Following the hostage crisis,
Abe was criticised within Japan for not considering the safety of the two
Japanese hostages when he publically committed Japan to support the anti-IS
coalition — a move likely to trigger IS hostility. Abe, it was charged, had
needlessly created an image
of Japan as an enemy of Muslims and Arabs.
But suffering casualties at
the hands of Islamic extremists is not new to Japan. Japanese tourists were
among the victims of an attack by Islamic extremists in Luxor in 1997. Japanese
businesspeople working in the World Trade Center did not escape the 9/11
attacks in 2001. And 10 Japanese workers were killed (the largest number of
casualties among the foreign hostages) when Islamist militants seized a gas
plant in Algeria in January 2013. In the most recent attack in a museum in
Tunis in March 2015, three Japanese tourists were also among the victims who
were killed.
Islamists first took
Japanese nationals hostage as a result of Japan’s Middle East policy under
former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi. His cabinet actively supported the US
attack on Iraq in 2003 and dispatched Japanese SDF troops to Iraq during the
post-war reconstruction period. The Japanese government consistently claimed
that its policy was ‘peaceful’ in nature and emphasised that SDF troops were in
Iraq to help reconstruct the country, to help the Iraqi people and,
importantly, not to fight. But this opinion completely left out the fact that
Japan worked actively towards the passage of a UN Security Council resolution
that would have sanctioned the US-led attack.
Japan’s policy towards the
Middle East has to be located in the context of its overall post-Cold War
foreign policy. Under US pressure, Japan has simultaneously expanded its
support for US-led military operations and security agendas in the Middle East
while still maintaining that Japan is a non-militarist, politically neutral and
peaceful country. The potential contradictions in balancing these two positions
was bound to come to a head sooner or later. But, in what could be called a
‘chameleon’ policy, Japan sought protection by presenting contrary images of
its foreign policy to different audiences — as a strong partner to the US and
as a peaceful actor to Middle Eastern audiences.
Japanese policy in the
Middle East had ostensibly been designed to head off threats from political
instability to the flow of oil and Japanese business in the region. But the
explicit targeting of Japanese nationals by Islamic extremists showed that
developments in the Middle East could pose a threat to the safety of the
Japanese population.
What is new is Abe’s
willingness to further Japan’s involvement in the Middle East in the absence
demands for it from the US or a consensus among major Western states.
The Abe cabinet rejected
paying ransom to IS, in line with UN Security Council Resolution 2133, adopted
in January 2014, banning ransom payments. After the killing of the second
Japanese hostage Abe claimed that Japan would never yield to terrorists. This statement
underlined the Japanese government’s intention to maintain the current policy
despite criticism from the Japanese public. Abe’s Middle East policy has made
Japan a high-profile actor
among major Western states and therefore a target for radical Islamists.
Following the January 2013
Algeria incident, the Japanese government launched a study on how to manage
hostage-taking and terrorist attacks on Japanese overseas. As a result, the
government increased the number of SDF officers stationed in embassies in
strategic countries in North Africa and the Middle East in order to strengthen
intelligence liaison.
The Japanese government is
also currently moving for a revision of security legislation
and the Peace Keeping Law as part of Abe’s push to recognise the right to
exercise collective self-defence. The proposed changes would allow the SDF to
conduct Japanese hostage rescue operations and to participate in post-war
reconstruction and humanitarian operations overseas.
While there is opposition to
the reforms, public anger against terrorists targeting Japanese citizens is
such that the Abe Cabinet will almost certainly succeed with this revision. But
it will not pass without alterations needed to gain the support of the ruling
coalition partner, Komeito. These alterations would limit Japanese
hostage rescues to countries not in armed conflict and where governments have
territorial control of the country. They would also limit the SDF’s use of arms
to the ‘self-defence’ of SDF personnel and require explicit approval from the
prime minister for such operations.
Abe has used the hostage
incident to geographically expand the self-defence mission of the SDF into the
Middle East and therefore advance his larger agenda of acquiring legislative
and constitutional sanction for SDF military activity abroad. This comes at a
time when a significant part of the Japanese population does not support such a
role. Japan’s chameleon policy seems likely to continue in immediate future.
Yukiko Miyagi is a Research
Fellow at the Institute of Middle East, Central Asia and Caucasus Studies,
University of St Andrews in the United Kingdom.
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