Thứ Sáu, 9 tháng 3, 2018

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US Air Force Pararescue training - Pararescue Indoctrination Course

For more infomation >> US Air Force Pararescue training - Pararescue Indoctrination Course - Duration: 19:26.

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Secretary of State Rex Tillerson Arrives in Djibouti - Duration: 0:45.

Airplane engine sounds

For more infomation >> Secretary of State Rex Tillerson Arrives in Djibouti - Duration: 0:45.

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North Korea Sends The U.S. A Friend Request - Duration: 3:03.

For more infomation >> North Korea Sends The U.S. A Friend Request - Duration: 3:03.

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COUNTER ROCKET, ARTILLERY and MORTAR ⚔️ US C-RAM Systems - Duration: 4:26.

The Counter-Rocket, Artillery, Mortar (C-RAM) / Indirect Fire Protection Capability system

was developed early during Operation Iraqi Freedom/Enduring Freedom in order to protect

ground forces and forward operating bases from the threat of rockets, artillery, and

mortars.

C-RAM is made up of variety of systems which provide the ability to sense, warn, respond,

intercept, command and control, shape, and protect deployed forces.

A main component of the C-RAM system is the LPWS, which is modified from the U.S. Navy

MK-15 MOD 29 Block IB, Baseline 2 Close-In Weapon System, and mounted on a commercial

35 ton semi-trailer for land-based operations.

The M61A1 20mm Gatling gun is capable of acquiring its target and firing at a rate of 4,500 rounds

per minute.

The Forward Area Air Defense Command and Control (FAAD C2) system integrates the sensors, weapons,

and warning systems for C-RAM Intercept.

C-RAM was operationally deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan, where its sense and warn capabilities

provided timely warning of more than 2,500 rocket and mortar attacks against C-RAM equipped

forward operating bases.

C-RAM was also purchased by Australia and the United Kingdom.

Mobility: Highly mobile, mounted on road-mobile platform

Role: Protect deployed troops from rockets, artillery,and mortars

Status: Previously deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan; purchased by Australia and the United Kingdom

Producer: Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, L3 Communications, Lockheed Martin

Tests showed that C-RAM had a 60 to 70 percent shoot-down capability.

On 16 December 2004, TARDEC's Active Defense Systems team conducted test simulation activities.

The first activity involved a live interceptor being loaded while waiting for a live mortar

to fall within engagement range.

This was followed by Mortar Tracking System(MTS) RADAR providing IAAPS a cue.

The system then tracked the mortar, computed a fire control solution, fired, updated the

fuse timing in flight, and the interceptor appeared to engage the mortar "nose to nose"

at the prescribed standoff in front of the mortar.

C-RAM used target acquisition sensors, including Firefinder and Lightweight Counter Mortar

Radar, to detect and track fired rounds.

The AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder radar system is produced by Northrop Grumman's Electronic Systems sector.

Once a threat is detected, audio and visual alarms sound to warn exposed soldiers.

A fire-control subsystem predicted the mortar round's flight path, prioritizes targets,

activates the warning system, and provides cueing data to defeat the mortar round while

still in the air.

The complete C-RAM system networks a ground-based version of Phalanx together with the Army's

Lightweight Counter Mortar Radar (LCMR) and Q-36 Target Acquisition Radar (AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder

Radar).

Unlike the naval version, C-RAM does not fire solid tungsten penetrators.

Instead, self-destructing explosive bullets are used, in order to reduce the risk of civilian

and friendly casualties.

The fire-control subsystem Northrop Grumman Mission Systems provided for C-RAM uses software

modified from FAAD C2, which ties together the sensors and weapons of the Army's short-range

air-defense battalions.

Northrop Grumman was the prime contractor for FAAD C2, which is operational throughout

the world and has been especially critical to homeland security efforts in the Washington,

DC area.

You will find more specifications in the description

For more infomation >> COUNTER ROCKET, ARTILLERY and MORTAR ⚔️ US C-RAM Systems - Duration: 4:26.

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U.S., N. Korea to talk again after decades of broken commitments - Duration: 2:31.

There have been interactions and meetings between representatives from Washington and

Pyongyang in the past, but nothing like what we're about to witness in May.

Cha Sang-mi helps illustrate why the upcoming summit marks a significant step forward.

Under an Agreed Framework signed between the United States and North Korea in Geneva...

Pyongyang froze its nuclear power plants and the U.S. agreed to replace them with light

water reactors.

The Clinton administration pushed for the normalization of U.S.-North Korea relations...

until the treaty ultimately broke down in 2002.

September 19th, 2005.

Multilateral discussions are held in Beijing involving South Korea, North Korea, the U.S.,

China, Japan and Russia.

The six-party talks seemed to have reached some consensus on North Korea abandoning its

nuclear programs, and the North pledged to return to the Nonproliferation Treaty.

But the pact didn't last long.

North Korea tested its first nuclear weapon in October the next year, and then the U.S.

took action against China's Banco Delta Asia, a Macau-based bank that was a "primary money-laundering

concern" at the time.

Further six-party talks were held in 2007 and a deal was implemented in October.

The parties agreed to provide a total of 1 million tons of heavy fuel oil in exchange

for the North committing to the pact.

The following year, North Korea demolished a 20-meter-tall cooling tower at its nuclear

reactor complex to symbolize its commitment.

But the talks have not been held since 2009, when North detonated a nuclear weapon underground.

The most recent official meeting between the United States and North Korea was on February

29th, 2012 in Beijing.

