diet Affairs Committee Chairman Tadamori Oshima softly 
rebutted Koga, saying: "We need to come up with bold proposals that 
force the DPJ to come to the negotiating table." 
 
After hearing their views, Fukuda declared, "We will face a moment 
of truth this week." 
 
On the night of March 25, LDP factional leaders, including Nakagawa, 
former Secretary General Tsutomu Takebe, Lower House Steering 
Committee Chairman Takashi Sasagawa, assembled together at a 
Japanese restaurant in Tokyo's Akasaka district. The members were 
all alarmed at moves by LDP junior members, including Reform 
Acceleration Parliamentary League Chairman and former State Minister 
for Science and Technology Policy Yasufumi Tanahashi, to oppose a 
second Lower House vote on revenue-related bills, seeking a shift of 
road-related revenues to the general account. 
 
Some members voiced, "If the junior members revolt against the party 
decision, we would not be able to secure the two-thirds majority 
needed for an override," or "In order to contain the moves of junior 
member, the prime minister needs to announce his resolve." 
 
Keenly aware of the administration's risk of collapsing, the members 
agreed in principle to integrate all road-related revenues into the 
general account starting in fiscal 2009 and maintain the provisional 
tax rates on the condition that part of them is used for measures to 
combat global warming. 
 
On March 26, Nakagawa briefed Fukuda on what was discussed the day 
before. Fukuda was convinced that party members would band together, 
concluding that he obtained seals of approval from all factions in 
the party. On March 22, former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi 
noted, "If the prime minister decides to make some compromises based 
on the integration approach with the aim of coming up with a good 
plan, party members would rally together under him." This comment, 
too, seems to have encouraged Fukuda, according to his aide. 
 
On the morning of March 27, some 30 junior LDP members, including 
Taro Kono, confirmed the policy course of opposing a second vote 
unless a shift of all road-related revenues into the general budget 
is ensured. In the afternoon, the group handed their "resolve" to 
the prime minister. Looking at their resolve, Fukuda, who loves 
baseball, said cheerfully: "This is a slider right in the middle of 
the strike zone." Fukuda held a press conference an hour and a half 
later in which he announced a set of plans that were largely the 
same as the junior group's resolve, thereby containing the junior 
members' move to revolt against the party decision. 
 
The prime minister held a news conference at the Prime Minister's 
Office (Kantei) last night in which he criticized the DPJ, which 
calls for scrapping the provisional tax rates, saying: "Courting 
 
TOKYO 00000888  005 OF 010 
 
 
public favor is easy, but such an approach would end up forcing 
future generations to pick up the tab for it." Meanwhile, Koga 
quietly told reporters earlier yesterday: "Although I have my own 
thinking, I would like to respect party unity and its direction." 
 
(3) Japan, the civil engineering state, finds itself at turning 
point with Prime Minister Fukuda's proposal to turn tax revenues for 
road projects into general funds 
 
MAINICHI (Page 3) (Abridged) 
March 31, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda declared he would turn the revenues now 
designated for road construction into general account funds in 
fiscal 2009. If implemented, this proposal could mean a shift from 
the previous policy that has continued for a half century and would 
change the way politics has been carried out so far in Japan, which 
has been called a civil-engineering state. The Mainichi looked into 
what underlies the argument seeking to turn revenues for road 
projects into the general funds. 
 
Junior LDP lawmakers supportive of Fukuda's proposal 
 
On March 27, ahead of a news briefing for him to announce a new 
proposal on road-specific tax revenues, Fukuda was visited by a 
group of some 30 junior lawmakers of the ruling Liberal Democratic 
Party (LDP), including House of Representatives member Masaaki 
Taira. They presented a proposal calling for incorporating 
road-specific taxes into the general account budget. Their proposal 
was almost the same as Fukuda's. 
 
Taira said: "Bureaucrats have handled the taxes designated for 
highway building as if such money were their own. This has led to 
the public's distrust of politics. In order to restore the public's 
confidence, we think there is no way other than to turn those taxes 
into general account funds, disclose information, and gain better 
control." Some pointed out their concern that the prime minister may 
find himself isolated (because of the proposal), but they assured 
him that many in the LDP support the notion of turning road taxes 
into the general revenue. 
 
