Japan confronts the increased price of US friendship - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 美日关系

Japan confronts the increased price of US friendship

The Japanese government cannot spin its one-sided $550bn investment commitment to Trump’s America as a win
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

Howard Lutnick and Ryosei Akazawa’s awkward on-camera to-and-fro followed months of negotiations
"}],[{"start":7.68,"text":"There were several moments during Howard Lutnick and Ryosei Akazawa’s celebratory joint video statement last week where you wondered if Japan’s chief trade negotiator was speaking of his own free will."}],[{"start":21.52,"text":"“You . . . think about what was good for Japan. I really felt so . . . You are a very nice guy for me and also for the Japanese people and Japan,” said Akazawa, praising the successful conclusion of trade talks and beaming at the US commerce secretary as a hostage with Stockholm syndrome might. "}],[{"start":44.51,"text":"Other nations must learn and practise Akazawa’s exact expression: the great grimace of friendship with the US, version 2.0."}],[{"start":55.04,"text":"The awkward on-camera to-and-fro between the men followed months of negotiations which began with Japan, as America’s best friend in Asia, hoping it could secure zero tariffs before being made to feel grateful it was only hit with a 15 per cent levy. The glint of gaslight was in Lutnick’s eye when he described this unprecedented handicapping of free trade as “tremendously beneficial to Japan”."}],[{"start":85.84,"text":"But the real crux of the deal was Japan’s $550bn investment commitment to “advance economic and security interests in the US”. Japan has agreed to disburse this by January 19 2029 — notionally the final day of Donald Trump’s presidency. The import of the deal is immense, but the publicly available information on key elements is sparse. "}],[{"start":114.47,"text":"Such details as there are have been set out in a seven-page, grammatically faltering memorandum of understanding between the US and Japan — a document seen by the Financial Times but which US government officials, astonishingly, say is only available to a handful of people in both the state and commerce departments. Japan requested something in writing, and this is what the small cabal around Lutnick appears to have come up with. Japan is not releasing the memorandum until the US side does the same and, as one Tokyo-based official puts it, the mechanics of making it public have broken down."}],[{"start":158.96,"text":"The MOU sets out an arrangement which, on one reading, reeks of coercion: a sovereign nation forced to funnel private and public-sector investment to a much richer one under a structure unashamedly directed by the US president."}],[{"start":176.31,"text":"Once Japan recoups its investment, it then reaps only 10 per cent of the cash flows from the project, to America’s 90 per cent. Yes, Japan has nominal input via a consultative committee into which projects are chosen, but there are no Japanese on the more powerful investment committee and it’s Trump who makes the ultimate call. Yes, Japan can elect not to fund an investment, but if it does so the US may impose new tariffs on Japan “at the rate determined by the President”. "}],[{"start":211.05,"text":"Japan, tenuously, has ways to spin this as a win. It knows that Japanese companies want to invest in the US and that these investments will be compounded and guaranteed by its government-backed lenders. If that was the price of lower tariffs, it may as well be something that might have happened anyway. But a gloating Lutnick, appearing separately on CNBC, denied Japan even the right to make that case at home. Japan, he said, had sought to “buy down” its tariff rate with a deal that he described as “off the rails” and the most fun he had working for this president. Trump, he said, had “complete discretion” over Japan’s investments and would decide where and how he wanted Japanese capital spent in America."}],[{"start":263.63,"text":"Akazawa, back in Tokyo and without the constraint of sitting at Lutnick’s side, told reporters that, according to the terms of the memorandum, the “complete discretion” bit was wrong. We’ll see."}],[{"start":278.52,"text":"But the precise contents are arguably less momentous than the nature of the document itself. The point is that its one-sidedness, continued unpublished life in the shadows and the widely variable interpretations this allows represent a miserable charter of what it means to be friends with the US in 2025. At home, Trump is perfecting ways to circumvent Congress; in dealings with America’s allies, his people are also circumventing the normal channels. This MOU, in its invisibility and construction-by-cabal, is a useful blueprint of that process in the early stages."}],[{"start":326.29999999999995,"text":"Japan, thinking that the old rules of friendship applied and that it had handled Trump astutely in the past, entered negotiations imagining that the underlying deal was the intended destination. What it found was a counterpart using the language of dealmaking as cover for the complete retooling of amity in the service of individual aggrandisement."}],[{"start":357.92999999999995,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1757670163_3933.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

莫迪希望夺取苹果印度生产基地的掌控权

泰米尔纳德邦已成为制造业强省,但莫迪领导的印度人民党迄今难以在这片土地上取得进展。

Lex专栏:标普500指数回升,但战争阴云仍笼罩股市

增长预期上升却未带动估值攀升,说明投资者对未来更加谨慎。

伊朗战争推高化肥成本,美国农民雪上加霜

美国农业部门本已因特朗普贸易战而深受打击,这场冲突又推高了化肥成本。

宾州芯片制造业振兴计划在特朗普任内陷入停滞

高科技半导体制造业发端于利哈伊山谷,但承诺用于其复兴的联邦资金迟迟未能到位。

苹果下一任掌门人特努斯面临决定性的AI时刻

库克的继任者必须带领这家iPhone制造商渡过产业转型。

乌克兰无人机飞行员在500公里外打击俄罗斯目标

基于互联网的新型引导系统使乌克兰无人机操作员能够在远离战场的区域执行任务。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×