Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09TOKYO1839
2009-08-12 06:55:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Tokyo
Cable title:  

DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/12/09

Tags:  OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA 
pdf how-to read a cable
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 TOKYO 001839 

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 08/12/09

INDEX:

(1) Disease of politics (Part 1): Political parties being
manipulated by populism (Sankei)
(2) Employment measures in manifestos of LDP, DPJ (Part 2): Even if
workers receive training, finding job is difficult (Yomiuri)
(3) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Key officials to
the DPJ's strategy on the U.S.(Bungeishunju)
(4) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Battle for
promotion at the Ministry of Defense (Bungeishunju)
(6) EDITORIALS
(7) Prime Minister's schedule, August 11 (Nikkei)

ARTICLES:

(1) Disease of politics (Part 1): Political parties being
manipulated by populism

SANKEI (Page
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 TOKYO 001839

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 08/12/09

INDEX:

(1) Disease of politics (Part 1): Political parties being
manipulated by populism (Sankei)
(2) Employment measures in manifestos of LDP, DPJ (Part 2): Even if
workers receive training, finding job is difficult (Yomiuri)
(3) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Key officials to
the DPJ's strategy on the U.S.(Bungeishunju)
(4) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Battle for
promotion at the Ministry of Defense (Bungeishunju)
(6) EDITORIALS
(7) Prime Minister's schedule, August 11 (Nikkei)

ARTICLES:

(1) Disease of politics (Part 1): Political parties being
manipulated by populism

SANKEI (Page 1) (Slightly abridged)
August 12, 2009

Minoru Kiuchi, 44, an independent candidate in the Shizuoka No. 7
Constituency for the upcoming House of Representatives election,
held a gathering in Hamamatsu City in early August. There, Kiuchi
apologized when one participant said: "It was meaningless to use an
election poster featuring a celebrity."

The celebrity - Kaori Manabe - complained on her blog: "My picture
was used without my permission," kicking up trouble. The trouble was
caused due to a mistake made by an intermediary agent, so Kiuchi
decided to remove the posters on July 31.

In the previous Lower House election, Kiuchi was forced to leave the
Liberal Democratic Party for his opposition to the controversial
postal privatization bill and was defeated by Satsuki Katayama, an
"assassin" candidate. In part because he did not go back to the
party afterward, some persons saw him as a person of conviction.
Given this, many people were disappointed, feeling that Kiuchi was
"defeated by populism."

Asked why he used a picture with Manabe, Kiuchi said:


"I intended to bring politics closer to young people. ... I have no
excuse even if people claim my deed stemmed from populism. ... In
the election campaign, I set forth the principles of not making
conflicting remarks, currying favor with the public, and abandoning
my efforts, I am determined to stick to my beliefs and principles."

The trend of currying favor with the public has dominated the
campaigning for the upcoming election, as seen from even Kiuchi's
dependence on a famous person.

A similar strife involving the LDP was also reported recently. The
party asked Miyazaki Governor Kokubaru Miyazaki to run in the
election on the party's ticket. The LDP aimed to turn the tables by
making use of Miyazaki's name recognition. Faced with opposition
from some party members, however, the party gave up this idea. The
approach to Higashikokubaru is still being criticized as
representing the party's moral corruption.

Ichiji Tozuka, 78, former executive secretary of the LDP Gunma
prefectural chapter who worked for prime ministers Takeo Fukuda,

TOKYO 00001839 002 OF 008


Yasuhiro Nakasone and Keizo Obuchi, complained:

"It was inconceivable for the LDP to make such a behavior in the
past. (Election Strategy Committee Chairman) Makoto Koga probably
asked the governor to run in the election for the sake of the party,
but if there were an influential person who can unite the party and
fight against the opposition camp, such as (former secretary
general) Hiromu Nonaka, the person must have scolded him, saying,
'Don't take such an absurd action. ... The party and party members
have slacked recently. That is why they depend on the power of the
wind."

The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is also dependent on the power
of "a change of government." A senior party member said: "The
voters, rather than supporting the DPJ, must be hopeful of seeing a
change of government once." Based on this view, the main opposition
party has emphasized the need for regime change.

Under such circumstances, the DPJ has altered the contents of its
campaign manifesto in response to critical comments. In response to
a call from Osaka Governor Toru Hashimoto, the party added a pledge
to set up a forum for talks between the central and local
governments. Faced with criticism of its proposed conclusion of a
Japan-U.S. free trade agreement (FTA),the DPJ rewrote the
expressions.

In the previous Lower House election, the LDP won a landslide
victory, with the "Koizumi drama," but was politics carried out as
the voters anticipated? The upcoming election is gradually becoming
a theater-type election with the title of "a change of government."

