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Viewing cable 08TOKYO2392, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 09/02/08

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08TOKYO2392 2008-09-02 08:36 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO2905
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #2392/01 2460836
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 020836Z SEP 08
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6938
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 1999
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 9636
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 3377
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 7768
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 0217
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 5130
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 1123
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 1449
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 14 TOKYO 002392 
 
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 09/02/08 
 
INDEX: 
 
(1) Having lost his spirit, Prime Minister Fukuda walks away from 
his post; Strains with New Komeito evident; Priority policies reach 
impasse (Mainichi) 
 
(2) Prime minister to leave office without policy agenda unfilled: 
Fate of supplementary budget unknown; Only sets direction for 
reallocation of special road-construction funds (Asahi) 
 
(3) Editorial: Fukuda government reaches cul de sac as it fails to 
come up with strategy for Lower House dissolution (Nikkei) 
 
(4) Fukuda made decision secretly without even consulting his wife 
(Mainichi) 
 
(5) "I am different from Mr. Abe," says Fukuda without offering 
apology (Mainichi) 
 
(6) Poll on Fukuda cabinet, political parties, MSDF refueling 
mission (Asahi) 
 
(7) Summit of lower house speakers opens in Hiroshima; U.S. House of 
Representatives Speaker Pelosi and others lay wreathes at the Atomic 
Bomb Memorial Tomb (Yomiuri) 
 
(8) Essay by Asahi columnist Yoshibumi Wakamiya on the Hiroshima 
Summit: Next time the U.S. President should come (Asahi) 
 
(9) Defense Ministry seeks Guam base-construction costs in budgetary 
estimate to cover U.S. military buildup expenses with taxpayer money 
(Akahata) 
 
(10) Rate of contract price to target price at 99 PERCENT  in more 
than 50 PERCENT  of all projects during three years until fiscal 
2007, showing no progress on ODA reform (Tokyo Shimbun) 
 
(11) Prime Minister's schedule, September 1 (Nikkei) 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1) Having lost his spirit, Prime Minister Fukuda walks away from 
his post; Strains with New Komeito evident; Priority policies reach 
impasse 
 
MAINICHI (Page 3) (Abridged slightly) 
September 2, 2008 
 
Having lost his drive, Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda abruptly 
announced last night his decision to step down ahead of the next 
extraordinary Diet session, scheduled to convene on Sept. 12. Ever 
since taking office after former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe "walked 
off the job," Fukuda has been struggling amid sagging support 
ratings. He has also been stigmatized by the ruling coalition as 
unfit to be the banner carrier for the next Lower House election. 
The major opposition Democratic Party of Japan has intensified its 
confrontational stance toward the government. Discord with the New 
Komeito over the management of the administration has become 
noticeable. 
 
Around 6 p.m. yesterday, after returning from Osaka, where he 
visited to participate in the National Disaster Prevention Day 
 
TOKYO 00002392  002 OF 014 
 
 
event, the Prime Minister called LDP Secretary General Taro Aso and 
Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura to his office. 
 
Their meeting lasted one hour and 10 minutes. Aso and Machimura 
tried to dissuade Fukuda from resigning, but he rejected their 
advice, saying, "I have made up my mind." Fukuda held a press 
conference two hours later in which he crisply said: "I have made up 
my mind after seriously considering how politics should be. I made 
the final decision last weekend." 
 
His decision "last weekend" was taken seriously within the LDP. 
 
In response to soaring crude oil and other commodity prices, the 
government and ruling coalition decided on a package of economic 
stimulus measures on Aug. 29 including a flat-sum tax cut in 
compliance with the New Komeito's request. Although Fukuda was 
cautious about the fixed-rate tax breaks on income and resident 
taxes from the viewpoint of fiscal discipline, he eventually gave in 
to the New Komeito's request. 
 
After the July Lake Toya summit, the New Komeito began to distance 
itself from the Prime Minister, some leaders complaining that their 
party would not be able to put up good fight in the next Lower House 
election under Prime Minister Fukuda. Taking the initiative in the 
process of determining the timeframe and the period of the next Diet 
session, while keeping in mind possible Lower House dissolution for 
a snap general election between the year-end and New Year period, 
the New Komeito succeeded in having the flat-sum tax cut included in 
the stimulus package. 
 
A bill amending the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law to continue 
Japan's refueling mission in the Indian Ocean is expected to take 
center stage in the upcoming Diet session. But there were no signs 
that DPJ President Ichiro Ozawa, who is now certain to win his third 
term, would make any concession on the bill. Further, the fate of 
the refueling mission has become uncertain due to the New Komeito's 
reluctance to use a two-thirds overriding vote in the House of 
Representatives. 
 
