FOR
the prime minister, Shinzo Abe, it was a milestone. On May 15th a panel
published its long-awaited report recommending that the country’s “self-defence
forces” (SDF) be allowed to act more like a normal army. At present, in Article
Nine of its constitution, Japan renounces war as a sovereign right. For Mr Abe,
rewriting the clause is a cherished aim. For most Japanese, that remains
several steps too far. So Mr Abe, backed by the panel, has a narrower goal:
reinterpreting the constitution in ways that, for the first time, allow for
“collective self-defence”—that is, would let Japan aid its allies, notably America,
should they come under attack.
The
recommendations stop far short of allowing combat missions overseas. Assuming
the recommendations become law, only collective defence related chiefly to the
protection of Japan will be permitted, meaning in practice in its near-abroad.
But in a country aware of its past imperial rampages through Asia and proud of
its post-war pacifist credentials, even this change faces opposition. Public
support for Mr Abe’s changes has been ebbing. In particular, his coalition partner,
New Komeito, has grave doubts. The party is backed by Soka Gakkai, the
country’s biggest (and staunchly pacifist) Buddhist organisation.
New
Komeito’s support is critical and, for the fact that it is not a given, Mr Abe
has partly himself to blame. His visit in December to Tokyo’s Yasukuni shrine,
which honours war criminals as well as the war dead, appalled the party. Its
leader, Natsuo Yamaguchi, deplores Japan’s bad relations with China and South
Korea. Both countries are wary of Japan being seen to boost its armed forces.
Still, New Komeito may yet come around. It seems to have been heartened by
President Barack Obama’s endorsement, when he visited Tokyo last month, of the
desire to reinterpret the constitution. It was just the boost that Mr Abe
needed.
Mr
Obama’s endorsement makes sense. The panel’s recommendations ought to help
Japan act as a more effective partner should the United States find itself, for
instance, in combat with North Korea or defending Taiwan. Indeed, the debate
about collective self-defence is taking place in parallel with an overhaul of
defence guidelines between America and Japan, the first in 17 years.
For
the first time, Japan could provide logistical support, including the supply of
ammunition, fuel, transport and medical services, to front-line American forces
in the event of a crisis on the Korean peninsula. Japan could also provide
America with more help in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. And
the self-defence forces would have clear permission to shoot down North Korean
missiles heading for American bases or territory.
Separately,
in UN-approved peacekeeping operations, Japanese soldiers could bear arms for
the first time. Japan’s small peacekeeping force in Iraq a decade ago was a
laughing-stock: it had to be defended by Australians.
Assuming
it wins New Komeito’s approval, the government must now pass more than a dozen
amendments to existing bills that enforce the current ban on collective
self-defence. Though the coalition controls both houses of the Diet, the
process could still take years, says Gen Nakatani, a colleague of Mr Abe’s in
the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) involved in the discussions on collective
defence.
As
it is, America is already feeling impatient. The end-2014 goal of reviewing the
bilateral defence guidelines looks as if it is slipping. Americans fret that
Japan will impose so many limitations on the exercise of collective
self-defence that it will be hard for American forces to rely on the SDF even
in scenario-planning. And, despite reassurances, some Americans wonder whether
the changes on collective defence will survive Mr Abe’s time in office.
Despite
these doubts, the prospect of Japan exercising the right of collective
self-defence has given energy to the revision of the bilateral defence
guidelines. A successful revision is all the more important since it would come
after some years of drift in the alliance, says Michael Green of the Centre for
Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC. The main priorities for
the revision are to improve the two countries’ joint response to an emergency
on the Korean peninsula, or to Chinese aggression around Japan’s Senkaku
islands (or Diaoyu islands, in Chinese), or against Taiwan. Japan and America
also want to co-operate more on cyber-warfare.
What
of Mr Abe’s bigger ambitions? At his prodding, the LDP is likely eventually to
press on with the broader goal of full constitutional revision—especially if he
wins another term as prime minister. On May 9th the lower house of the Diet
passed a bill to lower the minimum age, from 20 to 18, for voting to revise the
constitution. Younger voters, the LDP calculates, are less attached to pacifism
than are their elders.
But
the hurdles remain high—two-thirds of both houses of the Diet and over half of
those voting in a referendum are needed to amend the constitution, which is why
it has never happened. Popular reluctance to mess with Article Nine remains
strong. To implement even a modest revision of collective self-defence has been
a struggle. Given how much of his, admittedly plentiful, political capital he
has had to cash in, Mr Abe would find that pushing further will be hard. The
Economist
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