Prime Minister Abe wants review of legal constraints on Japan's military
Loading...
A daily roundup of terrorism and security issues.
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe today targeted a cornerstone of his country's 60-year postwar military posture, stating that it was time to review the long-accepted stance that Japan is constitutionally barred from using force except in cases of self-defense.
His call came after聽an advisory panel presented Mr. Abe with its recommendations for changes to Japan's defense laws. As expected, they proposed eliminating聽, albeit with conditions to avoid abuse, the BBC reports.
Skirting the highly controversial question of amending the Constitution, the focus would be on "reinterpreting" Article 9, which states in part that "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes."聽
At the crux of the push for change is collective self-defense: Japan's right to come to the defense of allies, such as the United States, even if not under attack itself. Currently Japan can only take up arms if attacked. Japan's military is known as the Self-Defense Forces 鈥 a force whose existence itself could be seen as a "reinterpretation" from earlier governments, Reuters reports, which notes that the "constitution has never been formally revised since its adoption in 1947, although successive governments have stretched its limits, which if taken literally ban the maintenance of any armed forces at all."
Japan's so-called pacifist Constitution, which the US drew up in the aftermath of World War II, has widespread public support. But Abe and other conservatives argue that Japan must be better positioned to deal with potential military threats in the region, including from North Korea and China, and to be a stronger player in international peacekeeping efforts.聽
The US is supportive, with President Barack Obama saying he welcomed the review during his recent visit to Japan. And Abe is trying to reassure critics, 听"聽has walked the path of a peaceful country for nearly 70 years since the end of World War Two. That path will not change. But we cannot protect our peaceful lives simply by repeating that we are a peaceful country. Our peaceful lives may suddenly confront a crisis."聽
The effort is as much emotional as it is strategic. Article 9聽is a reminder of Japan's aggression and brutality in World War II, 海角大神 notes.
Successive administrations have interpreted the clause to facilitate the build-up of a well-equipped military, yet one with a strictly defensive posture.
Abe and his supporters say that only by casting off the shackles of a constitution imposed by a victorious enemy can Japan vanquish its postwar guilt and emerge as a 鈥渘ormal鈥 nation. He points out that Japan cannot come to the aid of an ally under attack under the current Constitution. 聽
Some citizens interpret the desire to be a "normal" nation very differently. Today, as the advisory panel prepared to present their recommendations to Abe, , or parliament, in protest, Asahi Shimbun reports. Many of them were older Japanese who could remember the days of World War II.聽
鈥淲e should never let Japan become a type of country that wages war again,鈥 said Tetsuji Takada, a 78-year-old resident of Tokyo鈥檚 Adachi Ward who joined the rally with his wife.
Takada was 9 years old when World War II ended.
He said many of the older neighbors he used to play with were called up to fight for Japan.
On the day the neighbors left for their missions, Takada鈥檚 family smiled and threw their arms in the air in a 鈥渂anzai鈥 salute to cheer them on. Many of his friends never returned from the battlefields.
Takada described the time as an 鈥渋nsane period鈥 when one鈥檚 death was equated with honor. He also lamented the current lack of 鈥渞ealistic discussions鈥 on the ramifications of exercising the right to collective self-defense.
鈥淚 wonder if we would be treated as heroes again if we died in war now,鈥 he said.
The Economist reports that a poll by the liberal newspaper Asahi found that . The "Japanese people who preserve Article 9" were shortlisted for a Nobel Peace Prize last year.
There is broad domestic concern about what Japan will do without legally imposed, clear limits on its military action. Kyouji Yanagisawa, a security expert under former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi,聽: "Currently, the bottom line is whether Japan comes under foreign attack. Then, what serves as the brake for an abuse of the right to self-defense when Japan is not under direct attack?"
In a bid to win over doubters, officials in Abe's government have floated proposals in recent weeks that would limit when Japan would exercise collective self-defense.
The Diplomat, an online news outlet that covers the Asia Pacific region, o:
Three are conditional and three are procedural. The conditional requirements include: 1) A close Japanese ally is under attack; 2) A grave threat to Japanese security exists if force is withheld; and 3) Another country under attack asks Japan for offensive military assistance. The procedural requirements are: 1) The prime minister decides to use force; 2) The Diet approves the prime minister鈥檚 decision; and 3) A third country grants Japan permission to move troops through its territory en route to a conflict.
Abe also faces a difficult political battle. His Liberal Democratic Party is in a coalition with New Komeito, a Buddhist party with a "strong tradition" of pacifism, the Monitor reports.
The opposition is ultimately unlikely to deter Abe, political analysts told the Monitor. 鈥淭here are no big elections for another couple of years and no institutional barriers to the cabinet changing its interpretation of the Constitution,鈥 says Professor Jiro Yamaguchi, a political scientist at Hosei University in Tokyo. 鈥淎t the same time, the cabinet鈥檚 general approval rating is still quite high, so I think Abe believes he can pursue his [constitutional reform] agenda even though the public is against it.鈥
But The Diplomat writes that Abe is determined to have full backing before pursuing what amounts to a redefining of a central principle of modern Japan.
The LDP is indeed being very careful with how it pursues collective self-defense and lets the proposal play out, first in the cabinet and then in the Diet. It wants total unanimity within the Cabinet before it pursues debate in the Diet; a completely united front on the part of the government will be required to cause the first cracks in Japan鈥檚 pacifist society as enshrined in its constitution.