A bill to set up a Consumer Affair Agency, one of the prime 
minister's top priorities, is also deadlocked. 
 
Former Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Akira Amari, who is 
close to Aso, has recently referred to the possibility of unseating 
Fukuda, and former LDP Policy Research Council Chairman Shoichi 
Nakagawa criticized Fukuda as a prime minister who does nothing. The 
view was prevalent that such moves were linked to the New Komeito's 
alienation from Fukuda. 
 
A former LDP cabinet minister presumed Fukuda's frame of mind was 
this way: "The New Komeito gave Fukuda the coup de grace after the 
DPJ relentlessly bullied him. Fukuda felt he had no other option but 
to resign." 
 
Fukuda reportedly explored ways to dissolve the Lower House after 
the FY2009 budget clears the Diet. Nevertheless, given the political 
situation where his administration was being encircled by the 
opposition bloc, Fukuda felt that it was impossible for him to steer 
his administration. 
 
(2) Prime minister to leave office without policy agenda unfilled: 
Fate of supplementary budget unknown; Only sets direction for 
 
TOKYO 00002392  003 OF 014 
 
 
reallocation of special road-construction funds 
 
ASAHI (Page 6) (Full) 
September 2, 2008 
 
The fate of the government's economic stimulus package has become 
unclear due to Prime Minister Fukuda's sudden announcement of his 
intention to step down from his post. How can the package adopted 
late last month now be realized? Fukuda said in his resignation 
statement that he was able to set a direction for the reallocation 
of special road-construction funds for other uses and for the 
establishment of a consumer agency. However, his efforts so far to 
complete this agenda have been half-baked. Many items, including a 
consumption tax hike as a means finance social security, have been 
left for later discussion. The resignation of Prime Minister Fukuda 
could become a turning point for the structural reform line adopted 
during the Koizumi administration. 
 
In a bid to address the economic downturn, the government on August 
29 adopted a comprehensive economic stimulus package consisting of 
1.8 trillion yen in fiscal spending funded from the fiscal 2008 
supplementary budget and 11.7 trillion yen worth of projects. His 
announcement came right after the package had been completed. One 
Finance Ministry Official, looking dismayed, said, "I have no idea 
what will happen from now." 
 
Pressure for pork-barrel spending will likely mount, with an eye on 
the next Lower House election. The trend of moving away from the 
Koizumi reform policy line could accelerate. 
 
The prime minister had ruled out the possibility of issuing 
deficit-covering bonds, insisting that the goal of moving the 
primary balance into the black by fiscal 2011 must be achieved. 
Secretary General Taro Aso, who has been tipped as the most likely 
candidate to replace Fukuda, said, "Until the economy picks up, 
there is no other way than using fiscal disbursements." There is 
thus a possibility of the new administration actively mobilizing 
fiscal expenditures. 
 
Even though Prime Minister Fukuda during a press conference on the 
1st said that he had set a direction for the reallocation of special 
road funds for other uses, a final settlement has yet to be reached. 
He intends to do away with the mechanism of gas tax revenues 
automatically diverted to cover expenses for road construction so 
that the revenues can be used for other purposes. However, deciding 
on the amount of road budget funds to slashed for reallocation for 
other uses has been delayed until the year-end compilation of the 
budget. Because the prime minister was the one who adopted that 
policy, brushing aside objections from the ruling camp, the road 
policy clique in the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) can be expected 
to try to roll back the move to free up special road-construction 
funds. 
 
Regarding future economic stimulus measures, Ryutaro Kono, chief 
economist at the BNP Paribas predicted: "Many market players see the 
economic stimulus package as pork barrel. In order to spur growth 
over the mid- to long-term, deregulation and measures to lure 
foreign investment instead of tax cuts or fiscal disbursements are 
necessary. I am worried that the new cabinet might tilt toward 
turning budget money into pork-barrel largesse." 
 
What will become of a consumption tax hike, establishment of 
 
TOKYO 00002392  004 OF 014 
 
 
consumer agency? 
 
Regarding social security policy, Prime Minister Fukuda took a 
stance of positively addressing urgent items on the agenda, 
including measures to deal with the elderly, a shortage of doctors, 
and employment issues. However, regarding the goal of constraining 
social security spending by 1.1 trillion yen over five years, no 
prospects have been obtained for ways to achieve a 220 billion yen 
cut in fiscal 2009. 
 
