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Viewing cable 08TOKYO2120, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08//08

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08TOKYO2120 2008-08-01 08:00 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO0983
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #2120/01 2140800
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 010800Z AUG 08
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6262
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 1540
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 9166
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 2904
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 7368
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 9749
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 4674
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 0663
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 1048
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 12 TOKYO 002120 
 
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 08//08 
 
INDEX: 
 
(1) Machimura, Komura to remain in Cabinet (Kyodo) 
 
(2) PROFILE: Hori, former 'postal rebel,' gets LDP leadership post 
(Kyodo) 
 
(3) PROFILE: Sasagawa named as LDP General Council chairman (Kyodo) 
 
 
(4) PROFILE: Koga reappointed as LDP election bureau chief (Kyodo) 
 
(5) Aso to be appointed as LDP secretary general; Sasagawa as 
General Council chairman, Hori as Policy Research Council chairman 
(Tokyo Shimbun) 
 
(6) LDP to pick Aso as LDP secretary general, retain Koga as 
Election Committee chairman (Sankei) 
 
(7) Aso to be picked LDP secretary general; Welfare Minister Masuzoe 
to remain (Tokyo Shimbun) 
 
(8) Shuffled Fukuda cabinet to be formally inaugurated on August 2: 
Aso to take up post as LDP secretary general; Ibuki likely to be 
given ministerial post (Nikkei) 
 
(9) The end of the Japan-U.S. alliance's golden age (Sankei) 
 
(10) Drifting Doha Round: Japan keeps low profile without serving as 
intermediary (Asahi) 
 
(11) Editorial: Who protects the world from protectionism? (Nikkei) 
 
 
(12) Government considering levying fines on companies that caused 
injury to consumers: Fines of up to 100 million yen to be imposed on 
offenders of injury prevention order (Mainichi) 
 
(13) Behind the scenes of Japan-North Korea abduction negotiations; 
Even Hidekazu Hasuike is distressed (Shukan Shincho) 
 
ARTICLES: 
 
(1) Machimura, Komura to remain in Cabinet 
 
Kyodo News 
August 1, 2008 
 
Some incumbent Cabinet members will remain at their posts in the 
Cabinet reshuffle Friday, according to political sources. 
 
They include Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura, Foreign 
Minister Masahiko Komura, and Health, Labor and Welfare Minister 
Yoichi Masuzoe, according to the sources. 
 
Hiroya Masuda, a former Iwate governor who does not hold a Diet 
seat, will also remain in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda 
as minister of internal affairs and communications. 
 
From the New Komeito party, the junior coalition partner of Fukuda's 
Liberal Democratic Party, Tetsuo Saito will be named as environment 
minister, according to the sources. 
 
TOKYO 00002120  002 OF 012 
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08//08 
 
 
Among others, Bunmei Ibuki will be appointed as finance minister, 
while Kaoru Yosano will be named as economic and fiscal policy 
minister. 
 
(2) PROFILE: Hori, former 'postal rebel,' gets LDP leadership post 
 
Kyodo News 
August 1, 2008 
 
Kosuke Hori is the first to gain a Liberal Democratic Party 
leadership post as Policy Research Council chief among those who 
were ousted from the party in 2005 by then Prime Minister Junichiro 
Koizumi for opposing his postal privatization plan. 
 
Hori, 73, is known to be well-versed in education administration and 
has been involved in ruling coalition panels on amendment to the 
basic education law and education reform even when he was still an 
independent. 
 
He joined political circles succeeding his father, who had served as 
lower house speaker, and has refused to own a mobile phone. 
 
Hori, who returned to the LDP at the end of 2006, is now serving his 
10th term as House of Representatives member. 
 
(3) PROFILE: Sasagawa named as LDP General Council chairman 
 
Kyodo News 
August 1, 2008 
 
Takashi Sasagawa obtained the post of General Council chairman of 
the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, after serving as acting General 
Council chairman twice before. 
 
Sasagawa, 72, was first elected to the House of Representatives in 
1986 and is currently serving his seventh term. He once served as 
state minister in charge of science and technology. 
 
He became the chief of the lower house steering committee in 
September 2007 and has been playing the role of a ''referee'' 
between the ruling and opposition camps. 
 
Sasagawa, the second son of Ryoichi Sasagawa, who founded the Nippon 
Foundation, often appears high up on the lawmakers' assets list. 
 
