Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
October 28, 2025
How Can Japan Handle Its $550 Billion Trump Problem?

Yesterday U.S. President Donald Trump visited Japan and met with its new Prime Minister Sanae Takaishi. Both are conservatives and agree on many points. Japan is a trusted vassal which rarely collides with the U.S. demands.

But one serious point of contention is open between the two nations and threatens to blow up the relation.

Earlier this year Trump had imposed a 25% tariff on U.S. imports from Japan. The previous prime minister had ‘sold the house’ to lower that rate:

So desperate was now-former Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to lower Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on Japanese products to 15%, especially on automotive products, that he signed on to an incredible surrender regarding Tokyo’s promise for the government to invest $550 billion in the US over the coming three years.

Not only does Trump get to choose the projects and the US get the lion’s share of any profits, but if Japan dares to reject any of Trump’s schemes as nonviable, Ishiba has given Trump permission to impose even higher tariffs. The jointly-signed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) says that, “In the case where Japan elects not to fund [a project Trump has named—rk], the United States may also impose tariff rate or rates on Japanese imports into the United States at the rate determined by the President [emphasis added].”

The total surrender took the form of a Memorandum of Understanding which did not require a vote in the Diet. But the enormous amount of money it pledges to invest in the U.S. would need parliamentary approval. There was and is practically not chance that anything like it would pass. The ‘investment’ would blow up Japan’s government budget. It would also increase the U.S. trade deficit with Japan.

The completely unbalanced agreement was one reason why Ishiba was ousted from his position.

I had wondered how Takaishi would handle this most important issues. But it seems that both sides have agreed to ignore it:

Inside a gold-drenched palace in Tokyo on Tuesday, President Trump heaped praise on Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s new prime minister, telling her that their countries were “allies at the strongest level” and vowing to come to Japan’s aide on “any favors you need.”

The leaders signed two vaguely worded agreements — one declaring a “new golden age of the US-Japan alliance,” and another to cooperate on expanding the supply chain for rare earth metals — but there was little sign of any breakthrough in the details of the trade deal both countries signed onto in July.

There was no public talk about a major point of contention between the two countries: the details of how Japan intends to spend a promised $550 billion investment into the United States. The promise came as part of the trade deal, and in return for the large investment, Japan was to receive a 15 percent tariff on its exports — a lower rate than Mr. Trump had initially threatened.

Instead, both leaders focused more on what they had in common …

Another report says that the deal was mentioned on the sideline but that nothing was done to resolve its problems:

Trump’s trip to Japan was an early test of whether Takaichi could build inroads with the American president as the countries grapple with security commitments, trade tensions and the threat of China. Japan faces a daunting promise to invest $550 billion in the United States in exchange for lower tariff rates, and Trump administration officials have signaled they want Japan to pay more money to host U.S. troops.

Over a lunch of American rice and beef cooked with Japanese ingredients, the prime minister presented Trump with a map of the investments Japan is making into the United States, after the country committed to pour $550 billion into the United States in exchange for lower tariffs. In return, Trump signed lunch menus for Takaichi and her delegation.

“Look, I got a lunch menue signed by Trump and all I had to pay for it were $550 billion.” I don’t think that’s how the world, outside of Trump’s mind, really works.

Trump wants the money to build a ‘sovereign wealth fund’ which he can use to buy and control shares of U.S. companies.

It is therefore likely that he will insist that Japan fulfills the MoU no matter what. But Japan can not do that and Takaichi will have to solve the problem.

As the issue could create a break in U.S.- Japan relations Takaichi will have to prepare for that to happen. Alastair Crooke detects signs that she is already doing this:

In her first address to the nation, Takaishi said that she would not support the US trade war against China, and would not become an instrument of US economic pressure. She openly criticised Trump’s tariff policy, calling it ‘the most dangerous mistake of the 21stcentury’.

Reuters commented that her stance was wholly unexpected in Washington. A big shock. It emerged that since taking office, the new PM had held a series of meetings with the largest Japanese corporations who had conveyed a unified and urgent message to her: Simply — the Japanese economy would not survive another trade war.

Then, one week after taking office, she openly expressed support for China, executing the biggest foreign policy pivot since WW2. China was no longer the ‘enemy’.

Might this be Japan’s real strategy?

To caress the narcissism in Trump to divert him from a Japanese move towards China which eventually may allow it to break with the U.S.?

I for one would call that a good plan.

Comments

An MOU is a far cry from a binding contract.

Posted by: Exile | Oct 28 2025 17:58 utc | 1

Wow. If indeed she follows through on:
 

“most dangerous mistake of the 21st century” and “will not become an instrument of US economic pressure” 

 
That will be positively astonishing. There is no “contain China” without Japan. 
 
Wonder how long this new Prime Minister will last. Can you imagine the pressure she’ll be facing?
 
Without the support of the US, Japan has to face China  and Russia by itself, and Japan has a … not entirely happy … history with both China and Russia.
 
 

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Oct 28 2025 18:02 utc | 2

Nothing is being done?
 
Bloomberg reports that Trump and Ludnick had a gala dinner in Japan showcasing American business investments.
 

Bloomberg’s AI summery:
 

  • US President Donald Trump dined with business leaders including Salesforce Inc.’s Marc Benioff, Apple Inc.’s Tim Cook, and Rakuten Group Inc.’s Hiroshi Mikitani to tout Japanese investment in the US.
  • Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick announced a series of new potential Japanese investments in US projects at the event.
  • The investments are part of a trade framework under which Japan pledged to fund $550 billion in US projects in exchange for lowered and capped tariffs on Japanese goods.

 
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-10-28/trump-set-to-dine-with-openai-salesforce-ceo-in-tokyo
 
Bloomberg is pitching great expectations.
 

Posted by: too scents | Oct 28 2025 18:14 utc | 3

She openly criticised Trump’s tariff policy, calling it ‘the most dangerous mistake of the 21stcentury’.
To caress the narcissism in Trump to divert him from a Japanese move towards China which eventually may allow it to break with the U.S.?
 
I for one would call that a good plan.
Posted by b on October 28, 2025 at 17:52 UTC
 
Reuters commented that her stance was wholly unexpected in Washington. A big shock.
An MOU is a far cry from a binding contract.
Posted by: Exile | Oct 28 2025 17:58 utc | 1
————————————————–
I second those motions.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Oct 28 2025 18:15 utc | 4

I wonder if it’s just me but the world has become tediously boring. Maybe I’ve just stopped caring.

Posted by: Patroklos | Oct 28 2025 18:19 utc | 5

I wonder if it’s just me but the world has become tediously boring.
 
