@article{oai:stars.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008967, author = {松村, 昌廣 and MATSUMURA, Masahiro}, issue = {1}, journal = {桃山学院大学経済経営論集, ST.ANDREW'S UNIVERSITY ECONOMIC AND BUSINESS REVIEW}, month = {Jul}, note = {Amid increasing North Korea’s military threat, South Korea has continually taken anti-Japan policy primarily on the pretext of history issues. This behavior is paradoxical given the strong need to buttress its national security through foreign and security policy cooperation with Japan, or to push forward a “quasi-alliance” with the country on the basis of the two separate U.S-South Korea and U.S.-Japan alliances. This study is an attempt to grasp why the anti-Japan policy has been put on priority. The study will first present a comparative analysis of South Korean anti- Japan and Taiwanese pro-Japan popular sentiments as basic driver of their governments’ corresponding policies. Then, the analysis will argue that internal security consideration has in fact overridden the imperatives of external security consideration. The analytical focus will be placed on the orthodoxy and legitimacy of the South Korean state and individual governments in contrast to those of Taiwan, leading to understanding the pivotal importance for the former to preserve national identity as the last bastion of national security at the very critical moment of external and internal crises. The study will conclude that, given the current combination of external and internal conditions, South Korea will most probably have continual resort to anti-Japan policy in the foreseeable future. This will necessitate Japan to not seek active and stable foreign and security policy cooperation with South Korea but mere good neighborliness that is based on common strategic interests. Thus, Japan has to lower expectation and to fine-tune its South Korea policy accordingly.}, pages = {17--45}, title = {なぜ韓国は反日なのか : 日韓関係と日台関係の比較の視点から}, volume = {60}, year = {2018}, yomi = {マツムラ, マサヒロ} }