Those were the first high-level talks between the two countries since Kim Jong-un came to

power.

The Obama administration urged the regime to suspend its nuclear activities in exchange

for some 240-thousand metric tons of food aid.

But again, the North didn't keep its promise and tested a third nuclear device in 2014.

Six years after that last meeting,... an unprecedented encounter is about to happen between a sitting

U.S. president and a North Korean leader.

Come May, if there's to be a new commitment... it'll have to be reached by two leaders who've

both been unpredictible in their own ways.

Cha Sang-mi, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S., N. Korea to talk again after decades of broken commitments - Duration: 2:31.

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Google Is Helping the US Military Develop Artificial Intelligence for Drones - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> Google Is Helping the US Military Develop Artificial Intelligence for Drones - Duration: 0:57.

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Massives Militärtraining der US-Armee in Deutschland: "Werden den Frieden in Europa verteidigen" - Duration: 3:20.

For more infomation >> Massives Militärtraining der US-Armee in Deutschland: "Werden den Frieden in Europa verteidigen" - Duration: 3:20.

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US State Department Issues Travel Alert To Playa Del Carmen - Duration: 1:56.

For more infomation >> US State Department Issues Travel Alert To Playa Del Carmen - Duration: 1:56.

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US Forest Service Head Resigns Amid Sexual Misconduct Allegations - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> US Forest Service Head Resigns Amid Sexual Misconduct Allegations - Duration: 0:57.

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US Navy to Scrap Legacy Hornet Fighter Jets - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> US Navy to Scrap Legacy Hornet Fighter Jets - Duration: 0:57.

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Oldest high school orchestra in US performs at Statehouse - Duration: 1:06.

For more infomation >> Oldest high school orchestra in US performs at Statehouse - Duration: 1:06.

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Nor'easter dumps heavy snow on U.S. east coast, flights canceled - Duration: 0:31.

Nearly a million people in America's Northeast are without power as a second nor'easter winter

storm in a week batters the region.

Heavy snow in New Jersey, New York and southern New England continued into Thursday with some

areas getting more than 60 centimeters.

Hundreds of flights have been canceled, but air travel disruptions were not as bad as

it was on Wednesday when the second storm hit.

However, a third nor'easter is making its way up from the south and could hit the eastcoast

on Monday.

For more infomation >> Nor'easter dumps heavy snow on U.S. east coast, flights canceled - Duration: 0:31.

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US Senate Candidate Patrolling US Border Just Sounded Alarm After Horrifying Discovery – It's Bad! - Duration: 7:42.

For more infomation >> US Senate Candidate Patrolling US Border Just Sounded Alarm After Horrifying Discovery – It's Bad! - Duration: 7:42.

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US Senate Candidate Patrolling US Border Just Sounded Alarm After Horrifying Discovery – It's Bad! - Duration: 7:41.

For more infomation >> US Senate Candidate Patrolling US Border Just Sounded Alarm After Horrifying Discovery – It's Bad! - Duration: 7:41.

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2 More US Navy Officers Plead Guilty in 'Fat Leonard' Scandal - Duration: 1:01.

For more infomation >> 2 More US Navy Officers Plead Guilty in 'Fat Leonard' Scandal - Duration: 1:01.

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Federal Flash: Betsy DeVos Slams State ESSA Plans - Duration: 4:24.

Hello and welcome to Federal Flash.

I'm Phillip Lovell and I'm joined by Nikki McKinney.

The Every Student Succeeds Act (or ESSA) dominates this week's Flash, with Congressional Democrats

continuing to express concerns with implementation of the law and surprising remarks to state

education officials by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos.

Nikki, what's the latest from Capitol Hill?

This week, members of the Congressional Black Caucus, Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and

the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus sent a scathing letter to Secretary DeVos

criticizing her approval of state plans that violate ESSA.

They urged her to review all state plans to ensure they comply with the law including

QUOTE working with states to amend state plans the U.S. Department of Education has already

approved. END QUOTE

At issue are two important requirements within ESSA, often referred to as equity guardrails in the law.

One provision requires states to factor the performance of subgroups within their accountability systems.

Another that requires three distinct categories of schools to be identified for support and improvement.

If these issues sound familiar that's because the letter echoes concerns raised by Patty

Murray, Ranking Democrat on the Senate education committee, over the past several months.

The letter also further reinforces legal arguments made by the Alliance for Excellent Education

in a memo prepared for the Education Department.

Visit the link below to access All4Ed's memo.

Let's turn to Phillip for a deeper dive into the issues.

Thanks, Nikki.

Under ESSA states are not required to establish a rating system such as an A-F or 5-stars

to differentiate schools.

But, if they do, the rating system must factor in the performance of various student subgroups

into that system.

In many of the state plans that the department has approved, only the performance of the

all students group is included.

The practical effect of this is that schools receiving an "A" or five stars could have

African-American students not reading on grade level or students with disabilities who are

not proficient in math.

As important, is how states will identify schools for support.

Congress established three categories of schools to receive support: Comprehensive; Targeted;

and Additional Targeted

Two of these categories--Targeted and Additional Targeted--are based on the performance of

historically underserved students.

Unfortunately, the Department has approved plans that collapse those two categories into

one category.

As a result, fewer students will receive the support they need in order to graduate

college and career ready.

In a speech to the National Association of State Boards of Education, Bobby Scott, the

Ranking Democrat on the House education committee argued that state plans aren't compliant because

states QUOTE haven't been given adequate guidance from the Education Department. END QUOTE

As you might assume, Secretary DeVos has a different point of view.

