LDP official Masahiko
Komura makes the case for collective self-defense after meeting with US Defense
Secretary Carter.
Masahiko
Komura, vice president of Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party and former
foreign minister, visited Washington and met with U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter on Thursday.
At their meeting, Carter praised Japan’s recent efforts to develop a new legal
framework to better defend Japan in an increasingly uncertain East Asia. Komura
explained to Carter that the Japanese government wants to be able to exercise
the now constitutionally recognized right to collective defense to defend U.S.
warships attacked in contingencies that have a security impact on Japan, such
as a Korean peninsula crisis.
The new
framework would also provide the legal basis for the revisions expected in the Bilateral Defense Guidelines.
The Guidelines clarify the roles and expectations for U.S. military and
Japanese Self-Defense Forces (SDF) cooperation in a contingency. The Guidelines
were last updated in 1997.
On
Friday, Komura gave a speech at the U.S.-Japan Security Seminar 2015 at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). In his speech, he
offered a concise history and clear defense of the Cabinet decision to
reinterpret the Constitution last July. The Constitution is ultimately a
contract with the people to defend their lives and happiness, Komura argued.
Therefore, it is illogical for anything in the Constitution to constrict the
government’s ability to defend the state’s very survival.
Komura
then laid out the dilemma the Cabinet faced: in Japan’s current security
environment, a single-minded focus on a literal interpretation of the
Constitution may not be adequate to protect the lives of the people, but at the
same time, the government must not overzealously pursue security in such a way
as to violate the sanctity of the Constitution. The middle ground is to figure
out the minimum degree to which Japan must be prepared to use force in
order to successfully protect the Japanese people. Collective self-defense is a
minimum condition that Japan must have to be able to defend itself and expect
the cooperation of allies and partners in its defense, Komura concluded.
Collective
self-defense is not limited to the U.S. either. Japan is willing to cooperate
with any state to do the minimum needed to protect the people’s livelihood. How
collective self-defense will be invoked in various crises will depend on the
impact the situation has on Japan’s security.
The
Constitution should not be used to protect “pacifism” at the expense of peace
and people’s lives, Komura argued. For Japan’s peace and the world’s peace,
Japan needs to be more ready to play a proactive role. The current security
legislation is an effort to provide the legal basis for this reinterpretation
so that there can be a “seamless” response to various scenarios ranging from
“gray zone” contingencies to full-scale military clashes.
Japan’s
legislature will be taking up this issues in the coming months. The regular
Diet session may be extended beyond June 24 if extra time is needed to pass the
security legislation. By Mina Pollmann
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