Posted by: Patroklos | Oct 28 2025 18:19 utc | 5
 

 
I’m waiting like a kid before Christmas for the Trump/Xi meeting in Gyeongju.
 
https://www.apec.org/events-calendar
 

Posted by: too scents | Oct 28 2025 18:22 utc | 6

I know relentless boosterism for unstoppable China is the orthodox sentiment, but Takaishi is partly being pressured from the nationalist right in the new government. If you think that’s good for China, you might be completely brain dead.

Posted by: They Call Me Mister | Oct 28 2025 18:23 utc | 7

@Exile, #1
There is no way anyone can have a binding Contract with the US in any form!

Posted by: Seeji | Oct 28 2025 18:27 utc | 8

I was reading on one of the Russian sites, RIA  Novosti I think, that there’s movement for a joint Russia-Japan development of the Kuriles, and maybe a declaration that WWII is finally over between them. It’s all going in the mix, but things are moving.

Posted by: pasha | Oct 28 2025 18:28 utc | 9

thanks b!
 
sounds positive on the surface… a japanese leader saying NO to the usa.. trump epitomizes the beginning of the end for usa foreign policy agenda… 

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 18:43 utc | 10

Sounds like a similar deal to what the EU signed. As for the EU, they appear to start changing laws in favor of US companies – currently cloud storage. Data protection is apparently no longer a concern, neither is the fate of EU-competitors of Amazon, Google & MS.
Which highlights the real problem: There is not only the 550 billions to be invested. “Invested” means building companies and factories in the US, creating work and paying taxes in America, work and taxes that used to benefit european countries.
There was, for example, a – very brief – discussion of what 15 % import tax in the US, 0 % import tax in the EU and pressure to invest in America means for European car manufacturers: If they move their production plants to the US, they benefit from US subsidies and tax cuts. They won’t pay tax for cars the sell in America. And they won’t pay tax for cars they sell in Europe. Win-Win, happy faces all around. Mostly, anyways.
550 Billion US investments are just the start of a slippery slope.

Posted by: Marvin | Oct 28 2025 18:44 utc | 11

I say let us wait and see. A number of leaders have stood up to the Greatest President, but curl up in a fetal position when pushed good enough. 

Posted by: octavian61 | Oct 28 2025 18:45 utc | 12

When you owe the bank $1 million, you´ve got problems.
When you owe the bank $550billion, the bank´s got a problem.
Japan should suggest Russia give them their islands back and we´ll dump $550bn of paper on America.

Posted by: John Marks | Oct 28 2025 18:52 utc | 13

Maybe one takeaway from this is that a promise is nothing worth, even when it’s printed and signed.
 
That’s actually good news for all state leaders who have to deal with the US. 

Posted by: Avtonom | Oct 28 2025 18:53 utc | 14

Japan is an OG vassal like Germany, both immediately occupied by the U.S. military after WWII.  It is tough to imagine a scenario by which Takaishi or any prominent Japanese leader could oust the U.S. from Yokota Air Base in Tokyo or send packing the 55,000 active-duty service members from altogether 15 bases in Japan.
 
As in Germany, a series of treaties have strengthened the U.S. military’s integration into Japan’s security architecture over the past 80 years, renewed at various nexus points.  Celebrating a potential “turn toward China” on the part of Takaishi, or Tokyo in general, sounds distinctly bizarre given how occupied Japan is by a hegemonic military which has come to rely on its Indo-Pacific vassal remaining occupied unquestionably.
 
Berlieving that somehow Japan has the autonomy to turn toward China regardless of the hard-to-overlook small details, like the 55,000 boots on the ground & the 15 bases and the hegemon’s intent on maintaining this calculus, has a delusional edge.
 
Today, DJT has signed a minerals deal w/ Takaishi—smiles all around.    This echoes uncomfortably  the much-touted minerals deal Bessent signed w/ Ukraine.  It is as if signing a minerals deal is exactly what the hegemon insists on doing with its obedient vassal—a largely meaningless document intended to show obeisance.

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 18:57 utc | 15

I wanted to find out how much 550 billion USD is compared to Japanese exports to the US.
 
From (top of search results) tradingeconomics.com:

Japan Exports to United States was US$141.52 Billion during 2024, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade.

 
Yikes & wtf & I like sake too!
 

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 19:00 utc | 16

Might this be Japan’s real strategy?
To caress the narcissism in Trump to divert him from a Japanese move towards China which eventually may allow it to break with the U.S.?
 
I just saw this highest Japanese representative jumping next to Trump and was thinking that it doesn’t take much to forget the incineration through nuclear holocaust of her ancestors by that same US empire Trump embodies.
But indeed, the angle where it’s all just an act didn’t come to mind at first but it is possible.

Posted by: xor | Oct 28 2025 19:00 utc | 17

pasha | Oct 28 2025 18:28 utc | 9
 
The biggest problem for the Russians of the “end” to the War, is that the US wants to place bases and missiles on the Kuril islands. Thus hampering Russian access to the Pacific. I think they could claim this as part of a previous “treaty” with Japan, dating from the end of WWII.

Posted by: Stonebird | Oct 28 2025 19:03 utc | 18

You do a lot of reading and research b.
 
The Soviet Union under Gorbachev, of its own accord began pulling out of its post WWII occupation with the withdrawal from east Germany. That it turned into complete collapse of the Soviet Union and led to the utter mess we watch today…..
 
US has never relinquished its WWII occupied territories, instead continually expanding them.  I have read that Japan is still under its WWII surrender agreement to the US. At some point in the past, I looked up the post WWII status of Japan and Germany at the UN. Both still had the same status. I had read something that gave me some search terms and indication of where to look at the UN site.
 
Japan under US occupation has never signed a formal treaty with either the former Soviet Union nor the current Russia to formally end WWII. Th two Koreas. WWII two has never ended due to the US. The Chinese civil war has never ended due to the US.
US learned from mum I guess. Good old perfidious albion. Divide and conquer, divide and control.
 
Eighty years now since WWII. If Japan is looking at making a break from the US and becoming part of the Asia pacific region, that would greatly change the landscape here where the US intends to retain “Primacy” as the yanks have bluntly put it.
 

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 19:08 utc | 19

Japan. like Germany, are not just vassals but “legal colonies” after the war.
 
Until and unless that status changes I expect Japan to do what the US dictates, in spite of the rhetoric.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:09 utc | 20

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 18:57 utc | 15
 
RE:  incredible proliferation of minerals deals
 
<<
 
In mid-October the U.S. signed a minerals deal w/ Australia, another notable vassal nation of the global hegemon. 
 
We almost need a hobbyist’s rock tumbling kit in every basement or garage in the U.S. in order to refine what is actually meant by minerals, so that we can better comprehend the place minerals really occupy as geopolitical paperweights.

