▲ | hearsathought 4 days ago | |||||||
> the entire West (EU, UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia) Japan and South Korea are not western nations and hence not part of the west. > This played a role in the recent Japanese pledge to invest $60B in India and transfer processing tech IP to Indian firms. Think it had more to do with the US forcing Japan to join its trade war against china. Don't you? | ||||||||
▲ | alephnerd 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> Japan and South Korea are not western nations and hence not part of the west Japan and South Korea are commonly treated as being part of the West for the same reason Australia is - they are geographically in Asia but aligned with the United States and EU. If you don't like Japan or South Korea being called "Western" we can call them NATO+ then. > Think it had more to do with the US forcing Japan to join its trade war against china. Don't you? Japan began moving REE processing to India all the way back to 2010-12 when the Senkaku Diaoyu standoff happenened and China blockaded Japanese access to REEs. That's when both Toyota and Hitachi began working with IREL on REE extraction and processing. And China initiated the trade war with Japan all the way back to the Senkaku Diaoyu standoff, just like China initiated the trade war with South Korea due to South Korea allowing THAAD deployments. The interest in developing an ExChina supply in Japan and South Korea has existed ever since China was the aggressor to both countries. And Japan (as well as South Korea) has been an economic partner of India since all the way back during the socialist 1980s era. Japanese JVs like Maruti Suzuki, Tata Hitachi, Tata Docomo, Sumimoto Chemicals India, and others have been around for decades. Heck, it was Softbank that helped spark India's startup boom in the 2000s and 2010s which became the IPO boom today. | ||||||||
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