Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era
Nimmo examines Japanese and Russian attempts to resolve outstanding differences lingering since the end of World War II. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

As the end of the twentieth century approaches, lingering shadows of the devastating mid-century conflict witnessed in World War II are reflected in a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia over possession of the South Kurile Islands, known as the Northern Territories in Japan. For more than four decades, Kremlin leaders contended there was no territorial problem—the 1945 Yalta Agreement resolved the issue, they claimed—but Japan doggedly insisted the islands were Japanese territory. Yet, even with the major changes that have taken place since the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia and Japan have been unable to reach an agreement. Nimmo examines the attempts of the two countries and their statesmen to resolve their differences. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

Nimmo provides an overview of the historical perspectives while giving an extended examination of changing relationships in the post-1991 era. This book will be of interest to diplomatic and military historians, Japanese and Russian (Soviet) Studies scholars, and students of the contemporary East Asia.

"1132774929"
Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era
Nimmo examines Japanese and Russian attempts to resolve outstanding differences lingering since the end of World War II. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

As the end of the twentieth century approaches, lingering shadows of the devastating mid-century conflict witnessed in World War II are reflected in a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia over possession of the South Kurile Islands, known as the Northern Territories in Japan. For more than four decades, Kremlin leaders contended there was no territorial problem—the 1945 Yalta Agreement resolved the issue, they claimed—but Japan doggedly insisted the islands were Japanese territory. Yet, even with the major changes that have taken place since the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia and Japan have been unable to reach an agreement. Nimmo examines the attempts of the two countries and their statesmen to resolve their differences. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

Nimmo provides an overview of the historical perspectives while giving an extended examination of changing relationships in the post-1991 era. This book will be of interest to diplomatic and military historians, Japanese and Russian (Soviet) Studies scholars, and students of the contemporary East Asia.

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Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era

Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era

by William Nimmo
Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era

Japan and Russia: A Reevaluation in the Post-Soviet Era

by William Nimmo

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Overview

Nimmo examines Japanese and Russian attempts to resolve outstanding differences lingering since the end of World War II. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

As the end of the twentieth century approaches, lingering shadows of the devastating mid-century conflict witnessed in World War II are reflected in a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia over possession of the South Kurile Islands, known as the Northern Territories in Japan. For more than four decades, Kremlin leaders contended there was no territorial problem—the 1945 Yalta Agreement resolved the issue, they claimed—but Japan doggedly insisted the islands were Japanese territory. Yet, even with the major changes that have taken place since the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia and Japan have been unable to reach an agreement. Nimmo examines the attempts of the two countries and their statesmen to resolve their differences. He provides an in-depth analysis of Japanese efforts to regain control of the Northern Territories and explores attitudes of both Japanese and Russians at the grass roots level.

Nimmo provides an overview of the historical perspectives while giving an extended examination of changing relationships in the post-1991 era. This book will be of interest to diplomatic and military historians, Japanese and Russian (Soviet) Studies scholars, and students of the contemporary East Asia.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313284403
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/26/1994
Series: Contributions in Asian Studies
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

WILLIAM F. NIMMO teaches Japanese and Russian History at Old Dominion University and Christopher Newport University in Virginia. He lived, studied, and taught in Japan for 12 years and has conducted extensive research on political, diplomatic, military, and economic affairs of Japan in the Post-World War II era. An expert on relations between Japan and Russia, his earlier publications include Behind a Curtain of Silence: Japanese in Soviet Custody, 1945-1956 (Greenwood Press, 1988), The Occupation of Japan: The Impact of the Korean War (1990), and The Occupation of Japan: The Grass Roots (1992).

Table of Contents

Preface
Abbreviations
Chronology
Introduction
The Historical Background
Postwar Japan and the Soviet Union: From Stalin to Brezhnev
Dawn of a New Age: The Gorbachev Era and Japan
Gorbachev in Japan
Yeltsin, Russia and Japan
Japan and Russia: Looking to the Future
Bibliography
Index

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