Journalist Yoshiko Sakurai warned:

"In single-seat constituencies, one party tends to win an
overwhelming victory under the two-party system. This time, with a
focus on a 'change of government,' the people appear to be just
interested in bringing about changes, with policies hardly
discussed. Politicians must speak of their policies, but they are
eagerly trying to curry favor with the voters. This is indisputably
populism. I am worried out the future of Japanese politics."

The upcoming Lower House election is likely to be an opportunity for
the voters to choose which political party is more acceptable, given
that the voters have rejected LDP-led politics has been rejected,
rather than supporting the DPJ.

(2) Employment measures in manifestos of LDP, DPJ (Part 2): Even if
workers receive training, finding job is difficult

YOMIURI (Page 3) (Full)
August 11, 2009

When a 39-year-old woman dispatched by a temporary staff agency in
Tokyo informed the agency that the company planned to slash her
hourly wage by 40%, the person in charge at the agency said, "You've
worked there more than 10 years. Why not quit?"

The employee continued to work at the company, renewing her contract
every 6 or 12 months, and has now been there 12 years. She took
leave last fall to give birth and returned to the company in
December. But she found her assignments sharply reduced due to the
economic downturn. Her monthly wage, which sometimes topped 400,000

TOKYO 00001839 003 OF 008


yen including overtime, was reduced by half, and in August her
hourly wage will also be cut. "The worker dispatch system is
convenient for companies," she complained, "but the companies do not
protect dispatched workers."

In 1986, the government approved 13 types of work that could be
performed by temporary workers. After the government deregulated the
temp agency industry in principle in 1999, the number of people
registering with temporary staff agencies skyrocketed to 3,812,353
in fiscal 2007, a 26-fold increase from fiscal 1986.

As measures to improve unstable employment conditions, both the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Democratic Party of Japan
(DPJ) include in their policy platforms for the upcoming general
election planks to restrict the short-term employment of non-regular
workers. But Haken Union Chief secretary Shichiro Sekine asserted
that "it is imperative to improve working conditions not only for
dispatched workers but for all fixed-term contract workers by such
means as placing contract or temporary workers on the regular
payroll."

Measures for jobless young people are also urgently needed. A
breakdown of dispatched workers by age bracket discloses that those
aged 25 to 34 total 500,000, the largest number, according to the
Labor Force Statistics of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and
Communications (average figure for 2008). This age group also
contains the highest portion of people who have been unemployed for
more than one year. If people remain non-regular workers for a long
period, they will not acquire or enhance skills, and so it will be
difficult for them to find new jobs if they are laid off.

The LDP's manifesto includes measures to beef up vocational training
to give young people practical knowledge and measures to place
part-time workers on regular payrolls. In its manifesto the DPJ
pledges to raise the minimum hourly wage from the current 703 yen to
1,000 yen.

But among business groups there has been a backlash to the DPJ
proposal. They claim that raising the minimum wage could increase
bankruptcies among small businesses and put more people out of work.


NPO-Sodateage Net President Kudo, which provides support for young
people neither employed nor in training, also harbors doubts about
the measure," "There are many cases of young people pulling
themselves up by the bootstraps while starting in simple jobs at low
wages."

The two parties' manifestos include livelihood-support measures for
people receiving job training. "Under the current situation, even if
job-seekers receive training, they will have a hard time finding
employment with a company," says Open University of Japan Professor
Michiko Miyamoto, commenting on those measures. "It is also
necessary to address medium- and long-term tasks, in addition to
measures to deal with (unemployment) during the ongoing recession --
measures including how to make use of female and elderly workers."

(3) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Key officials to
the DPJ's strategy on the U.S.

BUNGEISHUNJU (Page 235) (Full)
September 2009

TOKYO 00001839 004 OF 008



The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) has been shifting conspicuously
to a more pragmatic line in foreign and security policies as its
takeover of political power approaches.

It is noteworthy that on the premise that a new Japan-U.S. security
declaration is expected to be drawn up between the two countries by
summer 2010 at the latest, the DPJ has: (1) condoned the
continuation of the refueling mission for ships of the multinational
forces in the Indian ocean; (2) condoned the U.S. "nuclear umbrella"
(nuclear deterrence); and (3) toned down its pledge to "embark on a
revision" of the Japan-U.S. Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) to
"suggesting a revision" of this agreement. It is reported that this
was mainly due to the advice of Jitsuro Terashima, chairman of Japan
Research Institute, who enjoys the great confidence of President
Yukio Hatoyama and who is still asked to give long briefings to
Hatoyama even after he became DPJ president.

Under the circumstances, there is great interest in the foreign
affairs bureaucracy in the activities of former Ambassador to the
United Nations (UN) Yukio Sato (currently vice chairman of the Japan
Institute of International Affairs; class of 1961 in the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs (MOFA)),who went to Washington in late June
supposedly to attend a seminar.

