Japan’s
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced on 1 July a decision to reinterpret the
Japanese constitution, allowing Tokyo to militarily support partners that are
under attack. Former prime minister Zenko Suzuki would approve. In 1981, Suzuki
became the first Japanese leader to use the word ‘alliance’ to describe Japan’s
relationship with the United States. The seemingly innocuous word sounded
alarmingly militaristic to many Japanese who, since their country’s defeat in
World War II, have been skittish of rearmament and involvement in overseas
military operations.
The most
recent change in Japanese defence policy is both remarkable and routine. It is
remarkable to see Japan embracing what had been politically unthinkable. Yet
the decision is routine in that it marks one of many such milestones in the
country’s evolving security posture.
After World
War II, the Japanese constitution imposed severe restrictions on security
policy. Article 9 of the constitution declares: ‘Land, sea and air forces, as
well as other war potential, will never be maintained’. In the aftermath of a
defeat that left millions dead, the country’s cities in ashes and sovereignty
in the hands of the United States, Japan’s people embraced Article 9 — and the
country’s political left vowed never again to go to war. The Japanese also
feared entanglement in the Cold War and the hot wars of its US ally. Article 9
provided Japan with an institutional sanctuary from American adventures in
Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and the Persian Gulf.
Yet
reinterpretation of Article 9 began before the ink was dry on the constitution.
Many
Japanese conservatives — some resentful of Japan’s perceived emasculation, some
fearful of US abandonment and others nostalgic for lost grandeur — wanted Japan
to play a greater military role. Japan’s moderate pro-alliance conservatives
were supported by Washington, which was continually pressuring Tokyo to acquire
more defence capabilities and engage in a wider array of alliance missions.
So, despite
the constitution, Japanese leaders created the Self-Defense Forces (SDF) in
1954, reinterpreting Article 9 as permitting military forces for defensive
purposes. The 1954 law prevented the SDF from being dispatched overseas. But
this too would later change. In the wake of US and global censure of Japan for
its perceived free riding in the first Gulf War, Tokyo passed the Peacekeeping
Operations Law in 1992 which permitted the overseas deployment of the SDF,
albeit under highly restrictive conditions. For example, SDF peacekeepers could
not be armed or sent to an area with ongoing hostilities.
Over time,
Japan passed more milestones, loosening additional military constraints. In
2006, Tokyo elevated the Japan Defense Agency to a more politically influential
Ministry of Defense, discarding previous restrictions on the policymaking
influence of the Japanese military. Japan’s 1967 Arms Export Ban, which was
adopted to rein in a feared military–industrial complex, was relaxed earlier this year.
Tokyo has
also acquired military capabilities that were previously seen as taboo.
A 1969 Diet
resolution prevented Japan from using space for military purposes. But Japan
jettisoned this restriction in 1998 after North Korea lobbed a rocket over its
territory, prompting Tokyo to acquire military satellites. And, although
aircraft carriers were long seen as power-projection forces prohibited by the
constitution, last year the SDF acquired the Izumo-class helicopter destroyer
(which in any other country’s fleet would be called an aircraft carrier). Over
the years, several Japanese leaders have argued that nuclear weapons are
consistent with Article 9, laying the groundwork for Japan to obtain those
weapons.
But Japan’s
gradual relaxation of defence constraints should in no way suggest that the country
is rearming with intent to once again commit aggression in East Asia.
Japan is a
responsible democracy. Its citizens remain committed to peace and wary of
involving their country in overseas military operations. In fact, when
announcing the reinterpretation of Article 9,
Abe emphasised that his government would need legislative approval before the
SDF could be sent to support an ally under attack. Clearly, Japan’s postwar
evolution is not a recidivist’s inexorable march toward aggression.
An important
lesson from Japan’s post-World War II history is that Tokyo has reinterpreted
and reformed its laws in keeping with changing strategic conditions.
A worrisome Soviet naval buildup in East Asia in the late 1970s led Suzuki (and
his successor, Yasuhiro Nakasone) to move closer to the United States.
Similarly, today China is modernising its navy and behaving with growing
assertiveness in its territorial disputes as well as challenging US military
access to East Asia. Tokyo is responding both by embracing the US–Japan alliance
and by accepting more defence roles.
Japan’s
adoption of new roles and capabilities
has been neither automatic nor straightforward. Deep-seated antimilitarism
prompted outrage against Suzuki in 1981 and motivated protesters in Tokyo to
condemn Abe’s recent announcement. But, as the Japanese perceive growing menace
from Chinese capabilities and behaviour, this recent milestone in Japan’s
security evolution will not be the last.
Jennifer
Lind is an associate professor of government at Dartmouth College. She is the
author of Sorry
States: Apologies in International Politics (Cornell University Press, 2008).
This article
first appeared on Aljazeera America.
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