In remarks before the Council of Chief State School Officers, she argued that state plans

do, in fact, comply with ESSA's requirements.

But where they fall short is in a lack of innovation.

Here's the Secretary in her own words.

Noticeably absent from the Secretary's speech was any acknowledgement of the concerns that

Democrats have raised about compliance with ESSA's equity guardrails.

That's all for now.

For an alert when the next episode of Federal Flash is available, email us at alliance@all4ed.org.

Thanks for watching.

For more infomation >> Federal Flash: Betsy DeVos Slams State ESSA Plans - Duration: 4:24.

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U.S. State Dept. Issues Travel Alert. - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> U.S. State Dept. Issues Travel Alert. - Duration: 0:33.

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US-Japanese: Are we on a Collision Course? - Duration: 1:16:56.

and with today's speaker I'd like to remind you that the Institute on world

affairs is a an activity open to the entire ISU community if you are here

you're part of that community and we welcome your participation

we'll begin meeting Monday after next at four o'clock in the pine room we'll talk

over this week for a few minutes and then we'll start arguing about what will

choose for next year we try to choose the most important topic in the world

and then we go out looking for the most important people we can the most

interesting the most knowledgeable those that can tell us the most to understand

that topic better and if you're at all interested or there's someone somewhere

in the world you'd like to have come here and have this university here come

get involved in the Institute they can part of the discussion and you can play

a part in the way this works out next year so please think about that welcome

to this news lecture before we introduce our speaker I'd like to bring to your

attention that tonight Jane Cortez is going to be giving a lecture in the Sun

Room on economy ecology and poetry and then tomorrow at noon here in the

Pioneer room we have a panelist spar speaking on engendering change women in

the new world order today's speaker Mitsu Goto-- served in executive

positions in europe and japan with the Nissan Motor Company before forming his

own international consulting firm for the auto industry while with Nissan he

was in charge of the International Affairs and he also worked in Europe

when Nissan opened its early plants in the UK he's a graduate of Wabash College

in Indiana and he did his graduate work at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of

Public and International Affairs he was managing director for the Japan Centre

for international exchange and his author of speaking out for Japan my

discipline in internationalism he's on the board of advisors for the Belgian

Business School a member of the Council of London's policies study Institute and

a recipient recipient of the Benjamin Rush Award for humanistic values in

corporate I introduced them to you go to' on us

Japanese relations are we on a collision course

thank you yes generous introduction my last name

Gothel is spelled g oto and when I went to Wabash College years and years ago

some of my classmates would call me goat oh hi goat or even call me hi billy goat

so around 1974 in the wake of first energy crisis Japanese cars started

selling like hotcakes in America and touched off a small small car war they

termed that the Japanese mass media corn and I am I thought my nickname should be

escaped as in scapegoat so if you like to call me escape be very happy

in fact my nickname was written up on the front page of Wall Street Journal in

February 1975 so I'm very pleased and to be on the campus of Iowa State

University today and feel honored to be invited invited by the Institute on

world affairs to speak to you today especially the day after the important

presidential election I don't know why you chose this particular day for me to

to speak but I'm delighted and feel honored to be here today I see sometimes

there are two kinds of dreams that I see in not that I see dreams that often one

dream that I sometimes see is myself walking up to a podium like this facing

an American audience such as yours unable to utter a single word of English

you see I did not speak a word of English

till I was about 17 or 18 so sometimes I see this kind of dream and wake up and

having really cold feet the other then then I'm also reminded of a young

Japanese boy someone like me who came to this country

to study his Japanese his English was so poor that whenever he wanted to say

something he had to look upwards in his pocket japanese-english dictionary

one day he will be invited to a party where he was introduced a pretty

American girl so he quickly looked up his dictionary and said you have a

beautiful high hid e you see in Japanese there one or

possibly two words which would describe outer coverings of anything but in

English you say strange enough human beings and picks up skin and horses and

cows have high on them tree has a bark Orange has a Reyn bananas appeal and

peace have pods on them and and of course I've known that that there are

some nuts in this country which have not shells on them but the skin on them also

but his friend immediately noticed the American friend said to him don't know

young man you should have used that word skin in a case like that complexion will

be too much for you so next Sunday following Sunday he goes to the local

church where the congregation was singing him jaimé jaimé o my Savior so

he started singing scheme a scheme me or my City

actually the other kind of dream that I sometimes see is the sky filled with

Boeing b-29 bombers that used to come drop bombs over us in the last years of

the war and and I was then attending a boarding school on the outskirts of

Tokyo but in the last year of the war all of the students who mobilized for

war effort we had to work in the nearby Nakajima aircraft engine factory

operating lathes and things like that and and that became the first target of

the b-29 bombers based in Marianas in November 1944 in the first wave of b-29s

came in high altitude and since from my childhood I was always interested in

airplanes and cars i disregarded the order to stay in the air raid shelter

and watch these b-29s come high altitude in broad daylight and

their bomb base open and bombs coming down

and fortunately the plant went up in smoke

but nobody was injured and I remember seeing Japanese anti-aircraft guns being

being shot but the the b-29s came in such high altitude that the guns could

not get to them but I do remember seeing a Japanese fighter playing congas a

style crashed into one of the between eyes and the both planes coming down

this was the first time I got to we Japanese got to see what the b-29 looked

like because there had been no published picture of the aircraft in the newspaper