Sato was director general of the North American Affairs Bureau when
Hatoyama was deputy chief cabinet secretary under the administration
of Morihiro Hosokawa. Together with Hatoyama, he was a member of the
party accompanying Hosokawa on his famous trip to the U.S. to "say
no" in 1994. Sato and Hatoyama have been close friends since then,
and the truth about Sato's trip to Washington is that he was asked
by Hatoyama to re-establish contact with his old acquaintances in
the U.S. Democratic Party. Within the Obama administration, Sato is
a friend of Richard Holbrooke, special representative for
Afghanistan and Pakistan who is close to Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton. Holbrooke was national security adviser to the president
during the Clinton administration. He is also close to Anthony Lake,
who has served as President Barack Obama's adviser on foreign policy
since the presidential election campaign.

Sato served as chief of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty Division
under the North American Affairs Bureau, director general of the
Intelligence and Analysis Service, and director general of the North
American Affairs Bureau, but he lost to former Ambassador to the
U.S. Shunji Yanai, who also joined MOFA in 1961, in the race to
become vice minister. His last position before retirement was
ambassador to the UN. However, he has built extensive personal
connections with the U.S. Democratic Party under the Carter
administration in the second half of the 1970s. His friendly
relationship with then House of Representatives member Mel Levine is
said to be the starting point of his network of personal connections
in the Democratic Party. His close ties with Holbrooke and Lake were
built through Levine, who is now a Democratic lobbyist.

The DPJ under Hatoyama is exerting efforts to tap on talented people
in MOFA (current vice minister is Mitoji Yabunaka, batch of 1969)
who are not part of the mainstream faction. One of them is former
deputy vice minister of foreign affairs Hitoshi Tanaka, a
contemporary of Yabunaka who is rumored to join the Prime Minister's
Official Residence (Kantei).

(4) From the "Kasumigaseki Confidential" column: Battle for

TOKYO 00001839 005 OF 008


promotion at the Ministry of Defense

BUNGEISHUNJU (Pages 234-235)
September 2009

The Ministry of Defense (MOD) implemented its regular personnel
placements of senior officials of the internal bureaus on August 1,
but the retirement of Administrative Vice Minister Kohei Masuda (who
joined the old Defense Agency in 1975) and his replacement by Kimito
Nakae (who joined the Ministry of Finance in 1976),director general
of the Minister's Secretariat, was not included. It is very unusual
for appointments already reported by the newspapers to be revoked,
but the background to this is the fierce conflict between Defense
Minister Yasukazu Hamada and Masuda on personnel issues.

Masuda was promoted as vice minister two years ago as the reluctant
choice to replace his alleged archenemy, former Vice Minister
Takemasa Moriya (class of 1971) from his previous job of director
general of the Bureau of Education and Training. As if negating all
of the "legacy" from the Moriya era, he has adopted an "exclusively
defensive" posture, shelving all the important pending issues,
including U.S. Forces Japan (USFJ) realignment and the selection of
major military hardware, and was even evasive on the question of
dispatching the Maritime Self-Defense Force to waters off Somalia at
first. On the other hand, he has been keen on the organizational
reform of the internal bureaus, such as the abolition of the Bureau
of Operational Policy, which became the decisive factor in the
decline of the internal bureaus' influence. As a result, a play-safe
attitude and an air of lethargy prevail in the ministry. His
reputation among his subordinates is very negative.

Furthermore, the Self-Defense Forces officers also have a low
opinion of him for his poor handling of the collision of the Aegis
ship Atago with a fishing boat, causing confusion both at home and
abroad.

However, Masuda is also shrewd. It is reported that he intends to
become the "power behind the throne" in the MOD with remote control
from the Prime Minister's Official Residence (Kantei) by replacing
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Kyoji Yanagisawa (batch of 1970) -
which is very unusual for a former vice minister.

For this reason, Masuda had wanted to frontload personnel
appointments to April at first to avoid the new administration's
interference in appointments to the Kantei after a DPJ
administration is formed. However, when he realized that this would
not be possible, he then maneuvered to postpone the regular
personnel changes, but he was stopped by Minister Hamada. Hamada
wanted to tap all the able officials in the ministry regardless of
their relationship with Moriya in order to bring some fresh air into
the MOD, so he ordered the appointment of Hironori Kanazawa (batch
of 1977),head of the Equipment Procurement and Construction Office,
as chief of the Minister's Secretariat. Masuda, who feared the
decline of his own influence with the comeback of the bold and
big-hearted Kanagawa to power, countered with the nomination of
National Defense Academy Vice President Takumi Okazaki (batch of
1977),who is subservient to him, for the same position. When he
found out that Hamada was determined to appoint Kanazawa, he
resorted to an outrageous plan of staying in his job, freezing
Nakae's promotion as vice minister, and through this, stop Kanazawa
from becoming chief of the Minister's Secretariat.