(4) PROFILE: Koga reappointed as LDP election bureau chief 
 
Kyodo News 
August 1, 2008 
 
Reappointed Liberal Democratic Party election bureau chief Makoto 
Koga has assumed prominent posts since he was first elected to the 
House of Representatives in 1980 at the age of 39. 
 
In the Cabinet, Koga, 67, was appointed as construction minister in 
1996, and within the LDP he has successively held important 
positions, such as secretary general. 
 
His father was killed in action in Leyte, the Philippines, and now 
Koga serves as chairman of Nippon Izokukai, the Japan War-Bereaved 
Association. 
 
TOKYO 00002120  003 OF 012 
 
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08//08 
 
 
As the head of an LDP faction and election bureau chief, Koga has 
been struggling to find competitive candidates prior to the next 
general election. 
 
(5) Aso to be appointed as LDP secretary general; Sasagawa as 
General Council chairman, Hori as Policy Research Council chairman 
 
Tokyo Shimbun online (Chunichi Shimbun) 
14:49, August 1, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, president of the Liberal Democratic 
Party (LDP), today, August 1, started shuffling the cabinet and 
reshuffling the leadership of the LDP. In selecting members for the 
party leadership, he decided to appoint Taro Aso as secretary 
general, who previously served in the post. He met with Aso face to 
face this morning at the official residence and asked him to accept 
his offer. Aso agreed to accept the offer. Fukuda will select a 
line-up of his new cabinet in the evening, following the appointment 
of the four party executives in the afternoon. 
 
Aso ran in the LDP presidential race last September. He is 
distancing himself from the prime minister. Fukuda has, however, 
determined that in view of the fact that Aso is popular with the 
public, he would be appropriate for the post in order for the party 
to put forward a clearer all-party setup in the run-up to a 
dissolution of the Lower House for a snap election. 
 
Regarding the selection of the four party executives, Election 
Committee Chairman Makoto Koga will be retained. Incumbent Secretary 
General Bunmei Ibuki and General Council Chairman Toshihiro Nikai 
will be given key cabinet posts, such as finance minister. Takashi 
Sasagawa, chairman of the Diet Steering Committee in the Lower 
House, will succeed Nikai. The appointment of Kosuke Hori as Policy 
Research Council chairman has also been decided. 
 
Regarding the shuffling of the cabinet, Chief Cabinet Secretary 
Nobutaka Machimura, Foreign Minister Masahiko Koumura and Health, 
Labor and Welfare Minister Yoichi Masuzoe will most likely remain in 
their posts. The LDP in the Upper House is calling for Gotaro 
Yoshimura and Tetsuro Yano to be given a ministerial post. 
 
The New Komeito at its standing executive committee held today has 
left the party's approach to the cabinet shuffle to head Akihiro Ota 
and Secretary General Kazuo Kitagawa to work out. It is expected to 
seek a replacement of Land, Infrastructure and Transport Minister 
Fuyushiba. 
 
The prime minister this morning held talks with Ota at his office. 
He formally conveyed his decision to shuffle the cabinet. Ota 
agreed. On that occasion, Fukuda said: "We must structurally change 
the mechanism of the economy to address the steep rise in raw price, 
the declining birthrate and the aging society. I would like to 
choose a lineup from that perspective." 
 
The prime minister will receive letters of resignation from 
incumbent ministers at a special cabinet meeting in the afternoon. 
He will then ask at a special meeting of the LDP General Council to 
give him a free hand to appoint party executives. He will then hold 
a press conference at 9:00 p.m. after completing all personnel 
matters and explain to the people why he has chosen the new lineup 
and how he is going to run the government. 
 
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An attestation ceremony at the Imperial Pace for new cabinet 
ministers will be held tomorrow morning. The shuffled Fukuda cabinet 
will be formally launched at the first cabinet meeting to be held 
after the ceremony. 
 
Machimura during a press conference today indicated a plan to 
appoint senior vice ministers on the 5th and parliamentary 
secretaries on the 6th. 
 
(LDP secretary general) 
 
Taro Aso. Graduated from Gakushuin University. Successively held 
such posts as Policy Research Council chairman, internal affairs and 
communications minister, foreign minister and LDP secretary general. 
67 years old. Elected from the Fukuoka No. 8 Constituency. 
Ninth-term Lower House member (Aso faction). 
 