or magazines and I was really fascinated with these long-range bombers now after

the nakajima aircraft plant went up in smoke I then returned to my hometown

which is Nagoya a big industrial city between Tokyo and Osaka or for that

matter between Kyoto and Tokyo and my my father said to me that perhaps between

eyes will start coming to Nagoya also because Nagoya was a home of Mitsubishi

aircraft which used to produce famous zero fighters and sure enough in March

of 1945 between I started coming dropping bombs over us but sometimes

they'll come nighttime and if you hear the engine you know each plane having

four engines and there are normally about five three to five hundred b-29s

in the air the engine noise alone had devastating psychological effect on us

dum dum glow and then we'll cringe in the area shelter and we soon hear bombs

exploding nearby and then on May 17th 1945 three months before walking to the

end my parental home which was a big Japanese style home in Nagoya went up in

smoke after 513 b-29s in a particular rate

dropped incendiary bombs in Nagoya and I remember standing on the smoldering

ruins of my parental home saying to myself my god what have we done and it

made me wonder why the Japanese army generals Tojo was the

Prime Minister army general who attacked through harbor in the first place

and wondered why Japan ever declared war against the United States I was really

mad at the Japanese army generals who started this last war and also wondered

if they had maintained a good dialogue with President of the United States

Secretary of State perhaps war could have been avoided or

if they had much better understanding of the great expanse of America especially

the Midwestern part of the United States and your industrial capability I think

war could not could not have happened and so when the war came to an end

then after I graduated from this boarding school senior high school I

decided that I would not want to go to college in Japan but rather I would grab

first opportunity offered to me to come to the United States to continue my

studies and and but I said to myself first you had to study the language so I

during the day I worked on my father's farm just outside of Nagoya and my

father being absentee landlord land would have been taken away by tenants if

I did not work on my father's farm under MacArthur's new agricultural policy and

so during the day I worked on my father's farm by night I would listen to

the Armed Forces Radio Japan was still under the Allied occupation and and

listen to especially newscast and then imitating the radio announcer who was

normally a GI I would read aloud the only english-language newspaper

published in The Japan Times trying to memorize phrases words and sentences

and when I became reasonably proficient in the language in about a year and a

half I then decided to go work for the local US military government in Nagoya

where a lot of my American friends would write to their own colleges in

universities and to see if they had scholarship available for me but in vain

I was also working with a young American in mid-30s civilian employee from Ladoga

Indiana a tiny town of 500 people even people in the air don't know where

he is but anyway one day this fellow became seriously you know he had bhavet

IPO that affected his neck he had hard time breathing and he was taken to flown

to US military hospital in Osaka and remained in an oxygen tank for ten days

but died there ten days later it just so happened that a few days he was stricken

I had taken his picture in your office and when I wrote a letter of condolence

to his mother back home in Indiana I thought she would like to have his

picture so I enclosed it and for the end of my letter I said someday I would very

much like to to come to your country to continue my education and she was

everything we had heard about me from her son and she was good enough to drive

to Crawfordsville Indiana which is about 13 14 miles from Ladoga and she talked

to the admissions wrecker Wabash College eventually Wabash College gave me a

scholarship so only because her her son did not make it back to Indiana I was

able to come and I and I had four years of one

or education in the heart of the Midwest so I became a kind of Japanese fujur and

and then I also received fellowship to do graduate work at the Princeton's

Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs so I've had

education wise best of both worlds and I'll be forever grateful to my American

friends who made it possible for me to come to the United States in the first

place now today I'm supposed to be talking

about u.s. apparent relations whether we are on a collision collision course my

thoughts always go back to January of this year when President George Bush

evidently was persuaded by the in commerce secretary Bob Mosbacher to

bring 21 US business leaders in the auto sector and I personally have had very

good relations with chairman of the big three trees of Detroit Lee Iacocca he

also had done graduate work in engineering at Princeton and I got to

know him very well he was president of Ford Motor Company and then read Pauling

germinal Ford and Bob's tempo of course he had to step down just a few days ago

but actually one of the Japanese

automakers said at the time that when there are so many of us we cannot

possibly have meaningful discussion you

know and in fact in in advance of their visit

both American and Japanese government negotiators negotiated is

sort of a autoparts purchased plants and I think on a voluntary basis Japanese

automakers now made commitments to buy as much as 19 billion dollars worth of

auto parts from us suppliers by 1994 but already there have been so much goodwill

