Japan govt allows foreign military deployment, earns China’s ire

Japan Self-Defense Force.(Reuters / Kyodo)

Japan Self-Defense Force.(Reuters / Kyodo)

China has reacted angrily after Japan’s Cabinet reversed a key article of the post-war constitution that forbids the country’s troops from ever fighting on foreign territory.

Article 9 of the 1947 founding charter proclaimed Japan a
pacifist nation, meaning that its armed forces are technically
domestic self-defense units, and cannot participate even in
UN-backed conflicts, other than as peacekeepers.

Following the landmark “reinterpretation” (a legal repeal would
require two-thirds of the votes of the parliament) Japanese
troops could be deployed if “there is a clear existential
threat to Japan and if people’s right to life, liberty and
pursuit of happiness could be fundamentally overturned,”

said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

At the press conference following Tuesday’s decision, Abe said
that the move will actually “reduce the risk of war,” claiming
that the current constraints merely embolden Japan’s adversaries.

Abe promised that Japan would not be involved in coalition
operations with its allies, such as the wars in Iraq or
Afghanistan, and even during defensive wars.

“We will not resort to the use of force solely with the aim
of defending other countries. But by being fully prepared to deal
with any situation, Japan can foil any attempt to wage war
against Japan,”
said the Liberal Democratic Party
politician, whose government enjoys the support of most of the
population in the polls.

Japan’s PM has been given the opportunity to push through the
historic change – long-requested by Washington and other allies
keen on Japan sharing more of the international military burden –
due to its increasingly tense stand-off with China.

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe leaves a news conference at his official residence in Tokyo July 1, 2014 (Reuters / Yuya Shino)

Beijing and Tokyo have been locked in a dispute over the
Japanese-owned Senkaku (or Diaoyu) Islands. Although uninhabited,
they allow the owner to claim lucrative trade routes, and vast
potential underwater resources that have yet to be explored.

Japan has scrambled its planes over 400 times in the past year to
ward off Chinese ships circling the archipelago.

The Japanese announcement provoked an immediate riposte from
Beijing.

“China opposes the Japanese fabricating the China threat to
promote its domestic political agenda,”
Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters in Beijing.


“We demand that Japan respect the reasonable security concerns of
its Asian neighbors and prudently handle the relevant
matter.”

Polls show that while the Japanese population is worried about a
potential confrontation with China, most regard the new ruling a
potential slippery slope, which could see Japanese soldiers
fighting alongside US and other Western troops in political wars
thousands of miles away from its borders. A survey conducted by
the Nihon Keizai Shimbun media group last week showed that only
one in three endorse the “reinterpretation”, and half are opposed
to it.

Protesters holding placards shout slogans at a rally against Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's push to expand Japan's military role in front of Abe's official residence in Tokyo July 1, 2014 (Reuters / Yuya Shino)
About 10,000 people protested in Tokyo on Monday, and a dissenter
set himself on fire last week. As the final decision was
announced, hundreds of opponents shouting, “Don’t send our
children to the battlefields!”
and holding placards saying
“Save Article 9″ congregated around the government building in
central Tokyo, with smaller demonstrations in other parts of the
country.

But Abe has promised there will be further public discussion of
the controversial document.

“Based on the Cabinet approval, we will immediately start to
prepare related bills by setting up a team of officials,”
he
said. “As soon as the bills are ready, we will submit them to
the Diet for deliberations.”

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