In specific areas, there are many issues to be addressed. State 
contributions to the basic pension are set to be raised starting in 
fiscal 2009. It will cost 2.3 trillion yen to finance this policy. 
However, no decision has been made yet on a consumption tax hike, 
the most likely measure to be adopted. The government and the ruling 
parties plan to consider fundamentally reforming the tax code, 
including the consumption tax, starting in the fall. The Liberal 
Democratic Party (LDP) had planned to hold a meeting of its Tax 
System Research Commission this week. Many government officials take 
the stand that if a political vacuum occurs, it would be impossible 
to discuss measures that ask the public to bear more of a burden. 
 
Regarding such issues as a shortage of doctors and emergency medical 
service, the government had decided to increase the enrollment limit 
to medical departments at universities up to the largest-ever 8,300, 
starting from the next fiscal year. However, discussions on specific 
measures were to be pursued in the future. 
 
As a measure to address the working-poor issue, the prime minister 
had ordered the drafting of a bill amending the Worker Dispatch Law 
at an early date. In response, the labor ministry had intended to 
submit such a bill before the end of October in the extraordinary 
Diet session. However, the effort could be wasted, depending on the 
situation in the Diet. The prime minister had been enthusiastic 
about establishing a consumer agency. However, the proposal is now 
in danger of being killed. 
 
The government had been preparing to submit a bill to set up a 
consumer agency to the extraordinary Diet session to be convened 
this month. The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ or Minshuto) in late 
August released the outline of a countermeasure to establish a 
consumer interest authority that is independent of government 
agencies. It has been anticipated that passage of the 
government-sponsored bill would require a revote in the Lower House. 
However, the New Komeito is presumably negative toward the idea of 
holding a revote on the bill. 
 
There is also a possibility of Fukuda's resignation affecting the 
fate of environment measures. When he chaired the Lake Toya Summit, 
the prime minister released the Fukuda Vision, a package of 
proposals featuring cutting Japan's greenhouse gas emissions by 60 
PERCENT -80 PERCENT  from the present level by 2050. He was 
determined to display leadership in negotiations to set the 
next-term framework that will replace the Kyoto Protocol, by calling 
for the sharing of the achievements made at the G-8, including a 50 
PERCENT  carbon emissions cut. However, his sudden resignation could 
serve as a negative factor for Japan exerting an influence. 
 
(3) Editorial: Fukuda government reaches cul de sac as it fails to 
come up with strategy for Lower House dissolution 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
 
TOKYO 00002392  005 OF 014 
 
 
September 2, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda suddenly held a press conference and 
announced his intention to resign from his post. He said: "Now is 
the best time for me to step down so that a political vacuum will 
not be created. I thought it would be good for someone not myself to 
serve in the prime minister's post." He revealed that he had chosen 
yesterday to announce his resignation before the opening of the 
upcoming extraordinary Diet session. The Fukuda administration has 
reached an impasse because the Prime Minister has failed to come up 
with a strategy for dissolving the House of Representatives. 
 
New premier should dissolve Lower House as early as possible 
 
Under the current politically difficult situation with the Diet 
divided between the ruling and opposition camps, in order to 
stabilize his administration, Fukuda felt out the possibility of 
forming a grand coalition with the main opposition Democratic Party 
of Japan (DPJ). After this notion hit a snag, he has been busy 
handling bills in a Diet session. According to the results of the 
latest Nikkei poll, the Fukuda cabinet's approval rate dropped to 29 
PERCENT  from the 38 PERCENT  of the previous poll, which was 
conducted soon before the cabinet shakeup. Therefore, the prevailing 
view in the ruling bloc was that lawmakers would not be able to 
campaign the Lower House election under Fukuda. There was concern 
that the move of unseating Fukuda out of alarm about the next Lower 
House election would have surfaced. 
 
The New Komeito, which has called for dissolution of the Lower House 
and a snap election before the end of the year or early next year, 
began to take a severe stance toward the Fukuda administration. 
There was constant discord between Fukuda and the New Komeito over 
when to convene the extra session, as well as over the length of the 
term of the session. 
 
Fukuda expressed his desire to enact during the extra session a bill 
extending Japan's refueling mission in the Indian Ocean and 
legislation to establish a consumer affairs agency. The DPJ, 
however, has maintained its policy of opposing an extension of the 
refueling law. Therefore, in a bid to extend the refueling law, the 
ruling coalition had no other choice but to take a two-thirds 
overriding vote in the Lower House. The New Komeito opposed it, 
however. Given that the situation, Fukuda would have had to deal 
with bills in the extra session without the cooperation of the New 
Komeito. 
 
The possibility was high that Fukuda, unable to break the deadlock, 
would have been forced to resign as prime minister soon or later, in 
our view. It is understandable that Fukuda decided to step down 
before the opening of the extra session to keep the political vacuum 
to a minimum. 
 
