
Japan.
In short
Japan is a parliamentary monarchy with real executive power in the cabinet, and the foreign-policy file is controlled by the prime minister, cabinet, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs rather than the emperor, whose role is strictly symbolic under the Constitution of Japan [Prime Minister’s Office of Japan](https://japan. kantei.
Capital
Tokyo
Government
Unitary parliamentary …
Japan's government & politics
Leadership, governance, and democratic trajectory.


Japan's UN voting record
How Japan votes at the UN General Assembly — ideological trajectory, voting partners, topic patterns, and key recent roll calls.
Ideological trajectory
Top voting partners
Topic-level voting
Source: Erik Voeten, “United Nations General Assembly Voting Data”, Harvard Dataverse (CC0). Aggregated by Model Diplomat. Last refresh tracked in profile freshness.
Japan's foreign policy
Bilateral posture, key relationships, and live diplomatic statements.
Foreign Policy
Japan’s foreign policy is now defined by deterrence against China and North Korea, tighter alliance integration with the United States, and a deliberate expansion of its security role beyond the postwar ceiling of minimal self-defense [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html) [Ministry of Defense of Japan, National Security Strategy 2022](https://www.mod.go.jp/en/d_act/d_policy/pdf/security_strategy.pdf). Its stated doctrine is the 2022 National Security Strategy, which labels China “the greatest strategic challenge ever” to Japan’s peace and security, identifies North Korea’s missile and nuclear programs as a grave and imminent threat, and frames Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a serious challenge to the international order [Ministry of Defense of Japan, National Security Strategy 2022](https://www.mod.go.jp/en/d_act/d_policy/pdf/security_strategy.pdf). The interest pyramid is unusually clear: survival comes first through defense of the southwestern islands and sea lanes, regime and system security comes through preserving the U.S.-anchored regional order, economic interests center on secure supply chains and advanced technology, and status comes through being treated as a major democratic power in the G7, Quad, and UN system [Ministry of Defense of Japan, National Security Strategy 2022](https://www.mod.go.jp/en/d_act/d_policy/pdf/security_strategy.pdf) [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html).
The decision structure is parliamentary, but the foreign-policy file is concentrated in the prime minister’s office, the National Security Secretariat, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Ministry of Defense, with the U.S. alliance acting as the fixed constraint on major choices [Cabinet Secretariat, National Security Secretariat](https://www.cas.go.jp/jp/gaiyou/jimu/nss/index.html) [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html). Japan’s capabilities give credibility to that strategy: nominal GDP was about $4.2 trillion in 2024 and population about 124 million, which still makes it one of the world’s largest economies despite slow growth and demographic decline [World Bank, GDP current US$ Japan](https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.CD?locations=JP) [World Bank, Population total Japan](https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.TOTL?locations=JP). SIPRI estimates Japan’s military expenditure at $50.2 billion in 2024, about 1.4% of GDP, with spending on a rising path under the 2022 strategy documents [SIPRI, Military Expenditure Database](https://www.sipri.org/databases/milex) [Ministry of Defense of Japan, National Defense Strategy 2022](https://www.mod.go.jp/en/d_act/d_policy/pdf/strategy.pdf). That matters because Tokyo’s doctrine is no longer rhetorical: it is tied to counterstrike capability procurement, munitions stockpiling, base hardening, and deeper operational integration with the United States and other partners [Ministry of Defense of Japan, Defense Buildup Program 2022](https://www.mod.go.jp/en/d_act/d_policy/pdf/program.pdf).
