Keitarō Ohno 大野 敬太郎 |
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Member of the Japanese Parliament for Kagawa 3rd district |
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Assumed office 2012 |
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Preceded by | Yoshinori Ohno |
Personal details | |
Born | 1 November 1968 |
Political party | Liberal Democratic Party |
Alma mater |
Tokyo Institute of Technology Tokyo University University of California at Berkeley |
Keitarō Ohno (大野 敬太郎 Ōno Keitarō, born November 1, 1968) is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party. He is currently serving as Parliamentary Vice Minister of Defense. He is the son of former Minister of State for Defense of Japan Yoshinori Ohno. He was elected into his father's former seat representing the Kagawa 3rd district in 2012.
He started his career as an engineering researcher at Fujitsu Limited. He was with the Space Development Group, involved in research and design of several components on flight-model satellites, including ARH on ETS-VII, GLI on ADEOS-II, TIR on ASTER, XRS on ASTRO-E and LISM on SELENE. In 1999, he moved to its research institute, Fujitsu Laboratories and was working on the robust and optimal control for applications including HDDs, humanoid robot, GPS, spatial information system, etc. During this term, he was with the University of California at Berkeley as visiting fellow to continue to work on the fundamental research on control engineering.
He started his political career as private secretary to the Minister of State for Defense in 2005 when his father was appointed to it by Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. He was in charge of supporting several issues including 1)revision of the National Defense Program Guideline, 2)realignment of U.S. bases in Japan, and 3)extension of activities of Japan’s Self Defense Forces in Iraq. He had been serving as a legislative assistant to his father until he run his own election. Other than the position in the diet, he was with the Department of Information Physics and Computing of the University of Tokyo, where he earned Ph.D. degree in 2007.
His interest includes national security policy, foreign policy, economic policy, science and technology policy, and education policy.