Abstract
The implications of Japan's relations with Communist China for regional international politics will be analyzed in this paper against the backdrop of Japan's foreign policy-making processes, her attitudes toward China, and her overall foreign policy. Japan's China policy is pursued within a foreign policy framework that emphasizes strong support for the United Nations, free world alignment under the Security Treaty with the United States, increasing involvement in Asian trade and economic development, maximum expansion of economic relations with as many nations as possible, minimal defensive armament and pacifism based on Article 9 of the constitution of Japan, and the separation of economics from politics in dealing with such nations as Communist China and the Soviet Union.
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