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:09 utc | 21

Posted by: xor | Oct 28 2025 19:00 utc | 17
 
RE:   Might this be Japan’s real strategy?To caress the narcissism in Trump to divert him from a Japanese move towards China which eventually may allow it to break with the U.S.?
 
<<
 
Call it the Geisha Strategy

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:12 utc | 22

“An MOU is a far cry from a binding contract.”
 
Posted by: Exile | Oct 28 2025 17:58 utc | 1
 
Thirty years ago an MOU was a good instrument to direct both sides on the path of a binding agreement.
 
But the whole concept was bastardized becoming more of a Public Relations tool than a path to an agreement.
 
As a prospector I signed 2 MOUs with publicly traded exploration companies; both times the company insiders put out a Press Release promoted the stock higher on the ‘news’ sold their stock and never did the deal.  I was just used; I don’t mind if a woman  does that to me sexually, but I detest  getting economically fucked!
 
Never signed another one again even when I or my company was the acquirer.
 
MOU s have become cheap whores where you can contract some nasty economic  diseases-like losing money and credibility..

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 19:14 utc | 23

A week or so ago I called the new Japanese PM, “Meloni-san,” because I think she will turn out exactly like the Italian PM: making yugggeee domestic promises around the subject of unfettered African migration and then totally fail to deliver by means of granting visas for the problem of “population replacement” and by highly visible, though largely negligible, efforts to police illegal maritime infiltration.
 
Meloni has not tackled the problem of illegal migrants yet has also come to Ukraine’s aid, never bucking DJT. 
 
Look for PM Meloni-san to follow the exact same MO.

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Oct 28 2025 19:16 utc | 24

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 19:08 utc | 19
 
RE:  US has never relinquished its WWII occupied territories, instead continually expanding them. I have read that Japan is still under its WWII surrender agreement to the US. 
 
<<
 
Indeed, DJT floated the notion that the ROK should sell to the U.S. the land which the U.S.’s military bases occupy, in effect intensifying the hegemon’s ownership.  One could easily see DJT suggesting such a thing to Japan too, especially w/ Takaishi nominating DJT for the Nobel Peace Prize and making other super-submissive noises.
 
It is somewhat a variation on DJT’s saying he would build a wall on the U.S. border and make Mexico pay for it—a la “We will occupy your land militarily, and we will in fact own the land we occupy.”

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:18 utc | 25

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Oct 28 2025 18:02 utc | 2
 
#######
 
Although a popular American delusion, there is no contain China now. Today, it is China containing America.
 
Japan and South Korea cannot carry the US, and the balance of Pacific power has shifted.
 
I do enjoy Trump shaking vassals down for their lunch money. The cannibalization continues.
 
This is a familiar script of Imperial decline.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Oct 28 2025 19:19 utc | 26

Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:09 utc | 20
 
######
 
Excellent articulation.
 
Impossible to discuss these matters without a sober understanding of the underlying relationships.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Oct 28 2025 19:23 utc | 27

steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:09 utc | 21
 
A lot of rare earth projects kicking off here now. Trump 1.0 kicked off the pentagon thing to gaining new supply chains for critical minerals other than China. The projects kicking off on the basis of supplying into the western market – US and Europe – will likely collapse as the western economies implode. If they have the minerals required for the many next gen chips China is developing and Australia does retain some form of trading relations with China, they may survive.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 19:23 utc | 28

Posted by: John Marks | Oct 28 2025 18:52 utc | 13
You must be joking. Japan would have to do a lot to get the Southern 2 islands (of 4) back.  Not just because Japan attacked Russian during WWII and there would be the possibility Japan would put bases on them. But also today’s  Japan would succumb to American pressure and, much worse, allow the Americans put naval bases there. 
My guess as to what would get Russia to agree to have those 2 be Japan again is Japan would have to kick out the US military (maybe except for Okinawa, way South).  Problem is, ASFAIK there is some surrender treaty detail from 1945 that states the land under the bases US property in perpetuity (similar to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba). The USA would likely refuse to leave.

Posted by: JustSomeOldGuy | Oct 28 2025 19:24 utc | 29

“Trump administration officials have signaled they want Japan to pay more money to host U.S. troops.”
i’d think it would be the other way around, that we’d have to pay Japan for the use of their land to station a US base there. 

Posted by: annie | Oct 28 2025 19:25 utc | 30

#7 “I know relentless boosterism for unstoppable China is the orthodox sentiment, but Takaishi is partly being pressured from the nationalist right in the new government. If you think that’s good for China, you might be completely brain dead.”
 
Old fashioned thinking. The China of the 1930s was dwarfed by the economic and military power of Japan. In the 2030s the positions are exactly reversed. The only thing China fears about Japan militarily is its relationship with the US. 
Re Japan/US vassalage: IF (big if) the Japanese have had enough, are reading the futures tea leaves re China, and are ready to escape their near century of servitude, a great way to go would be to complain visibly about paying exorbitant rates for the US occupation … or announce that they will “help out” the US by taking over the responsibilities, as a good ally should, you understand. Find a way to ease out of the thing, except perhaps for a symbolic base or two. 

Posted by: Caliman | Oct 28 2025 19:26 utc | 31

@ JustSomeOldGuy | Oct 28 2025 19:24 utc | 29
 
quote “The USA would likely refuse to leave.”
 
that is a problem when a guest overstays it’s visit, isn’t it? i wonder how ordinary americans feel about others being subservient to there kingdom?  do they ever wonder why people hate and resent them, or do they just listen to their politicians and msm tell them how they are the greatest country in the world??  a wake up call is coming for the usa and it might happen in one feel swoop.. 

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 19:29 utc | 32

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 19:23 utc | 28
 
RE:  The rare earth projects kicking off on the basis of supplying into the western market  will likely collapse as the western economies implode
 
<<
 
As w/ gifts, it’s not the minerals but the thought that counts.
 
The hegemon appears to be conducting Purity Tests among its scattered vassals, demanding that each swear a fealty of rare earths, whether the vassal has an industry capable of refining them or not.

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:31 utc | 33

Trump wants the money to build a ‘sovereign wealth fund’ which he can use to buy and control shares of U.S. companies.

————
 
It has baffled me that the US is so late to the Sovereign Wealth Fund party. (Not really, “privatize the gains and socialize the losses” has been a big part of the US financial model for over a century.)
 
For decades it has been obvious that sovereign wealth funds are a sensible route to both low tax rates and delivering services to citizens. Norway, Russia, China, Qatar (though they are a bit too literal about the sovereign part), etc., all have different models to use funds from business to support a huge chunk of government operations. The Russian government’s large stake in strategic industries allows them to have a 13% flat income tax rate.
 
The $64 trillion question in the USA is; will the government turn over their shares to Blackrock, Vanguard, etc. to manage (err, manipulate) for them? The potential for shady backroom deals is almost endless.

