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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Tag Archives | Japan

Monday Morning Java Jolt: Clinton Heads to Asia

japan_clinton_asia_xkan104UPDATE: Clinton arrives in Japan.

Wake up and smell the coffee readers. Taylor is hitting the road for her cross country journey this morning and my goal is to keep you all informed while she’s on the road. Having just made a cross country road trip and move myself just about 4 months ago, I hope Taylor’s is as much fun and trouble-free as mine was.

As Taylor mentioned here yesterday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Asia this week and her trip should give us plenty to talk about. Clinton is traveling to Asia where she will “seek to develop a strong coordinated response to the global financial crisis between the U.S. and Asia’s economic powers during her four-nation regional tour.”

Mrs. Clinton cited, in particular, China’s “robust stimulus plan” as the type of action the Obama administration is hoping to see from Asian nations in an effort to reenergize the global financial system.

“I will be discussing with [Asian countries] the approaches that they’ll be taking” to stimulate their economies “and seeking greater cooperation,” Mrs. Clinton told reporters aboard en route to Alaska from Washington. “The Chinese have a very robust stimulus plan…They are taking internal steps.”

Mrs. Clinton arrives in Tokyo Monday evening and will then travel to Indonesia, South Korea and China.

Clinton will be meeting with “religious readers, university students, and business leaders across the region” and she has “described her trip as primarily a listening tour to learn more about how Washington can develop partnerships to combat key economic, security or environmental issues.” Clinton said that “the information she gathers will feed into the Obama administration’s review of its Asia policy.”

“We have a very broad agenda to deal with when it comes to China,” Mrs. Clinton said. “This first trip will be intended to find a path forward.”

Mrs. Clinton said she’s raise human rights issues in China when she takes part in a town hall meeting in Beijing.

The timing of Clinton’s trip is impeccable given the news that Japan’s economy is tanking again, at the “fatest pace” since the 1970′s:

The sharp downturn is exposing the vulnerability of Japan’s export-driven economic recovery. The dismal figures also place Japan firmly among the worst-hit in the global crisis, dwarfing economic declines in the United States and Europe.

And speaking of the timing of Clinton’s trip to Asia, as Clinton was in flight to Tokyo, there was news that “North Korea was threatening to fire a missile.”

“The North Koreans have already agreed to dismantling,” she said. “We expect them to fulfill the obligations that they entered into.”

The secretary has warned North Korea “to avoid any provocative action and unhelpful rhetoric.”

Clinton said her trip will demonstrate a new U.S. commitment to work with Asian leaders on “problems that no one nation, including ours, can deal with alone.”

Clinton also promised to meet with families of Japanese citizens kidnapped by North Korea in the 1970s and ’80s.

She said, “We do want to press the North Koreans to be more forthcoming with information.”

Needless to say there should be plenty to talk about as we start of the week with a jolt of java and what appears to be the beginning of an interesting week for Secretary Clinton in Asia.

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Into the Night and on to Dawn’s Early Light

Road music. There’s so much, starting with jazz first, Miles Davis, but on long road trips you simply have to have great rock. But then it always comes back to jazz, especially the instrumentals.

Secretary Clinton is in Asia, so there should be some great stuff coming from State while I’m on the road. You can follow what’s going on, as well as see terrific videos. Don’t hesitate to put Hillary items “In the News” for all to see. It’s her first big trip overseas.

The week begins knowing that President Obama prevailed to get his stimulus passed, which he will sign into law this week. It was ugly, but no president has gotten this type of major legislation passed so quickly. Of course, there’s two sides to that coin. For the sake of the country and the watching world, let’s hope it works.

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Clinton to China

Hillary's World
This seems so fitting for her, especially for anyone who remembers her speech when she was first lady. It was a speech that shook the world, all because Hillary Clinton dared to say “women’s rights are human rights.”

Climate is to be a top priority on Secretary Clinton’s first trip, with Japan being the first stop on her Asia trip where economic turmoil will be on the agenda.

From Andrew Revkin of the NY Times on China’s energy focus that includes tackling emissions and greenhouse gases:

As I wrote the other day, it looks like countries are going to remain focused on addressing real-time problems related to energy security (most notably high oil prices) for the time being, even as evidence builds that global warming could fuel turmoil, particularly in already-troubled places like sub-Saharan Africa, in the long run. I ran a panel at a meeting on China, energy, and climate at the Council on Foreign Relations on Tuesday, and in the preceding session, Zhou Dadi, one of the leading figures shaping China’s energy and climate policies said energy security will remain China’s top priority for a long while to come. He restated the longstanding mantra from China on climate, saying the responsibility for blunting emissions curves for greenhouse gases will remain with industrialized powers for a long time to come.

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Clinton to East Asia, Zbig & Scowcroft to Iran?

This is a long travel day for me, so I put together some links, including some emailed to me, that involve foreign policy, as well as the economy. While I’m traveling over the next days, Pamela from DemocraticDaily will be on board to help out. Please welcome her, though some of you no doubt remember her from her previous guest posting. I’ll be writing too, but I won’t have a regular schedule.

Secretary Clinton’s schedule for the day is here and includes a working dinner on East Asia, which is said to be her first trip abroad.

David Ignatius picks Obama’s Iran “a Team”:

This willingness to embrace new ideas was especially clear when Brzezinski and Scowcroft talked about Iran. Both believed that the Bush administration’s policy of isolating Iran — and trying to dictate terms for negotiations about its nuclear program — had been a mistake. Scowcroft argued that the United States had approached Iran “emotionally,” while Brzezinski said the administration had followed “a self-defeating policy that simply perpetuates the existing difficulty.”

Steve Clemons has an interesting read on “The Economicization of US Foreign Policy.”

Up front on the economic scene is a column in the WSJ. The title alone gets it included today: The GOP Has a Dumb Mortgage Idea.

Few philosophers have done more good than Locke and Montesquieu, whose advocacy of divided government inspired America’s Founders. Our history, and the less happy past of nations without checks and balances, suggests the wisdom of John Adams’s statement: “a people cannot be long free, nor ever happy, whose government is in one Assembly.” Today, the Senate Republicans bear the heavy burden of providing the primary check on one-party rule in America.

For that reason, it is particularly disappointing to see Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell embrace “providing government-backed, 4% fixed mortgages to any credit-worthy borrower” as his alternative to the Barack Obama/Nancy Pelosi stimulus package. Our nation needs Mr. McConnell’s leadership, but this idea is bad economics and not a real alternative to the vision of America offered by Democrats. It also stands at odds with all that is good in Republicanism.

China could raise wages to stimulate demand:

Asians must either make less stuff and spend more time cutting each other’s hair, or they must buy more themselves. Either way, households will have to increase spending. But things have been going in the wrong direction. Assumptions about the region’s swelling middle class notwithstanding, consumption as a proportion of a fast-rising GDP has been falling – and swiftly at that.

Brad Setser writes for the Council on Foreign Relations regarding China and trade.

Macroman reports that there is a bit of optimism in the air about China right now. Loan growth was strong in January. Steel prices have picked up a bit. The latest Chinese purchasing managers survey wasn’t as bad as the last one. The fall in the pace of contraction in activity has generated hope that China’s economy will rebound later in the year. China’s stimulus will help, as will the fact that China’s state banks are liquid and have clear instructions to lend …

Everyone looks at China through their own lens. My lens is the trade data. And there I still don’t find much basis for optimism.

“Boo Hoo from the Boardroom” is one of my favorites today:

As it turns out, there’s a performance clause in class resentment. To fail and still walk away with a killing is a break in the social contract simply because it doesn’t work that way in real life for most people.

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