Former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Fukuda's predecessor, gave up on 
his post after serving in his post just one year. Fukuda will step 
down from the prime minister's post in less than one year without 
asking for a vote of confidence through a Lower House election. It 
is an extremely abnormal situation that a third prime minister will 
come into existence due to the rotation of political power in the 
ruling camp. 
 
Prior to his press conference last night, Fukuda told LDP Secretary 
General Taro Aso: "I would like you to push ahead with the selection 
 
TOKYO 00002392  006 OF 014 
 
 
of a date for a presidential election and its procedure." The LDP 
must promptly implement the presidential race and launch a new 
government. 
 
No matter who becomes prime minister, that person should receive the 
judgment of voters by dissolving the Lower House as quickly as 
possible. Carrying out the Lower House election is a shortcut to 
keeping a political vacuum to a minimum. 
 
Meanwhile, DPJ President Ichiro Ozawa formally announced at a press 
conference that he will run for his party's leadership race. The 
outlook is that it will be decided on Sept. 8 whether Ozawa will be 
reelected for his third term uncontested and he will be reelected at 
the party's convention on Sept. 21. Ozawa would become the DPJ prime 
ministerial candidate in the next Lower House. He expressed his 
intention at the convention to give a policy speech that would 
become the basis for his administration. 
 
Katsuya Okada and Seiji Maehara, both DPJ vice presidents, are 
regarded as strong rivals to Ozawa, announced that they would not 
run in the race. Public Relations Committee Chairman Yoshihiko Noda 
gave up his candidacy due to opposition from his group, even though 
he expressed his desire to run in the race. 
 
We have called on the DPJ to come up with a manifesto (set of 
campaign pledges) for the next Lower House election, after carrying 
out active policy debate during the campaign for the leadership 
race. It is regrettable that the DPJ squandered a good chance to 
promote its political presence. 
 
Ozawa must talks about policy 
 
Following Fukuda's announcement of his resignation, the LDP is 
expected to hold a presidential election quickly. Voters must not be 
completely satisfied with the uncontested DPJ presidential race. 
 
Ozawa said in the press conference that there would be no change in 
thinking between his party's manifesto for the Lower House election 
and the one for last year's House of Councillors race. 
 
However, the DPJ's manifesto for last year's Upper House election 
stated that most of totaling 15.3 trillion yen in fiscal resources 
to compensate the incomes of individual farmers and to allocate 
child allowance would be covered by reducing wasted tax money by 
public administration. It lacked persuasiveness. After that, the 
largest opposition party came up with new measures to abolish 
provisional taxes, including a gasoline tax. However, some DPJ 
lawmakers have criticized the new measures for lacking fiscal 
support. 
 
If a DPJ-led government is inaugurated, it would deal with issues, 
including the compilation of a budget, based on its manifesto. Ozawa 
needs to talk more about policies in drafting a set of campaign 
pledges. He also needs to humbly listen to criticism. It is 
indispensable for the DPJ to make clear its priorities about its 
policies, after examining the set of campaign pledges for the Upper 
House election. 
 
With the prime minister's announcement of his resignation, the 
possibility has increased that a Lower House dissolution and general 
election will be carried out before the end of the year. The next 
Lower House election will become a historic one which gives voters a 
 
TOKYO 00002392  007 OF 014 
 
 
chance to choose a new government. It is urgent for the LDP and DPJ 
to show their manifestos and contents that will directly link to 
national prosperity. 
 
(4) Fukuda made decision secretly without even consulting his wife 
 
MAINICHI (Page 3) (Full) 
September 2, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda made preparations for his resignation 
secretly. 
 
The prime minister said in a press conference yesterday that he had 
made up his mind last weekend. In reality, he reportedly made the 
decision earlier. 
 
The prime minister did not reveal his intention to resign to his 
aides. He did not even consult his wife, Kiyoko, either. 
 
As a result, his decision to step down did not reach beyond the 
Prime Minister's Office before his press conference. 
 
Apparently feeling relieved after the news conference, the prime 
minister frankly told his aides: "September 1st, 2nd or 3rd was the 
only timing I considered for the announcement. I chose the day that 
(DPJ President Ichiro) Ozawa decided to run in the party leadership 
race." He thus revealed his plan to overshadow the DPJ presidential 
race with his announcement to resign, which would then be followed 
by an LDP presidential race. 
 
Fukuda also said: "Because (both the DPJ and New Komeito) are 
calling for the prime minister's policy speech for Sept. 29, the new 
prime minister should do so on Sept. 29." 
 