Posted by: Fool Me Twice | Oct 28 2025 19:34 utc | 34

steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:31 utc | 33
 
I have seen no indication those projects kicking off are oz government driven. I suspect it is more by investors that read and believe the mainstream news and think the future will be the same as the post war past re US/Europe.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 19:40 utc | 35

It has baffled me that the US is so late to the Sovereign Wealth Fund party.
 
Posted by: Fool Me Twice | Oct 28 2025 19:34 utc | 34
 

 
Sovereign Wealth Funds compete directly against Family Offices and other classes of institutional investors like Private Equity.
 
It would take more aggressive taxation to push Capital out of its current havens and into Sovereign Wealth.
 
 

Posted by: too scents | Oct 28 2025 19:41 utc | 36

Continuing…
In other words to avoid a 10% difference in US tariffs of a value of something less than 15 billion USD Japan allegedly (see below) suggested paying 550 Billion USD which is over 36 times more.
 
If the tariffs last 36 years the two “options” would approach being equally bad. But in the alleged three years it would be over 12 times more/worse.
 
Something must be very wrong here.
 
Where exactly is the content of the MoU? Where are the clear public government sources and statements on this? I am not interested enough to start digging for something that seems like it isn’t there. Does anyone have anything solid from an official source?
 

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 19:43 utc | 37

Posted by: xor | Oct 28 2025 19:00 utc | 17 …..
Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:12 utc | 22

 
Well, gentlemen, we can only hope the Japanese have their own Epstein!

Posted by: ThirdWorldDude | Oct 28 2025 19:57 utc | 38

In response to

The hegemon appears to be conducting Purity Tests among its scattered vassals, demanding that each swear a fealty of rare earths, whether the vassal has an industry capable of refining them or not.
Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 19:31 utc | 33

I agree and it is silly to think of Japan doing what is now a very dirty processing job on their island…..don’t they have enough nuke contamination already?
 
I expect AU will be the goto country when China sticks to its posture of not supplying rare earths for military purposes.   I posit a facility in remote AU will be built and run very crudely but “efficiently” to get the desired rare earths…..environmental issues be dammed!

Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:59 utc | 39

a facility in remote AU will be built and run very crudely but “efficiently” to get the desired rare earths…..environmental issues be dammed!
Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:59 utc | 39

I fear you are probably correct.
Speaking of military bases. No one in Oz is concerned about the rapidly expanding US footprint (boot print) of bases in Western Australia and Northern Territory.
 
 

Posted by: Melaleuca | Oct 28 2025 20:11 utc | 40

psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:59 utc | 39
 
 
I recently watched a video on one of these start ups. They are sitting on a large deposit and operations have kicked of. Three stages from ore to final product. 1) getting basic separation from the ore but still containing other elements. 2) concentration to a fair degree of purity. 3) Separation of the various rare earth elements in the concentrate. 
At the moment they are just at the first stage and send the refined ore somewhere else for concentration of the rare earth elements. They intend building a concentration plant in the next few years and the final separation plant in ten years. I’m not sure if the Anglo empire and its debt ridden economy will still be standing in ten years time.
 
Thinking about it, US is now nothing more than a military industrial complex that runs scams using power point or whatever presentations to obtain money, and a stockmarket that is nothing more than a massive scam behind which is an empty shell.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 20:20 utc | 41

Melaleuca | Oct 28 2025 20:11 utc | 40
 
Most people I know/talk to think the good US is here to protect us from the yellow hordes to the north that are about to invade us. I tell them the US is our enemy, not China but it doesn’t make any difference.
 
Now while they are looking at China as the threat, US looting of Australia is well underway.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 20:29 utc | 42

Re: US rare earth deals
Look very carefully at exactly what ree’s they are expecting to mine. Heavy ree’s are what they need. The old Molycorp mine was full of light rare earth elements, not exactly what our military is looking for.
There also is a Canadian company planning to process rare earths in Louisiana obtained from South American mines, details at this link.
https://asiatimes.com/2025/10/1st-us-heavy-rare-earths-separation-facility-planned-in-louisiana/

Posted by: morongobill | Oct 28 2025 20:30 utc | 43

Continuing again (I shouldn’t be doing this, I’m out of cigarettes)…
 
This isn’t what I was looking for but it is at least something and seems to be much better than the links provided including the link to Richard Katz or for that matter the White House “Fact Sheet” (shit facts lol) that one can find on their website or any of the many MSM stories that contain so little useful and reliable information.
 
In fact the following seems to be all one can really find with many details still not actually worked out.
 
CSIS (Center for Strategic and International Studies) is based in Washington DC so well… anyway it seems much more solid and up to date:
“New Documents Reveal Next Steps for U.S.-Japan Trade Deal”
https://www.csis.org/analysis/new-documents-reveal-next-steps-us-japan-trade-deal
 
It also makes it clear that not all of the 550 billion will be direct investments in the US but also things such as market access and bank guarantees.
 
It is still horribly bad lol XP
 
So now I don’t buy that all of this was some Japanese idea, far from it, this is a US concoction being forced upon Japan no matter what is claimed because a 25% tariff would be far better than this. This “deal” is likely a punishment against Japan for any initial objection.
 

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 20:35 utc | 44

1. Sovereign Wealth Funds compete directly against Family Offices and other classes of institutional investors like Private Equity.
 2. It would take more aggressive taxation to push Capital out of its current havens and into Sovereign Wealth.  
Posted by: too scents | Oct 28 2025 19:41 utc | 36

————
1. Agree. But sovereign wealth money can also help prop up equity valuations, a perverse win-win.
 
2. The point, as is evident in the case of Russia/China, is that sovereign wealth can reduce income and investor taxation, again a win-win. Arguably, sovereign wealth might make large cap “strategic” corporations less attractive to those seeking larger capital gains. The fresh $ inputs from sovereign wealth (government money) could also chase private capital away and toward startups and growth, where it would be more beneficial to economic growth.
 
If you have not already done so, I suggest you read the article linked by b.  Sure it is speculative and has an anti-Trump slant, but it is the sort of speculation that we need to consider as we attempt to discern where we are headed and the hazards (both moral and physical) we will face.
 
https://richardkatz.substack.com/p/the-mussolini-corporatism-behind

Posted by: Fool Me Twice | Oct 28 2025 20:37 utc | 45

“ to cooperate on expanding the supply chain for rare earth metals “
 
To be precise
Does Japan have rare earths?
Or does Japan only have a ‘supply chain’ in rare earths ?
From WHERE ?  And chain to Where?
 
US wants Japan to expand ‘that supply chain’
Does US want Japan to purchase more from China ?
Then send it to the US?
 
What does ‘cooperate’ mean?
Is it NY mafiosi speak?
As in making ‘a deal they can’t refuse’ way?
And hand over billions as well?
 