The core bilateral relationship remains the United States, which Japan describes as the cornerstone of its foreign and security policy [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html). The alliance is institutional, not symbolic: U.S. Forces Japan remains stationed across the archipelago, and the two governments have updated command-and-control and force-posture arrangements to improve readiness in a Taiwan or East China Sea contingency [U.S. Department of State, U.S.-Japan Joint Leaders’ Statement, 10 April 2024](https://www.state.gov/u-s-japan-joint-leaders-statement/) [The White House, Joint Statement from the United States and Japan](https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2024/04/10/joint-statement-from-the-united-states-and-japan/). Japan’s second-tier partnerships are now strategically important rather than decorative: Australia and India matter through the Quad and maritime balancing, the United Kingdom through the Reciprocal Access Agreement and the Global Combat Air Programme, and France through Indo-Pacific naval cooperation and shared concern over freedom of navigation [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Japan-Australia Relations](https://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/australia/index.html) [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Japan-India Relations](https://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/india/index.html) [UK Government, UK-Japan Hiroshima Accord](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-japan-hiroshima-accord) [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Japan-France Relations](https://www.mofa.go.jp/region/europe/france/index.html). China is simultaneously Japan’s largest trading partner and principal long-term security problem, which is why Tokyo mixes economic engagement with export controls, supply-chain de-risking, and sustained protests over the Senkaku Islands and PLA activity near Japan [Japan External Trade Organization, Japan’s Trade by Country](https://www.jetro.go.jp/en/reports/statistics/) [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html). Relations with South Korea improved sharply after the 2023 thaw on forced-labor disputes and trilateral coordination with Washington, but the relationship remains vulnerable to domestic political reversals in either capital [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Japan-Republic of Korea Relations](https://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/korea/index.html) [Camp David Principles, 18 August 2023](https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/08/18/camp-david-principles/).
In multilateral diplomacy, Japan uses the G7, G20, APEC, OECD, the Quad, and the UN to defend rules that protect a trade-dependent maritime power [Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, Diplomatic Bluebook 2024](https://www.mofa.go.jp/policy/other/bluebook/2024/en_index.html). At the UN,
Japan's treaties & memberships
UN multilateral treaty positions and IGO memberships.
International Organizations
Society & economy
Macro-economic snapshot and demographic context.
GDP (nominal)
$4.03T
#4/250GDP per capita
$32,487.078
#49/250Currency
—
HDI
0.92
#21/250GDP (nominal USD)
GDP per capita (USD)
Top trading partners
In the news
Stories surfacing across Japan’s authoritative outlets, plus headline events and the diplomatic calendar.
Headlines
Asia's Tech Market Plummets
South Korea's KOSPI fell 8.29%, triggering a circuit breaker as tech stocks tumble amid geopolitical tensions and inflation fears.
Landslide election victory lets Takaichi confront China on her terms - The Japan Times
Summary: - The Liberal Democratic Party, led by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, scored a landslide victory in Japan’s general election, boosting her ability to pursue a hardline stance toward China. - The result signals Takaichi is likely to remain in power for the near term, using the political capital to push a strategy that pressures Beijing to reengage with Japan on its terms. - Takaichi previously floated Japan’s potential military intervention in a Taiwan crisis, a posit
With fresh mandate, Japan’s Takaichi sets sights on divisive security goals - The Japan Times
Summary: - Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, following her election victory, aims to push Japan’s security and defense agenda, leveraging political capital to pursue ambitious goals. - Key objectives include updating Japan’s three major security strategy documents, exploring revisions to the non-nuclear principles, and laying groundwork for potential pacifist constitutional amendments. - Takaichi seeks to advance policy priorities that could be politically divisive, while balanc
Explore Japan in depth
Frequently asked questions about Japan
Quick answers to the most common questions about Japan.
What type of government does Japan have?
Japan is governed as a unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy, with its capital at Tokyo.
Who is the head of state of Japan?
Naruhito is the head of state of Japan, in office since 2019-05-01.
Who leads the government of Japan?
Sanae Takaichi serves as the head of government of Japan, since 2025-10-21.
What is the population of Japan?
Japan has a population of approximately 124.0 million people, making it the 12th most populous country.
What is the economy of Japan like?
Japan has a nominal GDP of about $4.03 trillion, or roughly $32,487 per capita.
What languages are spoken in Japan?
The official language of Japan is Japanese.
When did Japan join the United Nations?
Japan has been a member of the United Nations since 1956.
Who are Japan's closest allies?
Japan's key allies include United States, Australia, India, United Kingdom, and France.