(Chunichi Shimbun) 
 
(6) LDP to pick Aso as LDP secretary general, retain Koga as 
Election Committee chairman 
 
SANKEI Online 
August 1, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda will shuffle his cabinet and select new 
Liberal Democratic Party executives this afternoon. Fukuda met New 
Komeito President Akihiro Ota at the Prime Minister's Office 
(Kantei) this morning. The two leaders confirmed the need for the 
Liberal Democratic Party and the New Komeito to continue to be 
united as partners. Later, Fukuda started coordination on selecting 
executives. He called in former Secretary General Taro Aso to the 
prime minister's official and asked him to assume the post of 
secretary general. Aso accepted the offer. The prime minister has 
also decided to retain Makoto Koga, Tadamori Oshima, and Hiroyuki 
Hosokawa as Election Committee chairman, Diet Affairs Committee 
chairman, and senior deputy secretary general, respectively. 
 
The meeting between Fukuda and Ota started at 09:00 and lasted for 
about 20 minutes. Machimura, Liberal Democratic Party Secretary 
General Bunmei Ibuki, and New Komeito Secretary General Kazuo 
Kitagawa were present. 
 
Fukuda told Ota: 
 
"To show my strong resolve to carry out reform, I want to shuffle my 
cabinet, so I want you to extend cooperation. It is important to 
tackle such issues as soaring oil prices and uncertainty over the 
economy. Now that the nation has turned into aging society, it is 
also imperative to reform the nation's economic structure to cope 
with the change. While keeping these challenges in mind, I would 
like to select the lineup." 
 
Ota replied: 
 
"That's fine. It is important to set forth the policy of pursuing 
reform that will contribute to encouraging ordinary citizens. I want 
you to give full consideration to ordinary citizens' points of 
view." 
 
The two leaders did not mention the names of any specific 
 
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candidates. They did not discuss Diet business, either, according to 
informed sources. 
 
The meeting between Fukuda and Aso started before 11:00. Last night, 
Fukuda called Aso and offered the position of secretary general. But 
Aso was reluctant to accept it. Fukuda therefore decided to meet Aso 
to persuade him to accept the offer. Aso asked Fukuda that the 
Election Committee chairmanship, which has been upgraded to one of 
the four top executive officers, be again placed under the secretary 
general as in the past. But Fukuda declined the proposal. 
 
It has been decided that Machimura will stay on as chief cabinet 
secretary. Coordination is now underway on a plan to appoint former 
Chief Cabinet Secretary Kaoru Yosano as an economic minister. 
 
Fukuda will hold a special cabinet meeting starting at 13:30 today 
to obtain written resignations from outgoing cabinet ministers. 
Later, he will hold an executive meeting with the incumbent 
executive members at LDP headquarters to explain a plan to appoint 
executives earlier than scheduled. After obtaining approval from the 
Executive Council, Fukuda will call in new executives and ask them 
to assume office. 
 
(7) Aso to be picked LDP secretary general; Welfare Minister Masuzoe 
to remain 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (ONLINE) 
August 1, 2008 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda (President of the Liberal Democratic 
Party) met this morning with New Komeito leader Akihiro Ota at the 
Prime Minister's Official Residence (Kantei). In the meeting, Fukuda 
conveyed to Ota his intention to shuffle today his cabinet and the 
key LDP executive posts. Ota gave his concurrence. Starting with the 
new lineup of LDP posts, Fukuda met this morning with Taro Aso to 
offer him the secretary general's post. Aso accepted Fukuda's offer. 
 
 
Aso ran in the LDP presidential race last September. Fukuda has 
determined that Aso, a popular figure with the public, would be 
suitable for the post in order to make clear that the party is 
unified as he considers a possible dissolution of the House of 
Representatives to be followed by a snap election. Recently, he has 
distanced himself from Fukuda and his administration. 
 
Following Aso's acceptance of the offer to become secretary general, 
Fukuda will next award incumbent Secretary General Bunmei Ibuki the 
finance minister's post. Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura, 
Foreign Minister Masahiko Koumura, and Health, Labor and Welfare 
Minister Yoichi Masuzoe are to be be retained in their respective 
posts. The LDP caucus in the House of Councillors has recommended 
Kotaro Yoshimura and Tetsuro Yano as members of the new cabinet. 
 
In a board meeting after the Fukuda-Ota talks, the New Komeito 
decided to leave the party's response to the cabinet shuffle to Ota 
and Secretary General Kazuo Kitagawa. The party would like to 
replace Land, Infrastructure, and Transport Minister Tetsuzo 
Fuyushiba, and will decide on what member will enter the new cabinet 
this afternoon (TN: The pick was Tetsuo Saito). 
 