on the part of Japanese automakers also the part of our government to want to

buy more from the United States and actually since becoming independent

international consultant I've been retained by chairman of the Timken

company which is the biggest bearings manufacturer in the United States and

also by chairman of our bean industries in Columbus Indiana which is the US

biggest all exhaust system manufacturer along with shock absorbers and their

Chairman also asked to come to Japan with the president but turned the

president down in saying they do not want to be politicized I'm also reminded

of the I mean as a other result the auto issue was really highlighted and you

know because of President Bush's visit to Japan I'm reminded of the story of a

Chrysler dealer somewhere small-town USA and the story that mr. Straub who is

Dean of the Sloan School of Management at MIT personally told me now this was

the Chrysler dealer in you know in the days when Chrysler Corporation was

having grave financial difficulties and the dealer

found it very difficult to move chrysler cars from his showroom floor and he

became and more and more depressed so he took to alcohol and eventually his

wife and children left him one evening he was nursing a bottle with his shaky

hands and suddenly I came smoke and with it a genie now Jenny said to him thank

you for having gotten me out of this bottle in gratitude I'd like to grant

you your last wish so the Chrysler dealer dealer says get me an import

dealership when the smoke cleared in the genie

disappeared the Chrysler dealer found himself in the middle of Tokyo selling

chrysler cars actually The Wall Street Journal had a notorious in January that

said Japan should have kept the Iacocca in Japan so that he will be directing

sales of Chrysler cars in Japan you know actually I felt this would be a golden

opportunity for Prime Minister nozawa first Japanese Prime Minister who

is very international minded and also who is able to speak English fluently

I thought maybe by getting together with the President of the United States they

can discuss broader issues global issues where Japan and the United States could

possibly collaborate but instead if you recall at the dinner hosted by our prime

minister President Bush threw up

we are fortunate he was probably very tired after a grueling trip to Australia

and other parts of Asia and so they did not get to discuss more important issues

of the day

maybe this being the day after the presidential election I should be

talking about about Texas businessman Ross Perot

but remember t boone Pickens the famous Texas oilman started coming to Japan

like a couple of years ago in saying that now that his company had had twenty

six percent of the Japanese lighting headlight

manufacturer called cojito manufacturing the three of his men be placed on the

Japanese company's board in the Japanese company also increased dividend payouts

and he kept coming back to Japan but over the years I got to meet him and see

him and I began to like this man he he one day gave me his autobiography

autograph and in reading his autobiography I admire the way he

managed his own company how he treated everyone my name's company you know just

like the Japanese Japanese company you know there's no distinction between blue

color and white color etc but he also told me a story to American women

walking down one of the fashionable streets downtown Houston one day when

they heard a frog I found a frog in the gutter and the Frog started talking to

them in saying that I used to be an oil man with the spell was cast I

came a frog now if one of you were to pick me up and kiss me

I'll be able to turn back into an oil man so one of the women picked him up

and instead of kissing him she put him in her purse and they continued down the

street after a while this other woman got concerned and said to the other why

didn't you kiss him and the other woman said nowadays a talking frog is worth

more than our oil man but as you know he was not successful in taking over

Japanese company and he often appeared before congressional committees in

saying that the Japanese companies are not open to foreign investors etc also

beginning January of 1990 Japanese government and the US negotiators began

a series of negotiations that were called SII which means structural

impediment negative almost sound like a star war you should be with something

and US side came up with many as 75 different demands ranging from Japan and

start buying American rice Japan opened up its market to big toy stores such as

tora tora like i can never pronounce that word toy toys are down to we

Japanese stop being or colleagues and take more paid holidays and also knowing

that we have pension for personal savings on the average we saved

16 fifteen to sixteen percent of our annual

income and to put put that into personal savings account as against your five to

six percent so American trade negotiators who come to Japan say to us

you know you become Spencer it and buy more from America etc so I was beginning

to feel that now wait a minute you are getting into our domestic you know in

our domestic affairs but even the poll conducted by a Japanese newspaper in I

believe in April of 1990 some forty percent of Japanese Paul felt that some

of the us demands are justifiable sixty percent of Japanese Paul also felt that

the Japan ought to start applying American rice bit a bit because

foodstuff in Japan tends to be very expensive compared to the food prices

here in the United States and then the Japanese side not to be to be outdone

for the first time came up with a dozen demands and to talk to the United States

of course the Japanese negotiate would say that us in Riyadh ought to put its

economic house in order by reducing federal huge federal budget deficit

reduce trade deficit with Japan and you encourage your industries to become more

productive improved productivity and competitiveness etc again I'm reminded

of the story of the Admiral of the fleet which was told by Marvin Runyon for

Nissan wood away from Ford Motor Company to run Nissan's manufacturing operation

in Tennessee in fact I was well I need some motor company I was in charge of US

investment project also and this story of the Admiral fleet is one day an

ensign on his flagship but watching the ship's radar screen and he saw a small

blip so he shouted we are on a collision course you change course and the voice

would come back and say you change course and you change course and and

they were getting nowhere finally the this incident reports this

back to the Admiral now Admiral of the fleet now had a microphone in his hand

he said this is the Admiral the fleet whoever you are change course and the

voice came back and saying god dammit I'm the lighthouse you change course

well I think US negotiators know that the we Japanese are very susceptible to

external pressure we would we would do something you know we will always react

to external pressure and so they have always used kind of harsh tactics harsh

rhetoric to get us to do something

actually caving in well not exactly caving in to pressure but beginning

about five six years ago we not be noticing for iteration of fact u.s. fast

food chains in Japan and first of all of course the McDonald's hamburger joint

and then Colonel Sanders Fried Chicken came

then Denise came baskin-robbins ice cream joint came Taco Bell and Pizza Hut

everybody is now in Japan and finally 7-eleven stores came in in joint venture

partnership with a Japanese retail chain called Ito yoga doll and there are now

more than 4,000 outlets throughout Japan and and they are doing very good

business they have very good market research program and the merchandise on

on their shelves are changed so often to meet the demanding tastes of

Japanese and actually parent company Southland corporation in Texas began to

have financial problems in the Japanese side in ended up going to the rescue of

Southland corporation and Southland I mean the Japanese yo-yo kado now has I

believe something like sixty percent equity in Southland corporation and I

think there is a very good example of joint venture between American company

and a Japanese company doing so well in Japan now the Japanese populace is

bombarded with what you Americans call junk food but we don't call it

youngsters really like your fast food restaurants and it's very hard for me to

keep my daughters from 17 not baskin-robbins ice cream joints for

example at any rate we are beginning to see obese children because of changing

food habits and and I'm afraid the rate of heart attack among all the

other people is on the increase because we we buy nowadays as much as 73% or

your beef export can you imagine this you know sometimes senator Bakk Max

Baucus in Montana and other senators or congressmen would say to us you must buy

more American beef and now we ended up buying as much of 73 percent of your

beef export I know the United States for example restrict the import of

inexpensive beef from Argentina or Australian but we ended up buying so

much American beef we also buy nowadays something like 68 percent of your pork

export and much of which both beef and pork come from Iowa in fact between Iowa

and Japan Iowa has trade surplus with Japan I was this morning was just

talking with Ratan governor joy Corning in Des Moines and I got to see her in

Tokyo in June of this year she was just saying that and that's really amazing

and and we also buy 51% of us citrus exports so our warehouses

are now bulging with grapefruits and oranges from the United States and my

family for example can enjoy grapefruit halves for breakfast every morning

prices have come down which is very good thing we also buy about 31% of your

chicken export and about 25% of soybean export corn

export feedstock export and and sorghum also I think and leave tobacco so we

last year if they ended up buying as much as 81 not 8.1 billion dollars worth

of agricultural products from the United States so we are United States and best

agricultural customer now Japanese industries also have been bending

backwards for Japanese government or government on universities also bending

backwards to buy more and more from the United States some seven years ago the

manufacturer goods imported from the United States accounted for only 30% of

imports from the United States but last year we the imports from the United

States totaled like fifty three billion dollars but 63% of which were

manufactured goods such as satellite space satellites communications

equipment computers a hundred million dollars worth of American movies and

American movies are very popular in Japan and we are also buying we like new

Cadillac Seville and which is becoming very popular in Japan Japanese

youngsters like Ralph Ralph Lauren you know outfits and there are also Brooks

Brothers tours in Japan now so we it's not that we do not like to

buy anything from America as some of you are led to believe but we really like

things American still and I hope more American companies would would bend

backwards to study the Japanese market and export their products to Japan

actually the Japanese today imports more on a per capita basis and per capita

dollar figure is something like 800 and not excuse me 387 dollars worth of u.s.

products at versus on per capita basis you Americans have been buying about

three hundred fifty-seven dollars worth of Japanese goods so that is where we

now stand

speaking of Iowa Japan relations in addition to to your exports Japanese

companies have come to Iowa to invest in sk the japanese bearings company has a

plan here rich Bridgestone also invested here in Iowa that's a tire company and a

