Reagan in Japan
November 11, 2006
On this day in 1983, Ronald Reagan became the first American President to address the Diet
on his second trip to Japan (the first having been twelve years before) and his first as President. (The picture below is of Reagan and then-prime minister Yasuhiro Nakasone on that morning.) He began by thanking Japan for the warm reception he and Nancy had received, saying, “日米の友情は永 です。” (Japanese-American friendship is eternal.) He then moved on to profuse praise of Japanese industry and democracy, noting that 1989 would be celebrated anniversaries for both the Diet and the US Congress (the former’s centennial and the latter’s bicentennial.) He tossed in an anecdote about Ulysses S. Grant’s trip to Japan, then moved on to discuss nuclear disarmament , the pressing issue of the late Cold War era, and joint US-Japan security.
Reading Reagan’s speech is interesting, of course, from a historical point of view, but is
also notable for the ease that comes across in the words on the page. He used Japanese people’s names as often as Americans’, he referred to a number of historical events, he included relevant anecdotes, he remembered the social niceties.
Back in the mid-to-late 1990s, a T-shirt with Reagan’s picture on it was quite popular among conservatives, hawked in magazines such as National Review and American Spectator. Under Reagan’s upturned beaming face, it said, “Hey, America! Remember when we had a real President?”
I’m looking for one of those T-shirts now. The question stands.
Related Posts:
- Seijigiri #18: February 23, 2007 - The Six-Party Talks Roundup
- TPR News: Thursday, February 1, 2007 - Abe, his cabinet, the economy, and mobile phones
- February 19, 1942: President Franklin D. Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9066, commencing the wartime internment of Japanese-Americans
- Prime Ministers of Japan









