The Compass

The George Washington University’s

Undergraduate International Affairs Blog

Julian Sherrod Julian Sherrod

The Kōchikai: How a Japanese Liberal Democratic Party Faction Went from Cooperation to Competition

This article focuses on the Japanese Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) faction called the Kōchikai (Big Pond Society) and how it has changed from more cooperative and collaborative stances to more dividing and antagonistic stances. It then shows how, while the majority of LDP factions are dissolved, these groupings can still be valuable to determine the possible policy stances a politician may take in the future.

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Sankar Harikrishnan Sankar Harikrishnan

Reviving Strategic Ambiguity: The Importance of Abiding by a Long-Established Principle

Over the past two administrations in the White House, the United States has increasingly moved away from the principle of strategic ambiguity that is supposed to shape U.S. foreign and defense policy toward the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China. This piece examines the origins of strategic ambiguity as a policy, reviews its effectiveness, and argues that there is a need for the U.S. to actively restart abiding by the constraints of the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 and the principles enshrined therein.

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