It’s a fucking shakedown by two bit US hoodlums and Drumpty Dumpty thinks he can get a cut for his dynastic obsession.
 
The problem with Japan (Korea too and some other such nations) is that their major industries and corporations are largely oligarchic, ‘family’ based concerns going back a looong way … to the pirates that came with the East India Companies …
 
So this manner of negotiating trade deals with countries that s not about the majority of the population – which in Japan 🇯🇵 s kept on a very short leash; over worked and under paid.
 
That has kept them supine to the tyranny that was long ago formed with the US oligarchs too – and we know exactly who those are – yes folks it’s the shapeshifters!
 
They want their cake! And EAT it. 

Posted by: DunGroanin | Oct 28 2025 20:40 utc | 46

Btw the reason I think it is a US concoction is the discrepancies noted by others between the early White House “Fact Sheet” (ffs I have to give the link I guess, here: White House shit sheet) and the actual details as they emerge later.
 
That and the absurdity of it; after all the rough value estimations in my first post still hold true and that all the details are only concerned with how the US is going to be able to squeeze that much blood out of Japan.
 

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 20:43 utc | 47

I expect AU will be the goto country when China sticks to its posture of not supplying rare earths for military purposes.   I posit a facility in remote AU will be built and run very crudely but “efficiently” to get the desired rare earths…..environmental issues be dammed!
 
Posted by: psychohistorian | Oct 28 2025 19:59 utc | 39
 
The major parties are both looking to water down environmental laws:
 
State governments could be given expanded powers to make decisions on fossil fuel developments under Labor’s proposed overhaul of environment law, prompting “shock and anger” from community-based conservation organisations that fear nature protection would be weakened.
 
 
The Albanese government plans to introduce its planned changes to the national law – the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act – to parliament later this week, and has been briefing interest groups on its plans.
 
 
 
Extracts of legislation seen by Guardian Australia show it includes provisions for state and territory governments that receive federal accreditation to make decisions about large coalmining and unconventional gas projects that affect groundwater reserves or waterways.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/28/nature-laws-epbc-expanded-fossil-fuel-water-powers-betrayal-australians
 
 

Posted by: Menz | Oct 28 2025 20:46 utc | 48

morongobill | Oct 28 2025 20:30 utc | 43
 
The heavies. One thing I noticed about some of the startups in Australia was that Uranium was present in the mix along with some other elements being slightly radioactive.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 20:51 utc | 49

Edward Snowden showed us all, via PRISM,  XKeyscore and Tempora -that the US has hacked Japan’s infrastructure, right down to the US even having the ability to switch-off all Japan’s street lighting and traffic lights.
 
Japan is for the lack of a better word f*cked.

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Oct 28 2025 20:56 utc | 50

Yawn.  This is Trump’s MO, in case you haven’t been paying attention.  Make a big announcement, based on a lie.  Then move on, never follow up, and count on the average American’s attention span being slightly shorter than that of a gnat.  
 
Meanwhile, the Gaza ceasefire just fell apart.  Shocker!
 
 

Posted by: Ghost of Zanon | Oct 28 2025 21:08 utc | 51

It has baffled me that the US is so late to the Sovereign Wealth Fund party. Posted by: Fool Me Twice | Oct 28 2025 19:34 utc | 34
 
 
________
 
 
The USA once had something vaguely resembling a sovereign wealth fund. It was the Social Security Trust Fund — of blessed memory.

Posted by: malenkov | Oct 28 2025 21:17 utc | 52

B: Might this be Japan’s real strategy?
 
Hopefully so!
 
The rest of the world does not need the western – now fascist – countries. While those fascist counties need the rest of the world. Looting it for more than five centuries and massacring everyone opposing this looting.
 
To every county’s choice: where does it want to belong?

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:22 utc | 53

Trump is behaving like a maffia gangster. He never fought the deep state, as he is part of it.
 
And Gruff is so stupid as not understanding it. Illusion… delusion…

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:25 utc | 54

No one in Oz is concerned about the rapidly expanding US footprint (boot print) of bases in Western Australia and Northern Territory.  
Posted by: Melaleuca | Oct 28 2025 20:11 utc | 40
 
***********
 
Hey! There are at least two of us :))

Posted by: General Factotum | Oct 28 2025 21:25 utc | 55

Meanwhile, the Gaza ceasefire just fell apart.  Shocker!
Posted by: Ghost of Zanon | Oct 28 2025 21:08 utc | 51
 
Why “Shocker!”
 
Are you so naive as to think one second that the deal was honest? Since when the yankes and the judeonazis do keep their word? They never did.

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:29 utc | 56

I tell them the US is our enemy, not China but it doesn’t make any difference. 
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 20:29 utc | 42
 
****************
 
Crikey! Three (at least,) already. If we can grow at this rate, we could solve the problem by Christmas.
 
I’m sure Patroklos is either on board, or will be *(when he is not bored)…

Posted by: General Factotum | Oct 28 2025 21:30 utc | 57

Where is the Japanese pride? Gone for ever?

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:37 utc | 58

@ General Factotum | Oct 28 2025 21:30 utc | 57
 
thanks for bringing some humour to the board!! 

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 21:39 utc | 59

board and bored, lol..

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 21:40 utc | 60

Dow Jones industrial average just made a so-called shooting star, often connected to market crashes.
https://x.com/great_martis/status/1983278708116119619

Posted by: unimperator | Oct 28 2025 21:43 utc | 61

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:37 utc | 58
 
Japan is plying for time, they had to submerge their pride for a greater goal; the MOU is a worthless POS yet  in the meantime Japan kisses Donny’s ass while  looking for new markets and new deals
 
I believe they are partnering with Russian on the Sakahlin (sic) Island on the other side for example..

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 21:44 utc | 62

Sit back and watch Trump drive Japan closer to China and Russia  –  Trump Making Asia Great Again.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 21:45 utc | 63

“Trump is behaving like a maffia gangster. He never fought the deep state, as he is part of it. And Gruff is so stupid as not understanding it. Illusion… delusion…”
 
Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:25 utc | 54
 
You are too smart to call someone ‘so stupid’, especially Gruff who certainly is not, but that doesn’t mean that he is ‘right’.
 
Instead of stooping to reactionary ‘ad hominens’  why not debate with Gruff your differences in this issue?
 
I am confident, that although you both may not agree on the issues after sturdy debate , you will both learn something from each other.

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 21:56 utc | 64

“Trump is behaving like a maffia gangster. He never fought the deep state, as he is part of it. And Gruff is so stupid as not understanding it. Illusion… delusion…”
 
Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:25 utc | 54
 
You are too smart to call someone ‘so stupid’, especially Gruff who certainly is not, but that doesn’t mean that he is ‘right’.
 