In the meeting, Fukuda told Ota: 
 
 
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"To deal with the increase in the cost of raw materials, as well as 
the falling birthrate and aging population, we must change the 
economic system structurally. Based on such an approach, I plan to 
arrange the new cabinet lineup." 
 
In an emergency cabinet meeting this afternoon, Fukuda will receive 
letters of resignation from the incumbent cabinet ministers. He also 
seal the appointments of the party executive members in a General 
Council meeting this afternoon. This evening after the selection of 
the new party leadership, Fukuda will call in his choices to the 
Kantei and form the new cabinet tonight. He will hold a press 
conference at 9:00 p.m. and explain to the public the purpose of the 
new cabinet lineup. 
 
An attestation ceremony will be held on the morning of August 2 at 
the Imperial Palace. The new Fukuda cabinet will then be inaugurated 
in its first cabinet meeting. 
 
In a press conference today, Machimura revealed that the new senior 
vice ministers will be appointed on August 5 and the parliamentary 
secretaries will be picked on August 6. 
 
Taro Aso graduated from Gakushuin University. He served as LDP 
Policy Research Council chairman, minister of internal affairs and 
telecommunications, foreign minister, and LDP secretary general. He 
is 67. He represents the Lower House Fukuoka No 8 electoral 
district. He is now serving in his ninth-term in the Lower House. He 
heads a LDP faction. 
 
(8) Shuffled Fukuda cabinet to be formally inaugurated on August 2: 
Aso to take up post as LDP secretary general; Ibuki likely to be 
given ministerial post 
 
Nikkei Online 
13:39, August 1, 2006 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda on the morning of August 1 met with New 
Komeito head Akihiro Ota at his office and conveyed his decision to 
shuffle the cabinet for the first time under his administration. 
Fukuda's shuffled cabinet will be in effect launched on the evening 
of the 1st. In reshuffling the leadership of the Liberal Democratic 
Party (LDP), Fukuda has firmed his intent to replace Secretary 
General Bunmei Ibuki with Taro Aso, who previously served in the 
post. Ibuki will likely be appointed to a key cabinet post. Nobutaka 
Machimura will remain as chief cabinet secretary, the key post in 
the cabinet. 
 
An attestation ceremony at the Imperial Palace will be held at 10:00 
p.m. on the 2nd, followed by the first cabinet meeting around noon 
of the same day. 
 
The prime minister on the morning of the 1st met with Aso at his 
official residence to discuss the reshuffling of the LDP leadership, 
a focus of attention. They appeared to have discussed the selection 
of members for the party leadership and a cabinet-formation policy. 
Aso agreed to take office as LDP secretary general. One suggestion 
being considered is to appoint Ibuki either as finance minister or 
as health, labor and welfare minister. Some observers said that 
Election Committee Chairman Makoto Koga would be retained. 
 
(9) The end of the Japan-U.S. alliance's golden age 
 
 
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SANKEI (Page 3) (Full) 
August 1, 2008 
 
Koji Murata, professor at Doshisha University 
 
The U.S. Board on Geographic Names (BGN) has again changed its 
description of the Takeshima islets to "South Korean territory." To 
begin with, the U.S. government should not have changed it to 
"undesignated sovereignty." The Bush administration is already in 
its final stage in such a serious condition that it cannot even 
coordinate anything like this. Its back and forth response denotes a 
lack of consideration for its allies, Japan and South Korea. 
 
The United States' political intention is clear. President Bush will 
visit South Korea from Aug. 5. However, talks between the United 
States and South Korea over a free trade agreement (FTA) have become 
deadlocked, and South Korea's Lee Myung Bak government is now in a 
fix over the issue of U.S. beef imports. The Bush administration 
went with South Korea's public opinion because it wanted the Lee 
administration to remain stable. 
 
Such a U.S. policy course can be interpreted in two ways. For one 
thing, the United States needs South Korea's cooperation in the 
six-party talks over North Korea's nuclear programs. For now, Japan 
cannot take part in energy assistance to North Korea. As it stands, 
the United States has to expect South Korea to substitute for 
Japan. 
 
Second, Japan-when it comes to democracy-is trustworthier than South 
Korea. The alliance between Japan and the United States is maturer 
than that between the United States and South Korea. Taking this 
into consideration, the United States, I think, has a sense of trust 
in Japan, expecting its public opinion to remain calm. 
 
