Word: ikeda
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Mikoyan's public grin soon turned into a private growl. Meeting with Japanese Premier Ikeda, he made plain the real reason for his visit: to rail against U.S. military bases in Japan. "Japan is tied to the United States through a security pact that is in fact an aggressive military pact," snarled the salesman, adding that if the Berlin crisis led to war, Japan, because of its U.S. bases, could expect a Russian attack. However, said Mikoyan, "we are making every effort to prevent war." Then he proposed to Ikeda that Russia and Japan sign...
...Mikoyan's meddling. Headlined one: JAPAN GETS RUN-AROUND FROM ANASTAS. Tokyo's Shimbun warned that Mikoyan's "parrotings of repeated threats by Premier Khrushchev" were no way to "make any sales." In a slap at a visiting statesman that was unprecedented for the polite Japanese, Ikeda's party issued a statement branding Mikoyan's threats as an "interference in Japan's domestic affairs." It went on to hint that Mikoyan might very well go home emptyhanded: "Utilizing an expansion of trade through a Soviet trade fair to promote a pro-Soviet attitude while...
...white gladioli and yellow chrysanthemums at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, then sat next to former President Dwight Eisenhower at a White House luncheon. Back in the rain, he cruised the choppy Potomac for two hours with Kennedy on the presidential yacht Honey Fitz. Before leaving the U.S., Ikeda addressed the House of Representatives and flew on to New York, where, in polite phrases, he issued a clear warning: U.S. restrictions against Japanese products can hurt the Japanese economy-and that economy is vital to Far East stability...
...heads home, Ikeda carries some concrete assurances of closer ties with the U.S. Example: a two-nation Cabinet-level committee was set up to meet at least once a year to promote economic and trade relations between the U.S. and Japan. Such assurances can only be applauded in Japan, where, despite the noise raised by frequently rioting leftists, majority sentiment is still heavily pro-American and antiCommunist...
Delicate Position. But on a few questions, Ikeda remained noncommittal, in recognition of his delicate political position at home. He hinted that Japan would not embrace a resumption of nuclear testing by the U.S. And he offered a classically inconclusive statement about the admission of Communist China to the U.N.: "To keep 600 million people out of the United Nations is unrealistic and unnatural, and contrary to the principles of universality of the United Nations. We have a treaty with Taiwan, and an amicable and profitable relationship. There is a question of your public opinion, their public opinion and ties...