Instead of stooping to reactionary ‘ad hominens’  why not debate with Gruff your differences in this issue?
 
I am confident, that although you both may not agree on the issues after sturdy debate , you will both learn something from each other.

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:01 utc | 65

Posted by b on October 28, 2025 at 17:52 UTC |
‘Might this be Japan’s real strategy?
To caress the narcissism in Trump to divert him from a Japanese move towards China which eventually may allow it to break with the U.S.?
I for one would call that a good plan.’

The difficulty lies in the historic enmity between Japan and China. Just as the US is now the imperious invading/conquering bully, so in the past, were the Japanese. Just as the US is doing now, Imperial Japan left a lot of scars that are not fully healed yet. While the Chinese and Japanese may be to the casual observer, quite cordial, that underlying enmity, although to perhaps a much lesser extent, still exists. 
If Trump is smarter than many now think, he will ease up on tariffs for his close allies, Japan being the most significant one, with Korea being of great significance also. They have earned such consideration. If I were to be thinking as a hegemonic imperial force, I would look to support my most powerful ally in the region as a means to consolidate my power. Perhaps the most powerful line in the movie Lawrence of Arabia by Sheikh Auda Abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn) as to why he was the poor man of his people; ‘I am a river to my people’.
 

Posted by: Áobh Ó’Sheachnasaigh | Oct 28 2025 22:04 utc | 66

CSIS (Center for Strategic and International Studies) is based in Washington DC so well… anyway it seems much more solid and up to date: 
Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 20:35 utc | 44
 
*****************
 
This is an excellent example of how dangerous and insidious the operation of these ‘Think Tanks’, ‘Centers’. ‘Institutions’, ‘Foundations’ etc actually are.
 
Superficially, they look innocuous. Many even appear selfless, charitable, or even opportunities for people to serve their country. (George Carlin had a wonderful skit on government operatives ‘servicing’ the accounts…)
 
The CSIS website states:
 
Commentary is produced by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a private, tax-exempt institution focusing on international public policy issues. Its research is nonpartisan and nonproprietary. CSIS does not take specific policy positions. Accordingly, all views, positions, and conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s).
© 2025 by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. All rights reserved.”
 
Sounds GREAT!! – Private, non-partisan, does not take specific policy positions…
 
But dig a little deeper, and what do you find? Take a look at the list of ‘experts’ who write their material:
 
https://www.csis.org/about/people/experts
 
I wonder how the experts were chosen (and who chose them!).
 
Now have a look at the Board and the Trustees and the Counsellors:
 
https://www.csis.org/about/people/board-trustees-counselors
 
The Chair of the Board is one Thomas J. Pritzker (Pritzker, now why does that name ring a bell???). The Trustees include Brendan Bechtel (yes, the Chair and CEO of Bechtel Group), William Cohen (Chair of the Cohen Group), William Daley (Former Sec. of Commerce, Obama Govt.), Linda Hart (CEO Hart Group), John Hess (CEO Hess Corp) and so on. Even Leon Panetta re-surfaces as he continues to re-invent himself.
 
Now ask yourself what all these 40-odd people have in common (apart from close and deep MIC ties???). Oh yes, but they selflessly select material from select experts that is policy-neutral and  non-partisan. Feel the love??
 
Now, just for giggles, go to the CSIS website and look at the mugshots of the Board of Trustees. Find a single one that looks like they could be trusted?
 
Now, Mr. Burger – does CSIS still “seem much more solid and up to date” or have you decided to slightly modify or adjust your assessment?
 
PS. Absolutely no criticism of Mr. Burger is intended. I’m just trying to be helpful…

Posted by: General Factotum | Oct 28 2025 22:13 utc | 67

“Sit back and watch Trump drive Japan closer to China and Russia  –  Trump Making Asia Great Again.”
 
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 21:45 utc | 63
 
Now what if that is Trump’s purpose.
 
Isolte-well take over South America, Cnada and Greenland and let the rest go; otherwise it doesn’t make sense.
 
Here in Canada the Trump tariffs and the way too bouyant real estate market are getting hit hard.  Carnage is a WEF and won’t expand Canada’s oil and gas exports
 
Now Alberta who pays Quebec 14 billion a year cause they are poor yet Quebec won’t allow Alberta to ship their oil through a pipeline through their province to the Atlantic coast. Alberta is pissed off.
 
Trump wants to pick Alberta up and no export controls.
 
Carney, Carnage is a WEFer and has put a cap on oil and natural gas export.
 
Its 1984 here in Canada and Trump is taking advantage.
 
There are more tarriffs across Canadian provincial lines then the US tariffs-everything is North to South for trade.
 
Canada is finished.
 
Oh, did you know that Carnage then our Central banker sold the last of our gold reserves in 2003 at $350/oz?
 
Can you tell I am drunk (four Chimay Belgian Monks 8% beer) and grumpy?
 
 

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:24 utc | 68

General Factotum @ 57.
Make that four.

Posted by: Honeyeater | Oct 28 2025 22:35 utc | 69

Can you tell I am drunk (four Chimay Belgian Monks 8% beer) and grumpy?  Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:24 utc | 68
 
Yep. You made a couple of typos 🙂
I guess the majority of us here now live in 1984. Its an effed up western world. But I guess we get a ‘privileged’  inside view of the collapsing anglo empire.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 22:39 utc | 70

b,
 
Read these it will give some clarity to what is happening.
 
https://billmitchell.org/blog/
 
Also, look at how many US treasuries Japan holds using Orwellian language what the nutters call the national debt.
 
Here:
 
https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/who-owns-us-debt-2025-02-10/
 
 
So rather than horde US treasuries with the $’s Japan received for exporting to the US over many years. What the US is asking Japan today is spend half of the US treasuries they hold in the US. My guess is If Japan does spend these $’s in the US it will mainly be On car plants or other stuff that Japan sells to the US.
 
 
Hope this helps.
 
 

Posted by: Clouds Of Alabama | Oct 28 2025 22:41 utc | 71

“I guess the majority of us here now live in 1984.”
 
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 22:39 utc | 70
 
Agreed.
 
But I would [canuk now has had 5 Belgians, editor]  extend your idea:
 
” The majority of us are living in 1884,”, and my humble extension,  ‘yet only a small minority are aware of this fact’

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:46 utc | 72

canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:46 utc | 72
 
Yeah. I very much agree with that humble extension.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 22:49 utc | 73

I vaguely recall that the great free market advocate Ronald Reagan attacked Japan in the 80s for being such good capitalists that US capitalists were losing market share.
Wasn’t there some agreement that knee-capped Japan?   
It is similar to the great free market advocate Donald Trump complaining that Chinese capitalism is out performing US capitalism, so they must be stopped by arresting CEOs, applying sanctions, and trying to force China into agreeing to stop outproducing the US (too late).
But Japan seems to have done alright.  Although we are told they have stagflation and demographic collapse, there are millions of Japanese who seem to be living comfortable lives.   
Maybe exporting to the world is overrated when it comes to having a decent society for your citizens.