Gino moto which is you know the company that makes seasoning called accent has a

plant here in Iowa Sammi Tommo Chemical also has come and

horn de part distribution facility is here in Iowa in Toyota Insurance Company

of North America has just decided to locate its head office in Cedar Rapids

Iowa so more and more Japanese companies are also

finding Iowa their American home homes in fact I was in when I was introduced I

used to be for a long time with Nissan Motor Company which is a tiny struggling

Japanese automaker and and I was also also I also spearheaded Nissan's right

to invest here in North America and we began a feasibility studies as far back

as 1974 and and the final decision to invest in Smyrna Tennessee was made in

time for the presidential election of 1980 you know was a toss-up between

Jimmy Carter's reelection and and or Ronald Reagan and in the end I was

negotiating with governors of Tennessee and Georgia Georgia governor was

democratic governor George Busbee and I played them against each other to get a

better deal and finally finally we decided Isan decided to go to Tennessee

because Lamar Alexander among other things moved state legislature to vote

as much as 7.2 million dollars for training our future employees and Nissan

itself matched with sitting aside as much as 52 million dollars for training

our people that's and then to date Nissan increase that amount by by double

that amount so and today today Nissan in Tennessee employs over 6,000 people and

yes I also decided to Bill's an Asian plant and Dekker

Tennessee but of the six thousand people over thousand people when they were

newly hired managers inclusive or sent to Japan jointly by the state of

Tennessee and Nissan and so that groups of maybe thirty and so that they can

receive on-the-job training lasting like six weeks in Japan

they will have orientation program for Japanese lifestyles also and whatever

they the garner and they would bring back to Tennessee and by having the best

of both worlds they have been producing real high quality vehicles in Smyrna

Tennessee and I for one are very happy that Nissan made their home in the

United States in Tennessee now the man who was named the first president chief

executive officer Marvin Runyon's name I already mentioned

he was vice president body and assembly a Ford Motor Company but he did such a

good job that he used to say the people are the greatest asset we have including

stake holders and he did such a good job that President Reagan tapped him to be

chairman of the travel TVA about a year ago President Bush asked him to become

Postmaster General well I think he's doing a very good job in you know was

possible us pasta pasta service has had some problems and I think Marvin Runyon

is a good job as Postmaster General today

before I conclude I just want to say that over the years in the last say two

decades the United States in the United States and Japan have become so mutually

interdependent our economies we have been bound by mutual security pact also

and culturally also there is so much going on even between educational

institutions in Iowa and the Japanese educational institutions and then state

of Iowa has had a long-standing association with Yamanashi Prefecture

which and where Mount Fuji is located I was told that in 1960 when the Yamanashi

Prefecture hit by a terrible typhoon

pigs were sent by generous people here in Iowa and that was the beginning of

Iowa and Yamanashi Prefecture sister state or sister Prefecture ties and

again I'm very grateful to the Iowa people for having sent relief goods to

Yamanashi Prefecture I think Japan probably needs America more than America

would need Japan Mike Mansfield who was long ago Senate the majority leader from

Montana was American ambassador to Japan during the Carter Administration and

also through the Reagan administration he's Democrat but he did such a good job

in Japan that President Reagan reappointed him

as ambassador to Japan he used to say the next generation next

century is the century of the Pacific and that's where the action is going to

be and that's where the growth is foreseen also there's no more important

bilateral relationship between that and that between Japan and the United States

barring none and I fully concur Japan also needs to play a bigger political

international role and of course as you have heard a prime ministers leadership

role Miyazawa leadership role has been debilitated by the political party

scandal involving political contributions intra factual dispute as

as to who should be the faction leader who is likely to be next

Prime Minister but at any rate because of Connemara position

I think Miyazawa Prime Minister has been keeping his mouth shut about his in his

own involvement and I think it has really stability his leadership role in

fact his popularity rate is now down to 20 percent so that's the kind of

leadership problem that we are having now until about November of last year

for four years I was on loan from Nissan Motor Company to the nonprofit

organization called Japan center for international exchange as managing

director now one of the major objectives of this organization was

not only annual congressional and parliamentary exchange program that we

had in the last 15 16 years in fact when Dan Quayle was freshman congressman from

Indiana he and his wife Marilyn were brought over to Japan and I was since

I'm a Wabash graduate in DePaul University

he's the Wabash archrival I was asked to take him out for first for breakfast and

dinner so ever since I got to know them very very well now same way with Al Gore

jr. and when he was a freshman congressman from Tennessee he and Tipper

were brought over to Japan and and I took I remember taking them out for

dinner and I've maintained very close contact with Al Gore jr. and Tipper

since then the fan Center for international exchange was also

organized major us-japan dialogue which is called Shimoda conference which will

bring together your political leaders business leaders and academics to always

policy oriented discussions we were also the parent committee for the trilateral

