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Cablegate: Daily Summary of Japanese Press 10/10/08

Published: Fri 10 Oct 2008 08:00 AM
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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 10/10/08
INDEX:
(1) Foreign Minister Nakasone: No contact from the U.S. about
removing North Korea from the list of terrorist-sponsoring states
(Nikkei)
(2) Editorial: North Korea nuclear verification-Terror delisting
unacceptable (Sankei)
(3) Interview with former BOJ Assistant Governor Eiji Hirano: G-7
should send strong message to contain financial crisis (Mainichi)
(4) Editorial: International financial cooperation; New thinking
needed in addressing unexperienced crisis (Mainichi)
(5) Prime Minister Aso, seven Aso cabinet members found to have
received donations from controversial companies (Akahata)
(6) Three former DPJ presidents challenge verbal confrontation
against premier (Yomiuri)
(7) TOP HEADLINES
(8) EDITORIALS
(9) Prime Minister's schedule, October 9 (Nikkei)
(Corrected copy): Legislation to extend refueling mission until Jan.
2010 likely to pass Diet on Oct. 24, at earliest (Sankei)
There will be no Daily Summary on October 13 - an American holiday.
ARTICLES:
(1) Foreign Minister Nakasone: No contact from the U.S. about
removing North Korea from the list of terrorist-sponsoring states
NIKKEI ONLINE (Full)
October 10, 2008
At a press conference following a cabinet meeting this morning,
Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone commented on the issue of the
U.S. removing North Korea from the list of states sponsoring
terrorism. Making it clear that there had not been any contact from
the U.S. about delisting, he said, "The United States will be
talking to our country prior to its making a final decision." Chief
Cabinet Secretary Tateo Kawamura also announced at his press
briefing, "At this point in time, there has been no formal contact
from the U.S. about delisting the DPRK in mid-October."
Regarding the contents of the U.S.-DPRK talks on North Korea's
verification of its nuclear programs, Foreign Minister Nakasone said
that when he met U.S. Ambassador to Japan Schieffer, "he told me
that there were remaining points that were still not confirmed."
Chief Cabinet Secretary Kawamura also indicated, "Right now, there
seems to be a verification process going on within the U.S.
government."
On the possibility that the delisting would occur before there was
any progress on the abduction issue, Foreign Minister Nakasone
stated: "We are asking that the abduction issue be quickly surveyed
as an abduction issue. It is not that the nuclear issue, which is in
TOKYO 00002834 002 OF 010
the midst of being considered by the U.S., in not unrelated, but we
are thinking of separating it off."
(2) Editorial: North Korea nuclear verification-Terror delisting
unacceptable
SANKEI (Page 2) (Full)
October 10, 2008
On the issue of North Korea's nuclear verification, the United
States and North Korea, having forgone the critical pending issues,
will now likely proceed with delisting North Korea as a state
sponsor of terrorism. Delisting with no guarantee of strict
verification is contrary to the principle of having North Korea
completely abandon its nuclear programs, and Japan should not accept
it.
A U.S. special envoy briefed the Japanese Foreign Ministry yesterday
on the progress of talks held between the United States and North
Korea during the recent visit to North Korea of U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State Hill, chief U.S. delegate to the six-party talks
over North Korea's nuclear programs. What was discussed there in the
talks is under wraps. However, North Korea's concurrence is
reportedly preconditioned on inspecting its nuclear facilities.
There is also a news report saying North Korea's uranium enrichment,
which North Korea has refused to declare, and its nuclear
proliferation, are not subject to verification.
The six-party talks have reached an agreement, which is North
Korea's promise to come up with a "complete and accurate"
declaration of its nuclear activities for strict verification. In
June, North Korea declared its nuclear programs. Its nuclear
declaration, however, did not include uranium enrichment. The United
States has called for North Korea to accept overall verification and
delayed its action to remove North Korea from the terror blacklist.
North Korea, reacting negatively, called off its process of
disabling its nuclear facilities. However, verifying only the
existing nuclear facilities is insufficient to have North Korea
completely abandon its nuclear facilities. It is also a categorical
imperative to uncover North Korea's uranium enrichment as well as
its nuclear proliferation to third countries. That is why the United
States has stopped its delisting procedures at President Bush's
judgment and called for North Korea to show and implement a reliable
verification plan.
North Korea, whenever it is inconvenient, will always play tough and
press for concessions. Concurring on vague verification could result
in a once-avoided mistake.