However, we should also think that the United States has a sense of 
disappointment with Japan. Bilateral relations between Japan and the 
United States were in good shape when the Koizumi and Abe cabinets 
were in office. Since then, the United States' stance toward Japan 
has changed. This, I guess, might be ascribable to the Fukuda 
cabinet's reluctance to reinterpret the Constitution for collective 
self-defense. In addition, the Japanese government has decided to 
call off the Maritime Self-Defense Force's refueling activities in 
the Indian Ocean and the Air Self-Defense Force's mission in Iraq. 
This decision also might have affected the United States. It is 
clear that the Japan-U.S. alliance's golden age like the one in the 
Koizumi-Bush days is gone. 
 
The Japanese government should not react at the same level as South 
Korea and should assume a calm attitude. By doing so, Japan should 
urge the United States to promise to pressure North Korea even more 
strongly for a solution to the issue of Japanese nationals abducted 
to North Korea. Furthermore, Japan should stabilize its domestic 
political situation and remove its diplomacy's constraints. 
 
(10) Drifting Doha Round: Japan keeps low profile without serving as 
intermediary 
 
ASAHI (Page 7) (Excerpts) 
August 1, 2008 
 
(Ogata, Geneva) 
 
 
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The ministers meeting under new Doha Round of global trade talks of 
the World Trade Organization (WTO) have ended in rupture, although 
an historic accord was in sight at one point. In the talks, the 
Japanese government kept a low profile. Japan remained passive as it 
watched industrialized countries and such emerging countries as 
India and China locking horns. 
 
U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab was the first person to show 
up at the lobby of WTO headquarters before 18:00 on July 29, just 
after the ministerial talks collapsed. She commented: "The meeting 
was moving very close to an accord, but ...." 
 
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Wakabayashi and 
Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Amari replied only to 
questions from Japanese reporters outside WTO headquarters. A 
government source commented: "I don't think they could have replied 
to severe questions from foreign reporters." Seeing their 
inward-looking posture, a foreign correspondent cynically said: 
"(The Japanese delegation) is like an interest group that pays 
attention only to protecting domestic farmers." 
 
According to informed sources, when the U.S. clashed with China and 
India over the so-called special safeguard mechanism (SSM), which 
would allow developing countries to raise tariffs on farm products 
in the event of an import surge, Brazil first tried to mediate 
between both sides. When its effort ended in failure, the EU next 
moved to bring about reconciliation. 
 
Japanese negotiators must certainly have had this feeling, for as 
one Japanese negotiator noted: "Regrettably, Japan cannot behave 
like other major powers, so it only has the choice of serving as an 
honest intermediary." There was an option for Japan to have its 
national interests skillfully reflected in an agreement by devoting 
itself to playing a mediating role. According to parties concerned 
from other countries, however, Japanese delegates seemingly did not 
move to mediate between the two sides in the agricultural sector. 
 
When the situation was tense late at night on the 28th, a Japanese 
negotiator cracked a joke: "Is 'SSM' an abridgment of 'special 
spaghetti meat source?", showing little sense of responsibility for 
the talks. 
 
Other countries were pressing Japan to make a concession on the 
number of sensitive farm products to be exempted from steep tariff 
cuts. Despite such pressure, Japan gave the impression that it was 
just hoping that its concession would be put on hold due to a 
collapse of the round. 
 
A Japanese government source cannot forget this remark made by one 
Brazilian government official concerned: "It is the major economies' 
responsibility to give explanations to reporters worldwide. If they 
don't, they will be considered to have no friends anywhere in the 
world." 
 
(11) Editorial: Who protects the world from protectionism? 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
July 31, 2008 
 
A ghost named protectionism is coming back to life. Ministerial 
talks of the World Trade Organization (WTO) collapsed at the 
eleventh hour. The multilateral trade talks (Doha Round), which were 
 
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supposed to advance trade liberalization, must now be put on ice for 
the time being. The free trade system that has supported the growth 
of the global economy now faces a serious crisis. 
 
The talks' collapse directly came from a clash between the United 
States and China and India over agricultural issues. Both China and 
India with a population of more than 1 billion each could be huge 
export markets for U.S. farmers. China and India, on the other hand, 
want to protect their farmers. The United States, the quintessential 
advanced country, fiercely clashed with the emerging economic 
giants. 
 