The system of setting tax revenues aside for road construction 
started in 1954 with legislation created by lawmakers, including 
former Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. In 1974, provisional tax rates 
to hike tax rates for gasoline and other items were established and 
have continued until today. 
 
With taxes designated for highway projects, road construction, which 
had been delayed until then, made headway and helped Japan to become 
an economic giant. 
 
However, the negative aspects of designated road-tax revenues had a 
eroding effect on politics. A number of "mini-Kakuei Tanakas" 
appeared: politicians who brought in contractors to carry out public 
works projects in cooperation with the Ministry of Land, 
Infrastructure and Transport (MLIT, formerly the Ministry of 
Construction). By mobilizing people and using the tax money, 
contractors backed the mini-Kakuei Tanakas when they ran in 
elections. 
 
In the medium-sized constituency system, where LDP lawmakers had to 
fight each other, the question of how many public works projects 
 
TOKYO 00000888  006 OF 010 
 
 
politicians were able to bring to their districts decided how many 
votes they were able to get. The champion of this mechanism was the 
Takana faction, the predecessor of the Takeshita faction, which was 
taken over by the Tsushima faction. 
 
But this situation changed with the introduction of a single-seat 
constituency system in the Diet's Lower House in 1994. Under this 
system, candidates have to garner 50 PERCENT  or more votes of the 
whole to be elected. This means that getting votes from only a 
certain industry is not enough. 
 
Because of this new circumstance, a mid-level House of 
Representative member argued: "That's why there is no merit in 
staking the fate of the government on protecting tax revenues 
designated for road construction." 
 
Fukuda has been under pressure from lawmakers linked with the road 
construction lobby, one of whom told him: "You are well aware who 
helped establish the Fukuda administration, aren't you?" 
 
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi tackled the privatization of public 
road corporations. In December 2005, his administration came out 
with guidelines for a review of road-specific taxes. Former Prime 
Minister Shinzo Abe, as well, sought to put taxes designated for 
road works into the general account budget. 
 
Those tax revenues resemble a purse that MLIT can use freely, but 
once the moneys are moved into the general account, how the funds 
are spent will be strictly examined. The purse may not contain as 
much money as it did before. 
 
Masajuro Shiokawa, finance minister in the Koizumi administration, 
was the policymaker who triggered debate on the question of moving 
road-related taxes into the general account. He said: "I pointed out 
this matter even before joining the Koizumi cabinet, but 
regrettably, the Fukuda faction (predecessor of the Machimura 
faction) was too small to press the issue. When I served as 
education minister, I tried to use a portion of the road-related tax 
revenues for (the construction) of educational facilities, but my 
proposal was turned down. Politics under Koizumi (which called for 
putting road-related tax revenues into the general account) aimed at 
rejecting the way the Tanaka faction carried out politics." 
 
At the end of last year, a 59-trillion yen mid-term road 
construction program, which the major opposition Democratic Party of 
Japan (DPJ) was expected to oppose, was approved without any loud 
objection. Why? 
 
On the night of Dec. 26, Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura, 
LDP Election Strategy Committee Chair Makoto Koga, LDP Policy 
Research Council Chairman Sadakazu Tanigaki and others gathered 
together at a Japanese restaurant in Tokyo. 
 
According to one participant, Koga told Machimura in the gathering: 
"You are well aware of who helped establish the Fukuda 
administration, aren't you?" 
 
Koga is a leading player in the clique of road-policy specialists. 
As chairman of the Election Strategy Committee, he is expected to 
lead a campaign strategy for the next Lower House election. He has 
already toured 42 prefectures across the country with that road 
construction program in hand and has called on various 
 
TOKYO 00000888  007 OF 010 
 
 
organizations, such construction industry associations in each 
region, to back the LDP. 
 
Unlike the Koizumi administration, which was supported by its high 
popularity with the public, the Fukuda administration was 
established based on a consensus reached among party factions. Will 
Fukuda be able to defy the kingpin of the road interest lawmakers in 
the Diet whom he relied on in the presidential election? Fukuda's 
determination in this regard will be shortly put to the test. 
 
DPJ aims at destroying the structure of LDP's conventional power 
base 
 
The DPJ has been dwelling only on the question of the provisional 
gasoline tax, but "the party's principal aim" is not just to abolish 
that tax but to move the funds into the general account, DPJ Tax 
Research Council Chair Yasuhisa Fujii said. 
 