commission which is the brainchild of David Rockefeller and annually this

trilateral commission meet once a year North America Japan in Europe and we

used to organize policy oriented discussions but but the major objectives

of the Japan Center in the last few years had been to encourage or educate

Japanese political leaders and three years Japan really need to be

played a bigger political role in the community of nations and I don't know

how much we've been successful at least I can get these business leaders also

being crying I mean we also try to enlighten Japanese business leaders in

the American concept of corporate philanthropy getting involved with

community affairs increasing number of Japanese businessmen who are based in

this country now there is encouraged to get involved with Community Affairs when

invited to speak at the local Rotary Club luncheon or something they are

encouraged to speak you have but I don't think Japan could ever play and the kind

of moral broker or Quarles policeman's role of which the American President or

Secretary of State have played so I hope now that you have elected Bill Clinton

as the next president I hope the president that only can redress some of

your domestic issues your economy and

jobs and other domestic issues but I hope that he'll be very good

international international I mean president for the rest of it for the

rest of the world also Bob Strauss whom I have known for a long time he's

currently your ambassador to Russia who said several years ago let us build upon

a common vision so that the United States in Japan can

stand together as we approach the new frontiers of the 21st century and I feel

the same way thank you very much

actually not very many of us happen to know Bill Clinton that well although a

lot of Japanese business leaders have been coming to the either japan-us

southeast Association meeting at which governors of all seven southeastern

states bring a big number of business states business delegation to this

annual conference but Arkansas has never been part of this conference and so I

have known governors of all these seven southeastern states very very well some

some past governors but none of us really have met Bill Clinton although

he's been to Japan three times to to invite Japanese companies to come in

investing I think four or five Japanese companies but he is still kind of figure

everything we had done very well he has done very well as governor I'll consult

and of course he he was educated at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and I hope

somebody who is really qualified will be appointed your secretary of state and

and maybe somebody like war and Christopher's name has been I also feel

that you know in one of the presidential candidates debates he said

that in order to increase the tax base he's going to tax anyone making over

$200,000 a year and also he said foreign companies investing here in this country

I hope I hope he would not treat the foreign companies differently from US

companies because I for one feel that for example Nissan my former company

which has invested so heavily in the United States we consider that company

to be an American company no longer only maybe less than ten Japanese so I hope

Japanese companies that there are about 1,400 Japanese companies that have

invested throughout the United States for manufacturing I hope I hope they are

not subject to different rates of tax I really do not think so of course in

Japan as you know our economy is now they're suffering we say in Japan

bubbles also have burst and our stock market has been very depressed

real-estate values has started going down for the first time so economies are

not doing I mean Japanese companies are not doing very well

you know you know when American multinational corporations invest

overseas of course and they tend to create more jobs overseas also but I

think the statistics show that that also created more job opportunities here in

America also because your companies here will have to produce certain componentry

or something for overseas sure actually my primary concern or the concern of

business which means business - such as mr. mortar of Sony is the content of US

Japan trade you know I hope my my sincerest wish is that more American

companies would be able to export to Japan more of high value-added things

rather than raw materials and parts and components kind of things but looking at

the recent US Japan trade US companies tended to buy even machine tools from

the United Front from Japan a machine tool industry in United States used to

be world's number one huh why over the years I think they lost out

to foreign competition I I just do not know you might the same way or much of

your steel mills in fact my I'm not Weiser to the Timken company but Timken

company built a new steel mill in Canton Ohio in 1983 with technologies from two

japanese mills and that mill produces the cleanest steel in the United States

and for the inauguration Reagan and went there for the inauguration that steel

mill but I hope you will not lose years ago we talked about hollowing out of

industries but I think your basic thing I hope your basic industry will remain

strong I mean including your auto industry and parts and component

manufacturers also actually several years ago Japanese government agreed to

pick up more of the defense cost me the cost of having American troops based in

Japan and and I think we nowadays pick up the cost of all Japanese means

payroll of all the Japanese employees hired by the US military in Japan I

think housing cost and things of this kind and that amount per soldier for

airmen u.s. airman is higher than the the cost that which is tab which is

being picked up by any of the NATO countries so I think maybe half half the

cost of having US troops based in Japan is being picked up and by the Japanese

government I think I think the gradually US forces

stationed in Japan will be reduced I think already I think the US troops

based in Korea is being that was already announced but perhaps I think the number

