Japan-U.S. ties grow in importance in new Cold War

U.S. officials' calls for reforming the international order at the Munich Security Conference signal growing importance for Japan-U.S. ties. The Trump administration's 2026 National Defense Strategy offers Japan a chance to deepen its role.

For years, Japanese strategists have quietly worried about a United States distracted by Eastern Europe and divided internally by culture wars. But the message from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Elbridge Colby at last week's Munich Security Conference (MSC) offers reassurance.

Rubio stated in his address, “We can no longer place the so-called global order above the vital interests of our people and our nations. We do not need to abandon the system of international cooperation we authored, and we don’t need to dismantle the global institutions of the old order that together we built. But these must be reformed. These must be rebuilt.”

After a decade of strategic drift, Washington has aligned its resources with the reality Japan has faced for a generation. The Donald Trump administration's recently released 2026 National Defense Strategy (NDS), along with its “flexible realism,” provides Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi a unique opportunity to solidify Japan's role not just as a host for U.S. troops, but as an indispensable partner in building a new Indo-Pacific framework to contain the Chinese Communist Party.

This development highlights the evolving U.S.-Japan alliance amid contexts like the Global South, NATO, and the Russia-Ukraine war.

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