The DPJ issues a booklet titled "Reform of the Tax Revenues for Road 
Projects" in February of this year. The pamphlet states that 
scrapping the provisional taxes is not the ultimate party goal. The 
party eyes policies that will be implemented after the road-related 
tax revenues are placed into the general account." 
 
The DPJ-sponsored bill for reform of the current system for the 
road-specific tax revenues, already submitted to the Upper House, is 
featured by three elements: abolishing the provisional tax rates; 
shifting the road tax revenues into the general account; and ending 
the system for local governments to pay a portion of the costs for 
projects under the direct control of the central government. 
 
The DPJ's bill is intended to make up for a decline in tax revenues 
that will be caused by the scrapping of the provisional tax rates. 
The bill also aims to move the road-specific tax revenues into local 
governments' tax revenues so that central government officials and 
legislators linked with the road construction lobby will hand off 
those tax revenues. 
 
The DPJ thinks that the LDP has put local governments under its 
control with certain LDP lawmakers holding the purse strings of 
special tax revenues so that they can distribute them to local 
governments. The DPJ's analysis is that in order to gain the reins 
of government, it needs to destroy the structure of the LDP's 
conventional power base linked to industrial circles and heads of 
local governments. 
 
Fujii said: "DPJ President Ichiro Ozawa is a direct disciple of 
Kakuei Tanaka, who established the system of tax revenues for road 
projects. He and I, who has served as a secretary to Chief Cabinet 
Secretary Susumu Nikaido in the Tanaka cabinet, are both trying to 
 
SIPDIS 
change this system." 
 
In Diet debate, the DPJ focused its efforts on calling for moving 
the road tax revenues into the general account, but at the end of 
the fiscal year 2007 (meaning at the end of March of this year), the 
party shifted its efforts to call for scrapping the provisional tax 
rates. It did so presumably because of its calculation that gasoline 
price cut would draw the public's attention, and thus lead to 
toppling the government. 
 
In this regard, former DPJ President Seiji Maehara made this 
critical comment: "It's strange to stubbornly insist on scrapping 
 
TOKYO 00000888  008 OF 010 
 
 
the provisional tax rates. Moving the road-specific tax revenues 
into the general account is the essence of the reform." 
 
Fukuda reportedly has stated that despite the DPJ's opposition, he 
intends to incorporate the road tax revenues into the general 
account. A worst-case scenario would be that the prime minister's 
proposal will be left in limbo, caught in a crossfire between Ozawa 
and Diet members linked to the road construction lobby. 
 
(4) Economy at standstill with politics casting shadow; 
Repercussions of rapid slowdown of U.S. economy; Appreciation of 
yen, falling stock prices, rise in raw material prices working as 
setbacks 
 
NIKKEI (Top Play) (Excerpts) 
March 30, 2008 
 
The economy is showing clearer signs of stagnation. It is most 
likely that the U.S. economy has entered a recessionary phase due to 
the aggravated subprime mortgage crisis. As a result, Japan is 
facing triple trouble, with the appreciation of the yen, falling 
stock prices and rises in raw material prices. With the corporate 
sector, the locomotive of the economy, losing steam, personal 
consumption is seesawing. Exports are still robust, but the 
mechanism of the virtuous circle of the economy is weakening. The 
dysfunction of politics is also casting a pall over the economy. 
Will the economic expansion, the longest in the post-war period, 
enter a temporary lull or will it recede? The Japanese economy now 
stands at the crossroads. 
 
Company-led virtuous circle weak 
 
As the corporate sector clearly slows, the virtuous circle of 
production, income and spending, as the Bank of Japan has put it, is 
weakening. 
 
The primary reason for that is the rise in crude oil prices. Leading 
power companies were forced to revise down their projection for 
business performance for the present term, as they did so when they 
released their interim settlement of accounts. 
 
The second reason is the worsened corporate sentiment due to the 
plunges in stock prices. Companies have postponed capital spending, 
as can be seen in the fact that banks and securities houses have 
forgone the openings of branch offices. Okamura Corp., for instance, 
expects a drop of 3 billion yen in group operating profits in the 
term ending in March 2008 from the estimated amount. 
 