Delisting, should it be based on concessions with no principles,
would also have a serious impact on the issue of Japanese nationals
abducted to North Korea. In June, Japan and North Korea held talks.
At the time, North Korea promised to reinvestigate. Nevertheless,
North Korea has yet to translate its promise into action.
Time and again, Japan and the United States have confirmed their
stance of working together to seek solutions to the nuclear and
abduction issues under their principles. When Prime Minister Taro
Aso met with abductee families yesterday, he also indicated that the
abduction issue still remains unresolved and is an "extremely
serious" problem.
TOKYO 00002834 003 OF 010
The matter of primary concern is that offhand delisting could rock
the Japan-U.S. alliance's unity. U.S. Ambassador to Japan Schieffer
said yesterday that the president has not decided anything.
Prime Minister Aso should exactly convey such awareness to the U.S.
government, and he should call on the U.S. government to hand down
the right judgment. We want Japan and the United States to team up
with each other and make North Korea keep its word.
(3) Interview with former BOJ Assistant Governor Eiji Hirano: G-7
should send strong message to contain financial crisis
MAINICHI (Page 9) (Full)
October 10, 2008
The Mainichi Shimbun interviewed Eiji Hirano, executive vice
president of Toyota Financial Services and a former Bank of Japan
assistant governor, prior to the upcoming meeting of the Group of
Seven (G-7) finance ministers and central bank governors in
Washington on Oct. 10.
-- The global financial crisis is in a critical state.
A financial bailout bill was enacted in the U.S. But since it was
once rejected by the Congress, an increasing number of people began
to take the pessimistic view that a solution of the crisis with
public funds might be difficult. The crisis has spilled into Europe
and the real economy, and this is also a negative factor. Even so,
the real economy has not bottomed out. A drastic solution is to
inject public funds into financial institutions. The U.S. should
immediately take this measure.
-- The central banks of the U.S. and Europe slashed interest rates
on Oct. 8.
If it were under normal circumstances, the banks would have taken
that step after the upcoming meeting. But reflecting growing
tensions in the market, they must have judged it necessary to take
action before the meeting in order to win praise from market
players. The demonstration of their cooperative stance must work
effectively to ease the tensions in the market. But that is not a
step to resolve the lack of funds in financial institutions, a
problem lying behind the ongoing global financial crisis.
-- U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson hinted at the possibility
of injecting capital into the banking system.
It is necessary for the G-7 to back up the U.S. Britain has revealed
plans to inject funds, so a lack of unity among the G-7 nations is
undesirable. Taking the crisis seriously, the G-7 should send a
strong message expressing a determination to take every possible
mean. If the U.S. promptly injects capital, the global economy is
expected to bottom out in the latter half of next year. But if the
measure is delayed, it would take three years until the system is
completely recovered.
-- The yen's value significantly surged against the dollar.
The current financial crisis may lower the United States' status
over the long run, but I do not think the U.S. dollar will
immediately plunge because the Japanese and European economies also
TOKYO 00002834 004 OF 010
remain fragile. I do not think concerted intervention (to prevent a
further drop in the dollar's value) is necessary at this stage. The
financial crisis is behind the current exchange rate fluctuation, so
the top priority task in the coming G-7 meeting is how to overcome
the ongoing financial crisis.
(4) Editorial: International financial cooperation; New thinking
needed in addressing unexperienced crisis
MAINICHI (Page 5) (Full)
October 10, 2008
Financial authorities flustered by a surge of panic in the market
urgently adopt a package of measures, they then look into another
package in the wake of another panic -- there seems to be no end to
the cascade of this sloppy approach by financial officials.
The U.S. Economic Stabilization Act was legislated after
complications were overcome. However, the global financial market is
continuing to go on a wild ride. Financial uncertainties are far
from being addressed. It appears that the crisis is nearing the
unknown phase.
Deeply alarmed about the development of the situation, the central
banks of the U.S. and Europe carried out coordinated rate cuts. They
aimed to put an end to market anxieties, by making a public appeal
that they are ready to address the crisis in unison.
The coordinated rate cuts themselves were a desirable step. However,
the measure was not powerful enough to change the situation. This is
because cooperation among major industrialized countries was no more
than a traditional step. The market is continuing to make nervous
moves.
Prior to the coordinated rate cuts, British Prime Minister Brown,
who has decided to inject public money into the market in an
unprecedented move, said, "The time for adhering to a conventional
thinking or outmoded doctrine is over. It is time to take a
ground-breaking intervention step to dig into the heart of the
matter." He is correct.