WTO leadership declining 
 
The days are over in which advanced countries, such as the United 
States and European nations, took the lead in establishing 
international rules and developing countries followed them. The 
collapsed WTO negotiations tell the cold fact that the dynamics of 
the world order has shifted. 
 
In the talks, the United States and the European Union (EU) 
presented a compromise plan. Although the path to a basic accord 
came into sight at one point, China and India, which regarded 
themselves as representatives of the developing countries, reacted 
furiously to the compromise plan. The negotiations fell apart 
abruptly with a "veto" by the two countries. 
 
Not only China and India but also Brazil continued to play a central 
role in the talks. Those countries clearly demonstrated their 
presence in place of industrialized countries whose leadership is 
declining. The more globalization advances, the more the power to 
control the order of the global economy disperses. The work to 
establish international rules is certain to become more difficult. 
 
What about Japan's role? As the chair of this year's G-8 summit, 
Japan needed to contribute to reaching a broad agreement by becoming 
involved in the talks more deeply than by the United States, the EU, 
China and India. 
 
In reality, Japan, which was totally on the defensive, was not even 
able to keep pace with the talks. Japan should have demonstrated a 
willingness to serve as a coordinator between the United States and 
China and India. 
 
Japan, which sustains economic growth in overseas markets and trade, 
must not be called protectionist by developing countries. Those 
engaged in agriculture and lawmakers representing farm-related 
interests were relieved by the breakup of the trade talks. Although 
cutting tariffs on farm products will be put off, this is no time to 
feel relieved. 
 
Suffering from a rapidly aging population and low productivity, 
Japanese agriculture is now apparently facing a fatal situation. It 
is high time to bravely address agricultural reform. The country has 
to promptly take steps to reduce fallow land, nurture future 
farmers, and expand opportunities for corporations' entry into the 
agriculture sector. 
 
Anyone seriously considering the future of Japanese agriculture 
cannot opt for market closure. There is a need to reform agriculture 
to increase the size of farmland and find ways to support farmers 
without relying on high tariffs. 
 
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If a Democratic administration led by Barrack Obama is launched in 
next year, the United States' economic policy would strongly be 
tinged with protectionism. Obama is clearly calling for a review of 
such trade agreements as the North American Free Trade Agreement 
(NAFTA) and the U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement (FTA) on the 
grounds of protecting jobs in the United States. 
 
Protectionism is rising in the EU as well. French President Nicolas 
Sarkozy has criticized EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson, who 
has been expediting efforts for an accord, saying that farmers in 
the region would suffer a loss. 
 
Even if WTO talks resumed, ironing out differences in views among 
member countries would be even more difficult in view of the 
situations in the United States and the EU. As the economy following 
the United States and the EU, Japan must play a major role rather 
than sitting on the sidelines. 
 
Discouraged by the difficulty of multilateral WTO trade talks, an 
increasing number of countries would probably accelerate their 
bilateral FTA strategies. Concluding FTAs is only a means to 
complement the WTO. It must not be forgotten that the conclusion of 
FTAs among a number of countries under the leadership of such major 
powers as the United States, EU, and China has an exclusive 
element. 
 
Japan must take steps for early resumption of WTO talks 
 
The WTO, which is composed of some 150 countries and regions, is the 
only organization that can build a new framework that can favor the 
entire world with free trade. If member countries march toward 
protectionism and an FTA race, the evolution of the free trade 
system cannot be expected. 
 
The Bretton Woods system was launched in 1944 with the aim of 
bringing stability to the post-WWII global economy. The 
International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and General Agreement 
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the predecessor of the WTO, were 
founded under the system as the pillars of the global economy. 
 
Through tough talks on trade liberalization from the Kennedy Round 
of the 1906s to the Tokyo Round of the 1970s to the Uruguay Round of 
the 1980s-1990s, countries around the world fought the temptation of 
protectionism. As a result of such efforts, the rate of trade in the 
global economy in terns of gross domestic product (GDP) topped 25 
PERCENT  in 2006. 
 
The Doha Round must move forward so as not to allow the free trade 
system to suffer a setback. Member countries, including Japan, must 
take steps for resuming the trade talks without relaxing their 
efforts. 
 