The third setback is the appreciation of the yen. According to the 
projection by the Nomura Securities Financial and Economic Research 
Center, the current account profit of 347 leading companies in 
fiscal 2008 would increase 6.4 PERCENT , compared with fiscal 2007. 
However, the calculation is based on the exchange rate of 107.5 
against the dollar. If the yen makes a 1-yen gain, the estimated 
current account profit would drop 0.5 PERCENT . 
 
According to corporate statistics, the current account profit of all 
industries up until the October-December quarter last year fell 
below the previous term for two consecutive quarters. Capital 
spending remained in the negative territory for two quarters in a 
row. With their driving force deteriorated, the corporate sector's 
power to produce a spillover effect on the household economy is on 
 
TOKYO 00000888  009 OF 010 
 
 
the brink of collapse. 
 
The possibility of the Japanese economy, which has been continuing 
to expand since February 2002, entering a recessionary phase would 
increase, if the downward pressure of the recession of the U.S. 
economy works. 
 
One of the few bullish factors is that exports, mainly developing 
country-bound exports, remain brisk. 
 
Japanese-made high-speed cameras are popular in Turkey and Israel. 
Photron, a video equipment manufacturer is marketing those cameras 
for the use of the research and development of automobiles. It 
expects that the current account profit for the tem ending in March 
this year will be 1.5 times the previous term. 
 
Robust exports to developing countries propping up Japanese economy 
 
The Cabinet Office in the monthly economic report for March noted 
that the economy has entered a temporary lull. However, unlike the 
two temporary lulls the Japanese economy experienced in the past, 
exports are robust this time. While the ratio of U.S.-bound exports 
to entire exports in 2007 dropped to 20 PERCENT , the lowest level 
in the post-war period, Asia-bound exports posted the highest ratio 
of 48 PERCENT . There is also an enhancing factor -- the yen is 
still weak against the euro, though the appreciation of the yen 
against the dollar has advanced. 
 
Exports are a major player in boosting the economy. They hold the 
major key. If U.S.-bound exports further drop, resulting in an 
overall drop in exports, the Japanese economy would enter into 
recession. If exports to other regions, such as Asia and Europe, 
replace U.S.-bound exports, a recession could be avoided. The 
Japanese economy is at a standstill with bullish factors and 
negative factors being on a tug of war. It is not known which 
factors will overwhelm. 
 
The slow political move and dysfunction are also working as 
setbacks. In the U.S. the Bush administration is becoming cautious 
about such policies as directly investing in individuals or banks 
battered by the subprime mortgage crisis with the presidential 
election just ahead. In Japan, the post of Bank of Japan governor 
has been left vacant. The ruling and opposition camps remain at odds 
over the special-purpose road construction revenue issue. 
 
The Japanese economy has overcome a triple surplus -- employment, 
facilities and debts. Even if it enters a recession phase, it has 
strength to emerge from the recession in a relatively short period 
of time. However, disrupted economic policy could act as a drag on 
the real economy. There is now urgent need for normalizing economic 
policy. 
 
(5) U.S. sailor admits to investigators that he killed Yokosuka taxi 
driver 
 
ASAHI ONLINE (Full) 
13:47, April 1, 2008 
 
It became clear today that a 22-year-old U.S. sailor of Nigerian 
nationality based at Yokosuka Naval Base whose credit card was found 
in the taxi of a slain driver in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture, has 
generally admitted to U.S. military investigators that he had killed 
 
TOKYO 00000888  010 OF 010 
 
 
the driver. Kanagawa prefectural police will soon ask the U.S. Navy 
to let them question the sailor. 
 
The body of the taxi driver, Masaaki Takahashi, 61, was found at 
around 9:20 p.m. March 19. Previously, the seaman told the U.S. 
Naval Criminal Investigation Service (NCIS) that at around that 
time, he had been at a restaurant on Dobuita-dori Street (several 
hundred meters away from the crime scene) and that he had lost his 
credit card before March 19, denying involvement in the case. 
 
Nevertheless, according to a person concerned, the sailor hinted at 
his involvement in the case, saying to his Nigerian friend on the 
cell phone, "I did it," and "I stabbed him." 
 
The possibility has also emerged that the knife (with a 20 
centimeter blade) used in killing Takahashi is the same as the one 
that disappeared from the home of a female acquaintance of his in 
Tokyo. 
 
SCHIEFFER