Posted by: wagelaborer | Oct 28 2025 22:54 utc | 74

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 21:56 utc | 64
 
Ad personam, not ad hominem. You are addressing your comment to the wrong person. Sorry.
 
What do you want to discuss when it is quite obvious who and what is Trump and when as a result you receive a “tds”? What to reply to a kind of teenager reaction? His sentence on Trump braking the deep state otherwise we will be reduced to nuclear ashes is typical of a disfunctional mentality.

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 22:55 utc | 75

Japan, still under the terms of its WWII surrender, and still under US military occupation.
 
Canada, Australia and NZ still British colonies, the English monarch. The terms crown land, crown prosecutor and such were common here not that long back but rarely heard these days. I guess due the propaganda operation about the west being democracies.
 
For the Canadian’s and any Kiwi’s that might be about, is it similar where you are, the use of the word ‘crown’ disappearing in the last decades?

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 23:00 utc | 76

Russian Ilyushin Il-76 lands in Venezuela with secret military cargo reports Borzzikman 
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRPmyUrN7g4

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:01 utc | 77

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Oct 28 2025 20:35 utc | 44
 
RE:   this is a US concoction being forced upon Japan.  This “deal” is likely a punishment against Japan for any initial objection.
 
<<
 
I can believe the DEI coterie in Japan, in so far as they exist, was quite pleased to send their first-ever female prime minister to stand alongside DJT.
 
Little did they know, of course, that the U.S. looks at Japan as the turnip which it is not averse to squeezing.
 
Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:22 utc | 53
 
RE:   The rest of the world does not need the western – now fascist – countries.
 
<<
 
Absolutely.  But notice how intent the hegemon of the western vassals is on ensuring that those supposed RoW countries in the Indo-Pacific, especiallly countries like the Philippines and ROK and Japan, do not prance from hegemon aims & objective.
 
The hegemon is trying to use Quad to rope India in.
 
Quad = the U.S., Japan, ROK and ( wait for it ) India.
 
Hmmmm.
 
If you’re seated at a poker table and, in glancing around, you  can’t spot the mark, you are the mark. 
 
India, take note.
 
 
 

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 23:02 utc | 78

b)
 
You see it in the UK all the time.
 
Step 1) Japan sells stuff to the UK and receives £’s from UK consumers.
 
What can Japan do with these £’s ?
 
a) Hold them at the BOE via the commercial banks as a reserve balance.
 
b) Swap them for gilts to earn more interest than just leaving them as a reserve balance. ( Utterly pointless, just as stupid as hording them as gold bars).
 
The only reason to horde in gilts is to keep downward pressure on the Yen. As in the old days Japan used to export a lot. A strong Yen would hurt Japanese exports.
 
c) Buy anything sold in £’s – This is the ONLY reason to trade. To swap stuff. To swap goods and services not horde gilts or gold bars.
 
d) swap the £’s for another currency.
 
You need a buyer and seller .. So.If Japan wants to do this 
 
Swap 
 
£’s ——————> Yen 
 
Then you need others wanting to do this 
 
£’s < ——————- Yen
 
So the £’s don’t move it is a closed system. All that happens is who owns the £’s is a different owner. Who now holds those £’s at the BOE.
 
 
That is IT – period ! That is the choices Japan has.
 
 
So what the UK government says to Japan is –  If we don’t have enough to sell to you that you sell to us. Thus you have to horde £’s and swap them for gilts.
 
Why not use those £’s That are sitting at the BOE to build a Nissan factory in Sunderland. Why not build a car parts plant in Birmingham etc, etc, etc,
 
This is what Trump is trying to do.
 
After exporting stuff to the US and getting $’s in return. Japan now has accumulated $1,099 billion and swapped them for US treasuries.
 
Rather than spend them on US goods and services. Rather than hold them as a reserve balance and rather than swap them for another currency.
 
Trump is trying to force them to spend half of the $1,099 billion they hold at the FED. On investments in the US. Like car plants, engineering plants etc, etc, etc that sell Japanese goods and services. Rather than build those things in Japan.
 
Hope this helps.
 
 

Posted by: Clouds Of Alabama | Oct 28 2025 23:04 utc | 79

$550 x10E9   / 0.15   So my guesstimate of how much trade Japan would have to export  to usOfa is about 3.6 Trillion to break even.   Factor in the treatment of Korean investment factories in the usOfa, the possibility of the cratering of the usOfa economy (derivatives, the LLVM-AI bubble  that will bust etc. etc.  Hell of a lot of other countries with better education, health, … to do joint ventures with.   

Posted by: paxmark1 | Oct 28 2025 23:06 utc | 80

johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:01 utc | 78
 
 
Your comment caused me to think of the great difficulties other Asian countries have had in trying to set up in America. No skilled labour, no supply chains.
 
On top of that, the Korean company recently trying to set up shop in the US had their Korean workers ICEd.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 23:07 utc | 81

 

Japan’s government-backed financial institutions will provide up to US$550 billion in loans, guarantees and similar instruments to support Japanese company investments in the U.S., and in exchange Japan negotiates a lower U.S. tariff on Japanese exports (~15 % vs threatened 25 %).

Posted by: johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:01 utc | 78
Which Japanese companies want to invest in what Trump picks and then see most of the profits go to the USA? And all that for just a 10 percentage point reduction in tariffs? Sounds like what you would do to get tariffs from 50% to 0%.

Posted by: Cheney | Oct 28 2025 23:12 utc | 82

An MOU is a far cry from a binding contract.
Posted by: Exile | Oct 28 2025 17:58 utc | 1

In international law, a memorandum of understanding is an international agreement. The effects of an international agreement do not depend on its name, but on its content. If a memorandum of understanding contains commitments, they are legally binding.

Posted by: Leuk | Oct 28 2025 23:12 utc | 83

“Borzzikman reports nothing. It is ad revenue generator channel pushing fake news and general unfounded bullshit. ”
Posted by: johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:06 utc | 81
 
Funny that, he has been correct on many occasions. 
 
Johnno reports nothing but pro US bravado propaganda and agrees with others who do the same. That’s all he is here for.  A Trump fluffer.
 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:14 utc | 84

Posted by: johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:12 utc | 85
 
RE:  thx for the correction.  Quad = the U.S., Japan, Australia, and India.
 
<<
 
Please note that the Quad is composed of the hegemon and the hegemon’s Indo-Pacific vassals, plus a mark—India—which the hegemon hopes to make a vassal.
 