(12) Government considering levying fines on companies that caused 
injury to consumers: Fines of up to 100 million yen to be imposed on 
offenders of injury prevention order 
 
MAINICHI (Page 1) (Full) 
August 1, 2008 
 
The government on August 31 started considering imposing fines up to 
100 million yen on companies that violated the central government's 
 
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injury-prevention order by causing food and food products-related 
injuries to consumers. This policy will be incorporated in a 
consumer injury prevention bill, which the government will submit to 
the upcoming extraordinary Diet session for the purpose of setting 
up a consumer agency in fiscal 2009. Heavy fines are to be imposed, 
the intention being to deter such injuries from occurring. 
Government agencies to be affected will likely criticize the idea of 
imposing such heavy fines as constraining industrial development. 
 
The bill is designed to prevent consumers from suffering injury 
caused by goods and services that are not regulated under existing 
laws, as can be seen in accidents caused by consuming Konjac Jelly. 
The government's Consumer Administration Promotion Council, chaired 
by Takeshi Sasaki, a professor at Gakushuin University Takeshi 
Sasaki, had pointed out in the panel's final reports issued in June 
the need to establish a new law. 
 
At present, each government agency has jurisdiction over relevant 
areas under its own ordinance, such as the Ministry of Economy, 
Trade and Industry (METI) dealing with accidents caused by gas 
equipment and the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare responsible 
for handling food poisoning cases. Such a system results in delayed 
responses. There have also been cases in which sufficient measures 
were not taken when incidents occurred that were not covered under 
existing laws. 
 
The envisaged consumer agency will be solely responsible for 
collecting and analyzing information. It will then recommend that 
relevant government agencies take appropriate measures. The consumer 
injury prevention law will enable the agency to order businesses 
that have caused problems to take necessary measures to prevent a 
recurrence or an expansion of serious accidents affecting consumers. 
This would speed up government responses to damage caused by 
companies. 
 
The bill sets the scope of punishments and the upper limit of fines 
with reference to punitive clauses under existing consumer-related 
laws, such as the Japan Agricultural Standards (JAS) Law. Companies 
will be fined if they disobey orders to recall problem products or 
suspend the use of such. The likelihood is that one-person companies 
will also be subject to prison terms of no longer than a year or a 
fine of no more than 1 million yen. 
 
(13) Behind the scenes of Japan-North Korea abduction negotiations; 
Even Hidekazu Hasuike is distressed 
 
SHUKAN SHINCHO (Page 32) (Abridged) 
August 7, 2008, issue 
 
On July 24, at the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) that was held in 
Singapore, Foreign Minister Koumura repeatedly asked North Korea's 
Foreign Minister Pak Ui Chun about the reinvestigation of the 
abductions, but he did not received a specific answer. Although 
North Korea promised Japan at the June working-level talks to carry 
out a reinvestigation in return for a partial easing of economic 
sanctions, at present, there has been no progress or anything 
forward-looking happening. 
 
In response, Hidekazu Hasuike, the former deputy representative of 
the association of families of abducted Japanese said: "North Korea 
bragged about the abductions having been resolved, so the Japanese 
government could do nothing about it to the other side. In that 
 
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respect, the promise of a reinvestigation, I think, is progress. 
However, until now, our response to North Korea has been solely 
hard-lined, with the result that there have not been responses from 
the North. Whenever I see my brother and talk to him, it makes me 
think what would be the most effective way to deal with North Korea. 
We cannot just simply wave economic sanctions at them; we must also 
be flexible in our responses, perhaps. I think there is a need at 
some point to compromise." 
 
The change in Hasuike's thinking away from his previous hard-line 
stance brought criticism on him from the family association, but his 
decision, painstakingly made, was that any means should be taken in 
order to resolve the abduction issue. 
 
Actually, behind the scenes, Japan-DPRK negotiations may be reaching 
a crucial stage. A senior Foreign Ministry official set the stage: 
"North Korea has sounded us out privately that it is prepared return 
several victims of abduction. The Japanese government's condition is 
that unless the abductees are released, normalization of relations 
will never advance. Having swallowed that, North Korea reportedly 
will transmit to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Hill the names of 
the abduction victims it will repatriate. In addition, talk has 
arisen about the U.S. being the guarantor that the commitments by 
both countries would be carried out." 
 
As a result, Prime Minister Fukuda, when he meets President Bush at 
the Beijing Olympics will inform him whether or not North Korea has 
swallowed those conditions or not. Prime Minister Fukuda would like 
to use the resolving of the abduction issue as a means to boost his 
popularity, but will he instead be swallowing a "poisoned bean 
cake"? 
 
SCHIEFFER