"It will be interesting to see how high a profile these exercises get," said senior fellow James Schoff at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "Are we trying to publicise them and put some kind of military psychological pressure on (North Korea), or will we keep it low-key and business-l
Date: Aug 20, 2017
Category: World
Source: Google
Japan's own 'pivot' to Southeast Asia seen bearing fruit ahead of G-7 summit, China isles arbitration
Overall, I think Chinas continued provocative moves in the South China Sea are alarming many and making this kind of diplomacy possible, said James Schoff, with the Asia program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. So Japans approach is perhaps better thought through, but its Chi
Date: Apr 13, 2016
Source: Google
Japan's Shinzo Abe visits US to discuss new threat: China
still has the primary combat role, the new guidelines integrate Japanese personnel closer to the front and give Japan a more central mission in military intelligence, missile defense, logistics support and cyber warfare, said James Schoff, an analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peac
Date: Apr 27, 2015
Category: World
Source: Google
Associated Estates adds new independent director, comments on talks with ...
"Land and Buildings has no interest in working collaboratively with the board to advance the interests of all other shareholders," James Schoff, chairman of the company's nominating and corporate governance committee, said in a document filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Instea
But if voters hand him too much of a majority, Abe might take his eye off the economic ball and press his less-popular pet projects, says James Schoff of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
"Obama will impress upon Abe the strategic value of curbing his cabinet's tendency to push a revisionist historical narrative that downplays the regional suffering caused by Japan's past imperialism," James Schoff of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace wrote earlier this month.
We are OK now but we cant keep doing it too much, said James Schoff, a senior associate on Japan at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Its like bending a paper clip back and forth. It gets weaker and weaker the more you bend it.
James Schoff, a former Pentagon official who is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that Abe's effort on defense could be "a net benefit for everyone" if Japan complements the United States.