(Why call it Indo-Pacifc if not to flatter the mark-?)

Posted by: steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 23:20 utc | 85

b – too much focus on Trump and not enough focus on the big picture.
The big picture includes:
1) Japan still buys Russian energy under an exemption
2) Takaichi has publicly talked about a peace treaty with Russia
3) Japan is still working with Russia on Arctic development
So yes, there are US bases in Japan and Japan has long relied on the US to provide for its military security … but Japan has very real and urgent economic requirements for survival. 
Japan imports 60% of its food and around 90% of its energy. The reason Japan focuses on exports is precisely to pay for these massive core import needs, and many others besides.

Posted by: c1ue | Oct 28 2025 23:21 utc | 86

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 22:24 utc | 68
 
So sit back get drunk and await the end of Canada. What I don’t understand is why even bother writing stuff if the game is over?
 
Why do you believe Trump has so much power? 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:22 utc | 87

It is VERY clear what Trump is trying to do 
 

Japan

$1,099 billion

China

$768.6 billion

Britain

$765.6 billion

Luxembourg

$424.5 billion

Cayman Islands

$397 billion

Canada

$374.4 billion

Belgium

$361.3 billion

Ireland

$338.1 billion

France

$332.5 billion

Switzerland

$300.6 billion

Taiwan

$286.9 billion

Singapore

$257.7 billion

Hong Kong

$255.7 billion

India

$234 billion

Brazil

$229 billion

Norway

$159 billion

Saudi Arabia

$135.6 billion

South Korea

$127.8 billion

Mexico

$100.8 billion

Germany

$97.7 billion

Rest of World

$1,589 billion
 

 
This is the amount of $’s that every country has at the FED after exporting their goods and services to the US. That they swapped and now  hold as US treasuries. Makes up part of the US national debt.
 
Using tariffs , Trump is trying to force countries to reduce the $’s they hold at the FED and spend them in the US rather than horde them.
 
He’s trying to kill three birds with one tariff stone. 
 
a) Reduce the national debt 
 
b) Force countries to build things in the US rather than in their own countries. To avoid the tariffs.
 
c) Reduce the US trade deficit.
 
 
The problem is tariffs are a US tax and now approaching $40 billion every month. So sucking nearly $40 billion out of the US economy.
 
The external sector has to replace that – US exporters has to replace that $40 billion being lost every month. Or the government has to step in and replace that $40 billion a month or the US consumer has to replace that $40 billion being lost every month.
 
Or US GDP will start falling……
 
If these countries do start building plants in the US and selling their stuff within America instead of building these plants at home. It doesn’t solve the problem because they will still be earning $’s whenever they sell stuff from these plants. Still have the very same 4 options of what to do with these $’s when they get them.
 
Rather than create jobs at home Trump is trying to force them to create American jobs instead.
 
 

Posted by: Clouds Of Alabama | Oct 28 2025 23:27 utc | 88

Posted by: johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:25 utc | 93
 
QUAD is a joke that is finished 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:27 utc | 89

steel_porcupine | Oct 28 2025 23:20 utc | 89
 
AUKUS was/is about putting a US submarine base on the Indian ocean. The brown sahib were a bit put out by not being included.
 
India is at times like an annoying dog. You kick it in the guts and it comes crawling back, so you kick it in the guts again. I think India is just starting to get the message now. It’s future is very much in the multi-polar world.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 23:29 utc | 90

You don’t want to discuss the objective issues, it always degenerates to ‘personal bullshit’ rather than rational discussion of the subject matter.
 
In this fashion we can only ‘agree to disagree’ which is a paltry substitution for opposing viewpoints which would illuminate the subjects..

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 23:30 utc | 91

1 minute video – wise words from an american
 
 

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 23:36 utc | 92

Trump’s Neo-Colonialist-Imperialist follies with South America: 
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcWH-LPyTow

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:37 utc | 93

@tom 2

Quote “Wonder how long this new Prime Minister will last. Can you imagine the pressure she’ll be facing? Without the support of the US, Japan has to face China  and Russia by itself, and Japan has a … not entirely happy … history with both China and Russia.”
No, Japan has no danger from China and Russia.japan has danger from America.
American troops rape Japanese girls in Okinawa and America asks Japan for more money to station occupying American soldiers!
And bullying to free much to tune of billions is piracy or business?  

Posted by: sam | Oct 28 2025 23:40 utc | 94

james | Oct 28 2025 23:36 utc | 98
 
I have heard about or rather seen his name in relation to various stuff. Those words at the end – “We weren’t on the wrong side, We are the wrong side”.  Those few words cut through great masses of bullshit to get to the heart of the matter.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 23:42 utc | 95

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:22 utc | 92
 
Actually, I don;t think Trump has that much power.
 
Hence, I think what he is doing seems erratic as he has to get between the shoals of neo cons and his base; in essence ,he wants to let go of Europe and West Asia and dominate the West hemisphere.
 
This is not an original idea see Monroe Doctrine
 

Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 23:45 utc | 96

In this fashion we can only ‘agree to disagree’ which is a paltry substitution for opposing viewpoints which would illuminate the subjects..
Posted by: canuk | Oct 28 2025 23:30 utc | 97
 
**********************
 
Aha!! Canuk is hereby awarded the much-lauded second First Annual Award for Perceptive Insight (TM) in defiance of over-whelming inebriation.
 
Have another four (plus one) Chimay Belgian Monks 8% beer on my account. Please – it is nothing; but the outcome will hopefully be useful to me when verifying my “Buffalo Theory of Beer”*
 
* To be disclosed and expounded upon in a later post.

Posted by: General Factotum | Oct 28 2025 23:45 utc | 97

That’s better. Ben Norton isn’t advertising spam.  (According to your opinion which you continue to aggressively enforce as if it is superior to anyone elses views) 
 
Posted by: johnno | Oct 28 2025 23:38 utc | 100
 
Neither is Borzzikman he has been consistently correct on many reports. 
 
If you listen to Norton you’ll find the US is thinking it can waltz into South America, but it has got another thing coming since Russian and Chinese interests will be there to greet him. Borzzikman simply adds more to the debate. 
 
I will keep posting Borzzikman reports for others, you don’t have to watch them. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Oct 28 2025 23:51 utc | 98

Posted by: Naive | Oct 28 2025 21:29 utc | 56
Sorry, forgot the /s tag … you missed my sarcasm. I was about as shocked at the Gaza ceasefire falling apart as I am at the sun rising in the east.

Posted by: Ghost of Zanon | Oct 28 2025 23:58 utc | 99

@  Peter AU1 | Oct 28 2025 23:42 utc | 102
 
here is where you heard his name and yes – he cuts right thru the bs..
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Ellsberg

Posted by: james | Oct 28 2025 23:58 utc | 100