(5) "I am different from Mr. Abe," says Fukuda without offering 
apology 
 
MAINICHI (Page 3) (Full) 
September 2, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda held a press conference last night to 
announce his abrupt decision to step down. Asked for his view about 
the two successive prime ministers "walking away from their 
administrations," Fukuda said: "This is different from the case of 
my predecessor, Prime Minister (Shinzo) Abe. He was suffering from 
ill health. I don't have any health problems." 
 
Abe felt compelled to resign following the revelation of misconduct 
by some of his ministers about a month after he shuffled his cabinet 
to boost his administration. Fukuda's resignation, too, came about a 
month after he shuffled his cabinet. 
 
Fukuda started off the news conference with the complaint: "A series 
of issues emerged, such as political funds, pension records, 
hepatitis-C, and misconduct at the Defense Ministry, and I have been 
busy dealing with those issues. The Democratic Party of Japan did 
not respond to our calls for discussion on important issues and only 
delayed and boycotted deliberations. It took much time to decide on 
anything." 
 
Citing a decision to free up road-related revenues for general 
spending, he also played up his administration's achievements, 
 
TOKYO 00002392  008 OF 014 
 
 
saying: "From the people's viewpoint, my administration has started 
reforms that no one would touch, although in an unobtrusive manner." 
He continued to lament: "I wanted to do something about important 
matters, but there were a variety of political circumstances. It 
would be better for someone other than me to take the helm of 
government in the upcoming extraordinary Diet session." 
 
The prime minister calmly recounted chronological events without 
offering an apology for the resulting political stalemate. A 
reporter told Fukuda, "You are reporting on matters as if they are 
someone else's problem." In response, Fukuda showed his temper, 
saying: "I am a person who can see myself objectively." 
 
(6) Poll on Fukuda cabinet, political parties, MSDF refueling 
mission 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Full) 
September 2, 2008 
 
Questions & Answers 
(Figures shown in percentage, rounded off. Bracketed figures denote 
proportions to all respondents. Figures in parentheses denote the 
results of the last spot survey conducted Aug. 1-2.) 
 
Q: Do you support the Fukuda cabinet? 
 
Yes 25 (24) 
No 55 (55) 
 
 
Q: Why? (One reason only. Left column for those marking "yes" on 
previous question, and right for those saying "no.") 
 
The prime minister is Mr. Fukuda 18(4) 6(3) 
It's an LDP-led cabinet 33(8) 23(12) 
From the aspect of policies 18(4) 60(33) 
No particular reason 28(7) 9(5) 
 
Q: Which political party do you support now? 
 
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) 26 (23) 
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ or Minshuto) 20 (22) 
New Komeito (NK) 3 (4) 
Japanese Communist Party (JCP) 3 (3) 
Social Democratic Party (SDP or Shaminto) 1 (1) 
People's New Party (PNP or Kokumin Shinto) 0 (0) 
New Party Nippon (NPN or Shinto Nippon) 0 (0) 
Other political parties 0 (1) 
None 40 (35) 
No answer (N/A) + don't know (D/K) 7 (11) 
 
Q: Do you think the House of Representatives should be dissolved as 
early as possible for a general election? (Figures in parentheses 
denote the results of a survey taken June 14-15.) 
 
Yes 43 (45) 
No 45 (42) 
 
Q: If you were to vote now in a general election for the House of 
Representatives, which political party would you like to vote for in 
your proportional representation bloc? 
 
 
TOKYO 00002392  009 OF 014 
 
 
LDP 27 (25) 
DPJ 31 (32) 
NK 3 (4) 
JCP 4 (3) 
SDP 2 (1) 
PNP 0 (0) 
NPN 0 (0) 
Other political parties 1 (1) 
N/A+D/K 32 (34) 
 
Q: Which one between Prime Minister Ozawa and DPJ President Ozawa do 
you think is appropriate for prime minister? (Figures in parentheses 
denote the results of a survey taken July 12-13.) 
 
Mr. Fukuda 36 (37) 
Mr. Ozawa 28 (28) 
 
Q: The government and ruling parties unveiled a package of economic 
stimulus measures to deal with rising prices and economic downturn. 
This package includes an across-the-board income tax break. Do you 
appreciate this uniform tax break? 
 
Yes 35 
No 46 
 
Q: There is an opinion saying the government should issue 
deficit-covering bonds and compile a large-scale supplementary 
budget to turn the economy around. Are you in favor of this 
opinion? 
 
Yes 15 
No 67 
 
Q: Do you feel badly off these days. If so, to what extent? 
 