TOKYO 00001839 006 OF 008


While Masuda explains to people around him that, "If we make Nakae
vice minister now, the poor guy may lose his job under a DPJ
administration," what is happening is also a result of his own
calculations.

Actually, Nakae, who hails from the MOF, is close to DPJ supreme
adviser Hirohisa Fujii, who is also a former MOF official, so there
is practically no objection in the DPJ to his becoming the vice
defense minister. What Masuda is saying is unconvincing.
Furthermore, at about the same time, unconfirmed rumors of Nakae
being involved with a scandal had been circulating in the
government, causing a delay in his background check. As a result,
the appointment of Nakae as vice minister and Kanazawa as chief of
the Minister's Secretariat was not included in the appointments
dated August 1.

Although Hamada has attempted to fight back to realize his plan to
appoint Nakae and Kanazawa, Masuda is defiant, since he no longer
fears a Liberal Democratic Party minister. He has absolutely no
intention to give up his job as vice minister under Hamada. For this
reason, ministry officials criticize him behind his back for "giving
top priority to his own interest; he is even worse than Moriya."

(5) TOP HEADLINES

Asahi:
Shizuoka earthquake: Collapsed portion of Tomei Expressway to be
restored Thursday; 110 injured, 3,340 houses damaged

Mainichi:

DPJ announces revisions to five planks in manifesto, including FTA
with U.S.

Yomiuri:
110 injured in quake in Shizuoka registering intensity of lower 6
(on Japanese seismic scale of 7)

Nikkei:
Sapporo Breweries to buy 20% of Pokka in three-way tie-up with
Meiji

Sankei:
DPJ makes revisions and additions to manifesto, including FTA with
U.S.; announces final version in an unusual move to appease backlash
from different groups

Tokyo Shimbun:
Shizuoka earthquake: 112 injured in three prefectures and Tokyo

Akahata:
Open the way to the future by growing the party that has advanced
history

(6) EDITORIALS

Asahi:
(1) Shizuoka quake with intensity of lower 6 (on Japanese seismic
scale of 7): Are we prepared for impending TOKAI quake?
(2) Burma: Military junta threatening Asia

Mainichi:

TOKYO 00001839 007 OF 008


(1) Torrential rains hit western Japan: Thoroughly investigate
problems exacerbating the damage
(2) Shizuoka quake: Fear nature and prepare for the worst

Yomiuri:
(1) Disaster archipelago: Secure reliable evacuation and relief
system
(2) Aung San Suu Kyi: Guilty sentence runs counter to
democratization

Nikkei:
(1) Shock of Shizuoka quake evoked TOKAI quake, which could occur in
near future
(2) Unreasonable court decision against Aung San Suu Kyi
unforgivable

Sankei:
(1) Yasukuni Shrine visit: What has become of the Prime Minister's
duty as a leader?
(2) Earthquake and typhoon: Prepare for multiple natural disasters

Tokyo Shimbun:
(1) Quake and typhoon: What will we do if they both hit at the same
time?
(2) Recommendations by National Personnel Authority: Substantive
reform under next administration urged

Akahata:
(1) General election and young people: Make choices that will
realize young people's wishes

(7) Prime Minister's schedule, August 11

NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full)
August 12, 2009

08:53
Met Tetsuro Ito, the Cabinet's crisis management officer, at the
Kantei.

09:20
Met National Personnel Authority President Tani at the Kantei, with
Chief Cabinet Secretary Kawamura and Internal Affairs Minister Sato
present. Met with Kawamura, followed by meetings with Deputy Chief
Cabinet Secretary Matsumoto and Disaster Prevention Minister
Hayashi.

10:02
Attended a cabinet meeting. Later attended a meeting of cabinet
ministers involved in drawing up monthly economic reports.

11:15
Handed a letter of appointment for the post of assistant deputy
chief cabinet secretary to the former Defense Ministry's chief
secretary Nishikawa. Later, met former Lower House member Akira
Shichijo, Tokushima Prefectural Chapter Secretary General Takeuchi
and others. Next met Ambassador to Hungary Ito, Ambassador to Libya
Nishigahiro, and others.

12:48
Recorded a video message for the international student exchange
program "Japan Tent."

TOKYO 00001839 008 OF 008



13:02
Met former prime minister Mori, followed by Cabinet Intelligence
Director Mitani.

15:28
Visited the Suzuki Kantaro Memorial Hall in Noda City, Chiba
Prefecture. Delivered a stump speech in its parking lot.

17:34
Delivered a stump speech in front of JR Matsudo Station.

18:28
Delivered a stump speech in front of JR Ichikawa Station.

19:47
Arrived at the Kantei.

20:45
Recorded a news program at Nippon Television Network Co. in
Higashi-Shimbashi.

22:01
Returned to his official residence.

ZUMWALT