The greatest problem is that credit, the major premise for financial
institutions, has almost disappeared. Nobody is willing to provide
funds for fear of loans turning sour. The blocked cash flow is
beginning to threaten the real economy's activities.
It is impossible to regain credit with the piecemeal implementation
of measures based on the conventional concept taken only after being
prodded by the market. An innovative approach unfettered by the
conventional thinking is sought.
This must be done very quickly. Otherwise, it would be impossible to
hold out against market movements. U.S. Treasury Secretary Paulson
indicated a proactive stance to the injection of public money. It is
imperative for him to put it into practice, instead of just
referring to such a possibility.
A meeting of the Group of Seven (G-7) finance ministers and central
bank governors is to be held, while drawing unprecedentedly
heightened interest from the market. It is time for G-7 member
nations to cooperate, based on a new thinking. It is only natural
for each country to settle its own problems. However, since the
TOKYO 00002834 005 OF 010
crisis is increasingly becoming global, it is important to come up
with a global policy measure beyond the traditional framework.
For instance, what should be done, if a country finds it impossible
to deal with the crisis it is facing, creating a fear of causing a
serious setback to the international financial system, should the
situation be left unattended? It is way more difficult to take part
in an operation to bail out overseas financial institutions.
However, industrialized countries are responsible for protecting the
global system, because the fallout of the financial collapse could
spread beyond national boundaries. Creativity and courage are facing
a testing time.
The unprecedented crisis can only be tided over with new thinking
and cooperative arrangements.
(5) Prime Minister Aso, seven Aso cabinet members found to have
received donations from controversial companies
AKAHATA (Page 14) (Full)
October 10, 2008
It was discovered yesterday that the fund-raising bodies of five Aso
cabinet ministers had received political donations from companies
charged with bid-rigging practices by the Japan Fair Trade
Commission. The number of Aso cabinet members whose fund-raising
bodies received donations from shady companies now totals eight,
including Prime Minister Taro Aso and Foreign Minister Hirofumi
Nakasone.
Finance Minister Nakagawa
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Hokkaido No. 11 chapter headed by
Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa received a total of 1.66 million
yen in donations from three companies that were warned due to
violations of the Antimonopoly Law from 2004 through 2007.
The companies in question include: Kushiro Seisakusho Co. (in
Hokkaido); Kobe Steel, Ltd. (Tokyo); and Nittoc Co. (Tokyo). Kushiro
Seisakusho and Kobe Steel were warned by the FTC over a bridge
bid-rigging practice in September 2005. Nittoc was warned in May
2002 by the FTC in connection with a bid-rigging practice in a slope
protection project ordered by Kanagawa Prefecture.
According to the chapter's political funding report, Kobe Steel
donated 50,000 yen each in 2005 and 2007. Kushiro Seisakusho
contributed 120,000 yen in 2005 and 240,000 yen each in 2006 and
2007. Nittoc donated 240,000 yen annually from 2004 through 2007.
METI Minister Nikai
The LDP Wakayama Prefecture No. 3 chapter headed by Economy, Trade
and Industry Minister Toshihiro Nikai received 2.53 million yen in
donations from three companies even after the discovery of the fact
that they had been ordered to suspend business by the Ministry of
Land, Infrastructure and Transport.
According to the chapter's report on political funds, the
Nikai-headed chapter received 1.44 million yen from Nishijima
Seisakusho (in Takatsuki City, Osaka), which was warned to cease and
desist all activities due to its bid-rigging practice in a sewage
treatment facility project ordered by Tokyo Metropolitan government,
TOKYO 00002834 006 OF 010
from 2004 to 2007. It also received 850,000 yen during the same
period from Nankai Katsuma Co. (Tsu City), which was excluded from
the list of companies designated for competitive bidding due to a
design error in bridge pier antiseismic reinforcement work. In 2006
and 2007, it then received 240,000 yen from Ars Bridge & Engineering
Co. (Tokushima City), and was ordered to suspend business due to its
involvement in a bid-rigging practice in a project ordered by the
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport and others.
The Wakayama No. 3 chapter also received 3.8 million yen from
Nitori, which was warned by the FTC to prevent a recurrence of
illegally reducing payments to subcontractors.