Very much 33 
Somewhat 49 
Not very much 15 
Not at all 2 
 
Q: U.S. and other foreign forces have sent fleets to the Indian 
Ocean to fight against terrorist groups in Afghanistan. A law 
intended for the Self-Defense Forces to back up their fleets there 
will expire in January next year. The government will present a bill 
to the Diet at its forthcoming session to extend this SDF mission. 
Do you think Japan should continue the SDF's activities in the 
Indian Ocean? 
 
Yes 37 
No 50 
 
Polling methodology: The survey was conducted Aug. 30-31 over the 
telephone on a computer-aided random digit dialing (RDD) basis. 
Respondents were chosen from among the nation's voting population on 
a three-stage random-sampling basis. Valid answers were obtained 
from 2,048 persons (58 PERCENT ). 
 
(7) Summit of lower house speakers opens in Hiroshima; U.S. House of 
Representatives Speaker Pelosi and others lay wreathes at the Atomic 
Bomb Memorial Tomb 
 
YOMIURI (Internet edition) (Full) 
 
TOKYO 00002392  010 OF 014 
 
 
September 2, 2008 
 
The G8 meeting of lower house speakers opened this morning in 
Hiroshima City. This is the seventh time for the speakers' summit to 
be held, but it is the first time for Japan to host it. Lower House 
Speaker Yohei Kono, who serves as the chair for the meeting, and 
U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi are among the 
representatives from the G8 countries attending the meeting. 
 
Prior to the opening of the session this morning, each country's 
speaker laid a wreath at the city's memorial to those who died in 
the atomic bombings. They listened to a message calling for peace 
from a local elementary school student. They also visited the 
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, where the tragedy of the atomic 
bombings is displayed, and there, they listened to the experiences 
related by atomic bomb victims. 
 
Ms. Pelosi, being next to the vice president in line for the 
presidency should succession be needed, is the highest seated 
dignitary from the United States to visit Hiroshima and the site of 
the atomic bombing. 
 
Afterward, the group exchanged views on the theme, "Role of 
parliaments in promoting peace and disarmament," at Hiroshima's 
International Conference Center. Speaker Kono deepened discussion of 
nuclear disarmament at Hiroshima, making an appeal for international 
peace, but there is a likelihood that the topic of the dispute over 
Georgia will come up, since the confrontation between the U.S. and 
European countries on the one side and Russia on the other has been 
heightening. The afternoon session will be devoted to discussions on 
the theme, "Democracy in Bicameral Legislatures." 
 
 The speakers' summit is an informal meeting. Although it is 
customary for political statements and the like that integrates 
views not to be issued, after the meeting ends this evening, a press 
conference will be held at which Speaker Kono will summarize the 
summit. 
 
(8) Essay by Asahi columnist Yoshibumi Wakamiya on the Hiroshima 
Summit: Next time the U.S. President should come 
 
ASAHI (Page 11) (Slightly abridged) 
September 1, 2008 
 
On that fateful morning, then Illinois assembly member Barrack Obama 
was driving his car in downtown Chicago when he heard on the radio 
about the first airplane crashing (into the World Trade Center). By 
the time he reached his meeting, two more planes had crashed into 
buildings. He immediately got out of the car, looked to the heavens, 
and thinking about his country and family, was overcome by grief for 
the victims. 
 
It will soon be seven years since the tragedy of 9/11, when 
terrorists attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. "With 
those incidents, everything changed," Obama later said. Three years 
later, he became a U.S. senator, and now, he himself has completely 
changed, having become a presidential candidate. 
 
That Barrack Obama, recalling the fear that 9/11 generated, came out 
with a statement of his thinking this July 16 that went: "I will 
place at the center of nuclear policy the goal of complete abolition 
of nuclear weapons." In a campaign speech in Indiana, he heatedly 
 
TOKYO 00002392  011 OF 014 
 
 
stated, "It is time for America to send a clear message that we will 
aim for a world where there are no nuclear weapons." 
 
His statement could only come from a sense of alarm about how 
fearful it would be if terrorist groups got their hands on nuclear 
weapons. The Democratic Party that nominated him at its convention 
at the end of last month included that in its election promises. 
 
Having just played a role in that party convention, U.S. House of 
Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi has come to Japan, and is now 
in Hiroshima. She is attending the G-8 Summit of Lower House 
Speakers that convenes on Sept. 2. This year, the seventh such 
event, is being hosted by Lower House Speaker Yohei Kono. 
 
