Monday, January 20, 2014

Defence in Japan - Don’t look back

Japan should be able to defend itself like any other country. Honouring war criminals makes that harder

IMAGINE that China decided to land soldiers on the disputed islands that it calls the Diaoyus. Japan, which administers the uninhabited rocks and knows them as the Senkakus, might, under its own laws, be unable to meet the incursion with force. The coastguard may repel private vessels, but not troops arriving from the air or from a submarine. It is not clear whether Japan’s pacifist constitution prevents its Self-Defence Forces from striking back until its own citizens are injured. Nor is it obvious that its main ally, America, would go to war to rid the Senkakus of the platoon of Chinese troops.

This uncertainty is dangerous, because it could lure China into miscalculation. In addition, Japan’s alliances would be stronger and more dependable if the country were a fully active member of them, able to shoulder its burden and come to its allies’ defence. Yet, although Asia would be more stable if Japan were more normal, the shadow of the second world war means that the country’s neighbours worry that their old enemy is about to forsake pacifism. Shinzo Abe, the prime minister, should be trying to allay their fears. He has chosen instead to visit a shrine commemorating high-ranking war criminals.


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