Declining Birthrate Minister Obuchi
The LDP Gunma Prefecture No. 5 chapter headed by Minister of State
for Declining Birthrate Yuko Obuchi received a total of 3.18 million
yen from 2004 through 2006 from six companies, including Sanko Air
Conditioning Co. (Osaka City), which was excluded from the list of
companies designated for competitive bidding over its involvement in
the Defense Facilities Administration Agency-led bid-rigging
practice, Dai-Dan Co., and Tekken Co.
Land, Infrastructure and Transport Minister Kaneko
The LDP Gifu Prefecture No. 4 chapter headed by Land, Infrastructure
and Transport Minister Kazuyoshi Kaneko received a total of 360,000
yen in donations from 2005 to 2007 from Abe Kogyo (which changed the
name to Abe Nikko Kogyo Co. in July 2006), which was warned by the
FTC to end its activities over its bid-ridding practice in a project
ordered by the Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport.
Consumer Affairs Minister Noda
The LDP Gifu Prefecture No. 1 chapter headed by Minister of State
for Consumer Affairs Seiko Noda received a total of 210,000 yen in
2005 and 2007 from Abe Kogyo.
(6) Three former DPJ presidents challenge verbal confrontation
against premier
YOMIURI (Page 4) (Full)
October 8, 2008
The DPJ had former Deputy President Naoto Kan and former Vice
Presidents Katsuya Okada and Seiji Maehara take the podium at a
meeting of the Lower House Budget Committee on October 7. The three
engaged in a battle of words against Prime Minister Aso, while
demonstrating the party's policy and their own stances with an eye
on the next Lower House election. However, there were visibly scenes
where they were arguing on different planes.
The DPJ picked the three as debaters representing the party with the
aim of making an appeal to the public that the DPJ has abundant
personnel who can run the government, as one senior DPJ official
said.
Kan, who took the podium first, emphatically rebutted a criticism
that revenue resources to finance the DPJ's policy are unclear, a
claim that the government and the ruling camp, starting with Prime
Minister Aso, have repeatedly made.
TOKYO 00002834 007 OF 010
Aware that the debate was being broadcast on television, Kan used a
panel carrying the words "DPJ government's four-year revenue source
plan" and explained, using gestures, that it is possible to secure a
total of 56.9 trillion yen in revenue sources over four years
starting in fiscal 2009, by cutting back on public works. He pressed
Aso, saying, "We have clarified the revenue sources. The government
and the ruling parties have yet to clarify revenue resources to
finance a fixed-sum tax break and a rise in the portion of the basic
pension funded from tax revenues. This is not fair."
The prime minister rebutted Kan by saying, "The government and the
ruling parties are responsible for implementing policies properly.
We will work out the revenue source issue at a meeting of the Tax
Research Commission to be held at the end of the year." Finance
Minister Nakagawa opposed Kan, saying, "Given the DPJ's
explanations, I found more inaccurate points about revenue sources."
Regarding revenue sources for the fixed-sum tax cut, he simply said,
"We will discuss the matter later in the days ahead."
Okada, who took the podium after Kan, focused on measures to combat
global warming, his bailiwick. When he asked Aso whether he intends
to succeed former Prime Minister Fukuda's long-term goal of cutting
global warming gas emissions by 60 PERCENT -80 PERCENT , the prime
minister was at a loss, because he did not know the target figure.
Okada criticized the three-part reform (tax grant cuts from the
central government to local entities, slashing of central government
subsidies and a shift in tax revenues sources from the central
government to local governments), which the prime minister compiled
as internal affairs minister, calling it a "failure." He pursued
Aso, asking, "How can you carry out decentralization, if you become
prime minister?"
Aso stressed that he realized the transfer of tax revenue sources
worth 3 trillion yen in the three-part reform. However, he admitted
that he was unable to dig into final authority, as he was appointed
foreign minister part way.
Touching on the government policy of cutting a natural increase in
social security expenses by 220 billion yen each fiscal year,
Maehara proposed making up for that portion with revenues generated
by the integration of road-related tax revenues into the general
account. The prime minister, however, dismissed the proposal,
saying, "The issue has yet to be looked into. However, I have no
intention of allocating the full amount for that purpose."
