Yasuhiro Nakasone, who served as prime minister for more than five years
in the 1980s, was one of Japan's leading postwar politicians. This book
is a biography of him, but by interweaving international politics and
media appraisals of him, it also serves as an examination of Japan's
postwar politics. Nakasone was an innovative conservative who actively
criticized the conservative mainstream, and this book reveals from both
domestic and foreign policy perspectives how the Liberal Democratic
Party governed. The Nakasone government served not only as the final
phase of the Cold War era of LDP factional politics but also as the
starting point for the general mainstream faction system that followed.
With the lengthy passage of time since the end of the Cold War and the
collapse of Japan's 1955 party system, there is a need to reassess
Nakasone, showing that there was much more to him than the popular
picture of him as a far-right hawk who loudly advocated for Japan to
engage in autonomous self-defense and as an opportunist leader of a
small faction, and to place the era in which Nakasone lived its proper
historical context.