JT Kuchikomi: Newsweek editor bashes MOFA
Fareed Zakaria, an editor of Newsweek's international edition...last week, criticized the poor level of English spoken by the Foreign Ministry diplomats. "It's incredible that Japan has failed to secure a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council," the Newsweek editor told his audience. "Japan is the world's second largest economy and contributes $10 billion a year to the organization; yet very few countries have supported its attempts to gain a permanent seat on the council. This is at least partially due to Japan's unrefined and clumsy diplomacy; it possesses no long vision, and the world hasn't accepted it.
...Comparing them with China, here's a huge difference, particularly among those under age 45," he opined. "Chinese diplomats are astute, they all speak English and are savvy about how to get things done at international forums. Japanese diplomats are particularly over concerned with superior and subordinate relationships and are also bureaucratic. They're too quiet, and many of them are unable to speak English
"English is the common tongue of diplomacy and business," Zakaria continued. "Ability to use it says something about the degree a country is progressing in the world. For Japan to rise to a level commensurate with its role in world society, it is going to have to change."