At the Toyako Summit of world leaders that was held in July, the 
main theme was global warming. If that is the case, I would like to 
bring up here another global crisis. The proposal came from Mr. Kono 
to choose Hiroshima as the sight to discuss "peace and disarmament." 
In the past, the eight countries represented here divided themselves 
into "Axis" countries of Germany, Japan, and Italy and "Allied" 
countries centered on the U.S. and Britain and fought a war. Now, 
their parliamentary speakers have assembled to lay wreathes at the 
monument in Hiroshima dedicated to atomic bomb victims, and tour the 
Peace Memorial Museum, where the bombings are vividly portrayed. The 
most noteworthy participant is no doubt Speaker Pelosi, who has come 
from the country that dropped the bombs. 
 
Prior to 1963, the feeling in Hiroshima, which had made the atomic 
bombings its hell, was that the United States could not be forgiven 
and the tragedy could not be wiped away. However, the United States' 
thinking was that without using the bombs, Japan could not have been 
subjugated, the expectation being that in ending the war, there 
would be tragic resistance. There was also a feeling of resistance 
from Japan, which stressed the catastrophe of the bombings, tending 
to forget that it had been the aggressor in the war. Even in 1996, 
when the Atomic Bomb Dome (Peace Memorial) was recognized as a World 
Heritage, the U.S. was against the move. 
 
Mr. Kono, who fully realizes the existence of such a situation, last 
year broached the idea to Speaker Pelosi first of all with the 
words, "If you were to come, it would be to Hiroshima." She replied 
that it would be a "good idea." Perhaps the Speaker's decisiveness 
was because she is a liberal, but Speaker Pelosi is the highest 
level U.S. politician to visit Hiroshima in the 63 postwar years. 
 
Even John McCain, the Republican Party candidate for president, in 
May made a similar statement. He introduced former President 
Reagan's words, "Our dream is a day when there will be no nuclear 
weapons on this earth," and then stated, "This is my dream, too." 
 
If such is the case, I would like to see the next president, whether 
it is Mr. Obama or Mr. McCain, make a visit to Hiroshima. In the 
message of aiming for a nuclear-weapon free world, there is no doubt 
such a spirit. 
 
In fact, this July 2, President Bush, then on the way to the Toyako 
Summit, had this exchange with reporters: When asked, "There has 
been a proposal for the prime minister of Japan to visit Pearl 
Harbor in Hawaii, and for the U.S. president to visit Hiroshima," he 
answered, "I haven't given it any thought, but it is an interesting 
idea." 
 
 
TOKYO 00002392  012 OF 014 
 
 
It is difficult for him to make the trip, given his remaining short 
stay in office, but Mr. Bush did make this significant remark: "Wipe 
the slate of the past clean, and turn to look to the future." This 
may have been lip-service, but if his friend (Koizumi) and he as a 
combination had continued, would it have been out of the question? 
 
That reminds me, there has never been a prime minister who has 
visited Pearl Harbor. There seems to be a strong resistance to do so 
within the Japanese government. In 1994, such a visit was considered 
when the Emperor visited the United States, but it never came 
about. 
 
If the prime minister visits Pearl Harbor, the U.S. president, too, 
would find it easier to pay visits to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. If 
both leaders bowed their heads in reflection and then laid down 
memorial wreathes, it would take the form of a real reconciliation 
and friendship. The atomic bomb victims, too, would perhaps be 
somewhat buoyed up by the gesture. 
 
What words would be used at Hiroshima by Mr. Obama, who captured 
peoples' hearts with his speeches that called for change and unity? 
What kind of emotions would be evoked by Mr. McCain, who suffered as 
a prisoner of war? 
 
It may be said to be premature, but my interest in this has 
continued to climb. 
 
(9) Defense Ministry seeks Guam base-construction costs in budgetary 
estimate to cover U.S. military buildup expenses with taxpayer 
money 
 
AKAHATA (Top Play) (Full) 
August 30, 2008 
 
The Defense Ministry has earmarked for the first time outlays for 
constructing facilities in Guam for U.S. Marines in the budgetary 
estimate for next fiscal year that was formally decided yesterday. 
The ministry is about to pour taxpayers' money into a plan to 
reinforce the U.S. military's presence in Guam on the pretext of 
relocating U.S. Marines in Okinawa to Guam. It is unprecedented for 
a foreign government to bear the costs for construction of military 
base facilities in a territory belonging to the U.S. 
 
Under an agreement reached between Japan and the U.S. (in April 
2006) on the relocation of U.S. Marines in Okinawa to Guam, Japan 
agreed to (1) foot the bill for construction of such facilities as a 
headquarters (2.8 billion dollars or 324.8 billion yen, 116 yen to 
the dollar) from national coffers; and (2) commission private 
companies to build infrastructure facilities at the base, such as 
electricity and houses for Marines and their family members by 
disbursing government funds (3.29 billion dollars or 381.6 billion 
yen). 
 