of somebody told me there are 60,000 US forces

you know airmen and Navy and Army being based in Japan but perhaps that number

could be reduced I don't know we still you know follow pins and gave up the US

Naval Base Subic Bay and Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines was had to be

abandoned because of the eruption of that inner tube so I think US troops

would need some kind of base I think in Japan Air Force Base or maybe naval port

you know I also realized that the u.s. is is currently having a bit of

difficulty relationship with with China after the Kenya Moore incident because

of human rights issues involved but I think Japan is maintaining very cordial

relations with China we had our Emperor visit China just a week or so ago and

although our Emperor had to apologize to the Chinese people that you know during

wartime Japanese army invaded China and killed so many even trillion populace

but I think I think Japan can maintain cordial relations will probably can give

certain economic aid and but I also like to see and we Japan do this in

collaboration with US companies

no I do not well of course when Gorbachev came to

Japan the last time there was great expectation that he would make certain

concessions but that did not happen of course its position and within the

within Russia was being weakened but by Yeltsin but Yeltsin is also concerned

about the economic health of Russia and I don't think he is inclined toward

returning even two of the four northern islands to Japan but of course of course

Yeltsin would like to see seek Japanese economic aid but Japanese government

seems to be thinking you know if we depend gives Soviet Union I mean Russia

some kind of economic a package then in return we wanted some back but it's not

going to work work that way I don't actually because of the public opinion

prevailing there even during the 70s and for example Japanese industries

especially the auto industry had to comply with these the very strict

exhaust emission control standards and that was introduced in Japan I believe

1973 based on the so-called muskie standards and the basis of muskie

standards as I understood it was that somebody amateur measure

is also a mission on a busy street in Chicago and senator Edmund muskie put it

in the exhaust emission control so Japanese automakers have had to comply

you know initially the Japanese on all industry would say oh we just cannot

produce cars that can meet that kind of standard but we did it and as a result

the air over Tokyo and you know soccer metropolis has become very clean in the

meantime from stationary sources also or smoke smoke we have put in restrict

local regulations and as a result the air I think over top over Japan is now

relatively clean we are now concerned about the destruction of ozone layer

this what's my call it you putting in the air conditioning system it's now

quickly being replaced by something else what you put in also in the aerosol cans

also it being replaced I think Japanese industry has really bent backwards to

comply with strict exhaust emission control and in the meantime this also

produced new technologies and companies that would make waste treatment system

things of this kind in fact I'm now being asked to become consultant to

Nashville based four-year-old or company called

natural resources technology and company NRT to professors at the Vanderbilt came

up with very ingenious waste treatment there are five and they have just

licensed a Japanese manufacturer and also trading company for marketing in

Japan and new waste treatment facilities being built based on their technology in

Columbus Ohio and Cleveland Ohio and I'm being asked to go see and become

consultant there's a great deal of market for such that's us technology I

know somebody will ask me that question

of course there has been some talk among some Asian countries of forming Asian

trade bloc also including Japan but I think Japan has taken the position that

of course during during the last war Japan tried to create greater Asian

called prosperity sphere and our Asian neighbors we in some ways very about

Japan forming the Asian trade bloc also in some ways I think forming regional

trading blocks such as not is against the principles of gap well European

community in some ways but as I see it more American companies

including the excretes of Detroit would establish more manufacturing facilities

for example in Mexico where the labor cost is Lord and I don't know how this

and will contribute to the creation or loss of jobs here in America I'm a

little bit against big multinational corporations American or Japanese

farming out there work overseas where the labor cost is much more I think that

would tend to take their jobs away but there may be freer and freer trade

between US and Mexico and Canada yes over the years Japanese labor cost has

has really gone up perhaps and to the

level of advanced European countries but the ten perhaps in Germany labor cost is

probably higher than in Japan but compared to the u.s. labor costs there

should not be that much different stuff but perhaps I think you assets to labor

cost is higher

oh yes yes well Nyssa appointed a new president in June of this year and he

the man who moved up to chairman is mr. Coony

now both both rose through the ranks of manufacturing and new president

soo-ji has had no marketing experience where Nissan has been weak in marketing

and I'm afraid faith will take this a long time to become more market oriented

and company and Nissan in fact in internationalizing and the company is in

US or in Europe always elevated to the position of importance the local

nationals and the Japanese went back to Japan and I am afraid me even Nissan USA

in Los Angeles is now headed by x-coordinate and in marketing neason in

North America Nissan has been very very weak compared to the Toyota and Honda in

Europe only because in England Nissan sells outsells Toyota and anybody else

these are still number one Japanese automaker in Europe

of course I was in charge of Nissan's entire European operation until 1986

what I think is that Japan is not playing bigger political role I mean

befitting its economic strings that's what I I want to say but Japanese and

Prime Minister's I mean past Prime Minister's never had the international

experience of course the the only Prime Minister that that we have had who was

very articulate and internationally was not a funny but he is no longer a prime

minister perhaps when a younger generation Prime Minister is named after

me as our perhaps he can play a little bigger international role but we can we

can never provide the kind of leadership that US and president has

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