The headlines this morning are, let us be frank, deliciously absurd. Japan, a nation that once terrified the West with its industrial juggernaut, is now reportedly outraged by Donald Trump’s antics involving the sacred cow of modern Japanese pop culture: anime. You can almost hear the collective gasp across the archipelago. Trump, in his usual ham-fisted way, has managed to offend an entire nation by treating their artistic exports as disposable kitsch. The irony is rich. Here is a man who built his brand on deal-making and grandeur, yet he cannot grasp the subtleties of soft power. Japan is not just angry. It is disappointed. And disappointment from Japan is far more cutting than rage.
But amid this diplomatic farce, a quieter story unfolds. A story of British soft power, that most elusive of national assets. Japanese firms are flocking to London, not Tokyo, not New York, not even Frankfurt. They are choosing the City, with its murky skies and genteel decay, over other global hubs. Why? Because Britain, despite its own travails, still offers something Japan craves: stability, a whiff of old-world sophistication, and a legal system that does not change with the wind.
This is the triumph of something the modern world has forgotten. Soft power is not about Marvel films or McDonald’s. It is about trust. It is about a nation that can be relied upon to honour contracts, to cultivate an atmosphere where culture can breathe without being commodified into a cartoon. While Trump tramples on Japanese sensibilities with his crude marketing stunts, London remains a sanctuary for those who value tradition over transience.
Let us not kid ourselves. Britain is not the empire it once was. But empire is not the goal. Influence is. And influence, as the Japanese know, comes from being respected, not feared. Our legal system, our universities, our museums, our very air of decline: these are assets that cannot be replicated in a trade deal. They are the fruits of centuries of institutional memory.
The Japanese are wise to this. They sense the decadence in America, the flailing chaos, the desperate need to be seen. And they sense in Britain a quiet confidence, a nation that has been through decline and emerged with a stiff upper lip and a decent cup of tea. That is why they are coming. Not because we are louder, but because we are quieter. Not because we are flashier, but because we are steadier.
Of course, there will be howls of protest from the usual quarters. ‘Britain is irrelevant,’ they will say. ‘We are a backwater.’ Nonsense. Relevance is not measured in GDP growth alone. It is measured in the decisions of serious people with serious money. And right now, serious Japanese executives are choosing London. That is a fact. The rest is noise.
So let Trump tweet his anime monstrosities. Let Japan burn with righteous indignation. Meanwhile, in the quiet corridors of power, British diplomats can allow themselves a wry smile. The game of nations is long, and the winners are not always the loudest. Sometimes they are the ones who know how to brew a proper cup of tea while the world burns.