The Defense Ministry decided to propose some of the above two 
categories of expenses in its budgetary request for next fiscal 
year. The estimate also includes costs needed to construct a Guam 
relocation office (tentative name). 
 
Regarding outlays for a plan to relocate Marines from Okinawa to 
Guam, the Defense Ministry included expenses for preliminary studies 
in its past budgets. But this is the first time for the ministry to 
seek actual construction costs. The ministry has said it will decide 
 
TOKYO 00002392  013 OF 014 
 
 
on a specific amount of money to pay through coordination with the 
U.S. military and in the process of compiling a budget. 
 
Ministry also request costs for repairing GSDF choppers, with eye on 
Afghanistan 
 
The Defense Ministry incorporated in its budget request expenses 
needed to upgrade the capability of the Ground Self-Defense Force's 
CH-47 transport helicopters, keeping in mind a strong request coming 
from the U.S. to dispatch CH-47 choppers to Afghanistan. 
 
The Defense Ministry is eager to enhance its engine output so that 
the choppers can cope with a variety of environments, such as very 
high land, when they are used to transport troops overseas on a 
mission connected to international peacekeeping operations. The 
ministry plans to bulletproof the helicopter against attacks from 
the ground. 
 
The slaying of aid worker Kazuya Ito in Afghanistan showed that the 
U.S.-led military operation has exacerbated the security situation 
there. At such a time, the Defense Ministry has proposed budgetary 
allocations for a plan to dispatch GSDF troops to the ground of 
Afghanistan, and that is an extremely serious matter. 
 
(10) Rate of contract price to target price at 99 PERCENT  in more 
than 50 PERCENT  of all projects during three years until fiscal 
2007, showing no progress on ODA reform 
 
TOKYO SHMBUN (Top Play) (Excerpts) 
August 31, 2008 
 
The rate of the winning bid price to the target price was over 99 
PERCENT  in more than 50 PERCENT  of all non-reimbursable official 
development assistance (ODA) projects during the three years up 
until fiscal 2007. The rate of the contract price to the 
predetermined price has dropped recently as bid-rigging or bribery 
cases have been proactively exposed, but the Tokyo Shimbun has found 
that the rates in ODA-related projects remain high. 
 
The Board of Audit has pointed out that the rates in ODA projects 
remain high, but signs of improvement are nowhere in sight. 
Recently, a former president of a Tokyo-based consulting firm and 
others were arrested on suspicion of violating the unfair 
competition prevention law (that incorporates a clause banning 
bribes to public servants of foreign countries) for bribery in 
connection with an ODA-financed project in Vietnam. The bidding 
system and ways to implement the system for ODA projects are now 
being questioned. 
 
Of the grant aid projects during the three years up until fiscal 
2007, the Foreign Ministry posted information on 457 projects 
related to highway construction, fisheries, and other affairs on its 
website by Aug. 31. The total amount of their estimated costs was 
approximately 524 billion yen. 
 
Of the 316 cases in which the target price was announced, the 
winning-bid price was over 99 PERCENT  of the predetermined price in 
163 cases, with 72 cases in fiscal 2005, 41 cases in fiscal 2006, 
and 50 cases in fiscal 2007. There were 79 cases in which negotiated 
contracts were concluded as the amount of the bid tendered was 
higher than the predetermined price. This figure accounts for 
one-fourth of the total cases. 
 
TOKYO 00002392  014 OF 014 
 
 
 
Participating in these biddings were 1.8-2.7 companies on average. A 
total of 139 cases drew in only one bidder. 
 
(11) Prime Minister's schedule, September 1 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
September 2, 2008 
 
07:49 
Cabinet meeting on comprehensive disaster preparedness drill at the 
Kantei 
 
08:30 
Press conference. Then meeting of Emergency Disaster Countermeasures 
Headquarters. 
 
11:20 
Left Haneda Airport by MSDF's U4 plane. 
 
12:34 
Arrived at Kansai Airport. 
 
13:01 
Inspected joint drill by prefectures in the Kinki region carried out 
at Hama Industrial Park in Kishiwada City, Osaka. 
 
13:24 
Inspected disaster prevention drill on Chikiri Island, an artificial 
isle. 
 
15:08 
Left Kansai Airport y U4 plane. 
 
16:10 
Arrived at Haneda Airport. 
 
16:44 
Arrived at the official residence. 
 
17:54 
Met with Secretary General Aso, joined by Chief Cabinet Secretary 
Machimura. Machimura remained. 
 
21:30 
Press conference. 
 
21:50 
Met with Machimura, and Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Iwaki and 
Futahashi, joined by Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Shionoya. 
 
22:28 
Arrived at the official residence. 
 
ZUMWALT