REUTERS-U.S.
President-elect Donald Trump plans to pick businessman William Hagerty as the
next U.S. ambassador to Japan, an adviser to Trump's transition team
told
Reuters on Wednesday.
Japan's Nikkei
news service reported that Trump would soon announce the choice of Hagerty, the
director of presidential appointments in his transition team.
The adviser
who spoke to Reuters confirmed the Nikkei report on condition of anonymity.
Hagerty is a
Tennessee native who founded a private equity firm, Hagerty Peterson. He spent
several years in Japan with the Boston Consulting Group management consultancy
and later served in the White House of former President George H.W. Bush.
He will
replace Caroline Kennedy, who has held the position since 2013.
Japan's chief
cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, declined to comment on the report since the
choice has yet to be formally announced, saying only that he hoped the new
ambassador would be able to develop a friendly U.S.-Japan relationship.
Others said
that while the extent of Hagerty's knowledge of diplomacy and regional politics
remained unknown and could be a concern, the choice suggests Trump is
prioritizing economics in bilateral ties, which may relieve officials concerned
by his protectionist stance on trade during the presidential campaign.
Japanese
companies play a key role in the U.S. economy, employing more than 800,000
American workers. They contributed $78 billion to U.S. exports in 2014, according
to the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo.
Koichi Hori,
the chairman of consulting firm Dream Incubator Inc and a former president of
Boston Consulting in Japan, who worked with Hagerty in the early 1990s, termed
him a pragmatist who might not always toe Trump's conservative line on trade.
"Rather
than doing that, he might advise Trump that if he doesn't think of other
countries more, it ultimately may not benefit the United States," Hori
added.
A long-time
U.S. resident of Tokyo with knowledge of business and politics who knows
Hagerty by reputation, but not personally, said he had a reputation as a
"typical management consultant - logical, thoughtful, and has no patience
for trade rhetoric."
The news was
likely to reassure officials at the Ministry of Economics, Trade and Industry
(METI) as well as the Ministry of Finance (MOF), he added.
"The boys
at the U.S. Defense Department and the Defense Agency may be disappointed
because of his lack of experience in the geopolitical aspects of the U.S.-Japan
relationship, but METI, MOF and everyone else here in Tokyo should be breathing
a sign of relief," he added.
Japan's
Defense Ministry was formerly called the Defense Agency.
REUTERS
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