df cardwell said:
I agree - in part.
Short history lesson:
The Kiev line was a "spoils of war". Entire Contax factory lines from East(ern) Germany were dismantled and shipped east to the Ukraine after WWII. [Same with Leica].
So in that sense - Contax and Kiev are "intertwined" (or, better said, "related").
But it was a free for all after WWII ended. The Cold War was commencing and both the US and USSR knew that Germany had the best optics and camera gear.
The US took the patents from Occupied Germany for both Leica and Contax gear and provided them to highly-qualified "sponsored" manufacturers in what was then Occupied Japan. Nikon was "granted" the Contax patents and Canon (and others) were given the Leica designs. [This "lifting" of patents was not, shall we say, fully in "compliance" with accepted international patent law - ahem.]
It was a defensive move. The US was not confident it could "hold the line" in Central Europe in the late 1940's (and early 1950's) and wanted to ensure that it would have access to the best optics/camera designs available. If all of Germany fell to the Soviets - the US wanted to ensure it had "secured" German optical designs.
Despite WWII (and the ugly PTO ending with the A-bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima) - MacArthur quickly convinced the US Govenment that it needed to "lock in" Japan as an ally and source of mass produced, yet quality, production of key defense items.
In 1950, MacArthur was still acting as a "Viceroy" over Occupied Japan. In that year the Korean War (the first "proxy war" b/w the US and USSR broke out).
There is more than a coincidence to the fact that the Life Magazine reporters (someone here will know their names) were given access to the "pick of the litter" of the nascent Nikon production line at the start of the Korean War. Ultimately, MacArthur would run afoul of the political situation and be relieved of duty by President Truman. At the same time, the new Japanese democracy operating under MacArthur's "dictated" Constitution rightfully wanted a formal peace treaty with the US as a "price" for becoming an ally.
Quid pro quo ruled the day. And, with a peace treaty Japan also obtained nearly unfettered access to the US marketplace.
So, in the end, Nikon and Canon etc. obtained their entry into the US market and served as "substitutes" for Contax and Leica, respectively. Japan obtained its formal peace treaty and alliance with the US. Thus the "MIOJ" acronymn disappeared from Japanese camera gear and this gear gained first its foothold and then its, to this day, continuing domination in the US camera marketplace.