(7) TOP HEADLINES
Asahi:
Scholarship society to give info to banks on students with
delinquent repayments
Mainichi:
Okayama lawyer overcharges fees for work as state-appointed lawyer
Yomiuri: Nikkei:
Japan to propose at G-7 use of foreign reserves for IMF emergency
loans to rapidly emerging countries
Sankei:
Financial assets worth 21 trillion yen disappeared in nine days
TOKYO 00002834 008 OF 010
Tokyo Shimbun:
Professor Yamanaka generates iPS cells without viruses
Akahata:
Give top priority to protection of people's livelihood: Sacrificing
public unforgivable
(8) EDITORIALS
Asahi:
(1) Additional economic pump-priming measures: It is most important
to reconstruct safety network
(2) Refueling bill: Rush-in Diet deliberations abnormal
Mainichi:
(1) International financial cooperation: New thinking needed to
handle unprecedented crisis
(2) Additional economic stimulus package: Remove anxieties people
are feeling about future
Yomiuri:
(1) Coordinated rate cuts: Market urging U.S. to take additional
measures
(2) Result of achievement test: Revision to release rule needed
Nikkei:
(1) Government, BOJ should come up with effective measures to
address sudden change in economic conditions
(2) Flashpoints still remain after reconciliation between Georgia
and Russia
Sankei:
(1) Global stock plunges: U.S. should decide on capital injection
(2) Verification of North Korea's nuclear development program:
Removing the country from U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism
unacceptable
Tokyo Shimbun:
(1) Financial crisis will question true value of G-7
(2) Revision to Worker Dispatch Law: Ban on dispatch of day workers
progress
Akahata:
(1) Four Japanese win Nobel Prize: Major occasion to assist basic
research
(9) Prime Minister's schedule, October 9
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full)
October 10, 2008
08:30
Met at Kantei with LDP and New Komeito policy chief Hori and
Yamaguchi, and LDP International Financial Crisis Project Team chief
Yanagisawa. Called Osamu Shimomura, winner of Nobel Prize in
chemistry.
10:00
Attended Upper House Budget Committee session.
10:04
Met with Welfare Minister Masuzoe, followed by Land, Infrastructure
TOKYO 00002834 009 OF 010
and Transport Minister Kaneko, by METI Minister Nikai.
11:22
Met at Kantei with Chief Cabinet Secretary Kawamura.
11:49
Had lunch with secretary Japanese restaurant Tempura-Tenshin in
Hiraga-cho.
13:21
Arrived at his private office in Nagata-cho.
16:31
Met at Kantei former Finance Minister Ibuki, later joined by
Kawamura.
17:03
Met with LDP Administrative Reform Promotion Headquarters chief
Chuma. Met afterwards with JCCI President Okamura, followed by
Foreign Ministry Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau Chief Saiki.
18:06
Met with Defense Ministry Defense Policy Bureau Chief Takamizawa,
Defense Intelligence Headquarters Chief Sotozono and Cabinet
Intelligence Director Mitani. Mitani remained.
20:14
Met with Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Matsumoto at Bar "Golden
Lion" in Imperial Hotel.
22:30
Retuned to his private residence in Kamiyama-cho.
(Corrected copy): Legislation to extend refueling mission until Jan.
2010 likely to pass Diet on Oct. 24, at earliest
SANKEI (Page 2) (Excerpts)
October 10, 2008
A bill amending the New Antiterrorism Special Measures Law is likely
to pass the Diet later this month. The bill is designed to extend
the ongoing Maritime Self-Defense Force's refueling mission in the
Indian Ocean beyond its January expiration. This development
followed a suggestion yesterday by the Democratic Party of Japan
(DPJ), which is opposed to the bill, to put the bill to the vote in
a meeting of the House of Representatives Special Committee on Oct.
20. The bill will be voted down in the opposition-controlled House
of Councillors but will be reinstated by a two-thirds lower chamber
overriding vote on the 24th, at the earliest.
The legislation will make it possible for Japan to continue the
refueling operation, which Japan has labeled as its main
contribution in the war on terror, until January in 2010.
The Lower House Antiterrorism Special Committee decided in its
executive meeting yesterday to hold a session for explanations about
the rationalization for the government-sponsored bill and a
counterproposal by the DPJ today and deliberations on the bill on
the 17th and the 20th. The DPJ proposed in the meeting taking a vote
on the 20th. The bill is likely to be approved by a majority from
the ruling camp and clear the Lower House on the 21st.
TOKYO 00002834 010 OF 010
The DPJ intends to vote the bill after few days of deliberations in
the House of Councillors. After it is voted down in the Upper House
on the 24th, at the earliest, the bill will be enacted by an
override vote in a Lower House plenary session the same day.
The refueling service was suspended last November but was resumed in
February as the New Antiterrorism Special Measures Law was enacted
by a revote in the Lower House this January with approval from the
ruling camp. The said law is to expire on Jan. 15.
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