On 7 June, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
approved legislation to create a National Security Council (NSC), which will
replace the existing Security Council. The bill is expected to pass the Diet
this year, and is a revival of a proposal Abe made during his first
premiership. The NSC will give a more centralised role to the Cabinet Office in
national security and crisis management. Abe believes that centralised
decision-making by the NSC would strengthen Japan’s national security and has
used the US national security system as a model for reform, even though Japan maintains
a parliamentary system
The 2013 bill makes two major changes. First, it strengthens
the role of the prime minister and the Cabinet Office in national security
policy-making by establishing a sub-committee of the prime minister, the chief
cabinet secretary, the minister of foreign affairs and the minister of defence
to consider issues of national security and defence. The equivalent
subcommittee in the current Security Council has nine ministers, and the
reduced membership is intended to facilitate prompt decision-making in national
security and crisis management. The prime minister will be able to assign the
committee any issue relating to national security and crisis management that he
or she considers important. The 2013 bill also creates a new position, national
security advisor, and establishes a secretariat for the council. The Security
Council had no permanent secretariat, and establishing one will ensure the NSC
is independent from related ministries.
On the other hand, some features of the Security Council
remain: a nine-minister committee will still provide advice on defence and
national security issues, and when the four-member subcommittee considers basic
defence policy, such as the National Defense Program Outline, other ministers
will be able to join in on discussions. Abe wants to ensure that the NSC will
be able to make prompt decisions when necessary, but also that it properly
deliberates long-term policy.
The second objective is to make the NSC the ‘headquarters’
for intelligence on national security and crisis management. Japan’s
intelligence system has traditionally been decentralised. Different agencies
are involved and ministries often do not share information with each other. The
designation of the NSC as intelligence ‘headquarters’ provides a solution
because the NSC will be able to pick and choose what information is needed and
order other ministries and administrative institutions to furnish intelligence.
The NSC is designed to contribute to prompt decision-making
and facilitate information gathering for national security and crisis
management. But will it succeed?
It is still unclear whether the NSC will become a central
decision-making body or remain just an advisory institution. The four-minister
committee will make final decisions, but these decisions may largely rely on
information and policy recommendations from the ministries in Japan’s
parliamentary system. The new bill does not prescribe the functions of the
national security advisor and the chief of the secretariat and it is still
unclear how power will be shared between them. Finally, the NSC will include
existing members of the Cabinet Office such as the assistant chief cabinet
secretary and the special advisor to the prime minister, while leaving out the
deputy chief cabinet secretary for crisis. This means there is still
institutional overlap, which may make it difficult for the NSC to make
decisions quickly. NSC’s power to order information would be another area of
concern in relation to related ministries and the protection of civil
liberties.
The 2013 bill envisages remarkable change in Japan’s
national security policy-making institutions. But Japan’s bureaucratic and
organisational culture should be kept in mind. Most officials in the NSC are
expected to come from existing ministries. When Japan tried to centralise the
Cabinet Office, key officials found it difficult to work independently from
their ‘original’ ministries. The NSC will face the same problems and needs its
bureaucrats to be independent to be successful. The increased membership of the
Cabinet Office may prevent the prompt decision-making that the bill seeks. In
addition, the 2013 bill will not develop human resources for national security
and crisis management. Institutions cannot work without relevant human
resources. The NSC needs people who have been properly trained and understand
security policy to work effectively, but Japan lacks institutions to provide
this training.
For this purpose, Japan has to consider the development of
‘national security communities’ in which governmental and non-governmental
security experts would be well versed in the issues of national security. Human
resources for national security institutions would be nurtured by them. The
establishment of national security communities would contribute to overcoming
ministerial sectionalism within government and divided opinions on national
security in Japanese politics. An effort to develop security communities requires
wider institutional change than in the 2013 bill, but is a necessary step for
Japan.
Toshiya Takahashi is a PhD candidate at the National
Security College, Australian National University.
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