Yasukazu Hamada (second from right), chairman of the lower house committee that approved the bills, is surrounded by opposition lawmakers after the vote on Wednesday. If the bills become law, Japanese troops will be able to fight abroad. Toruhanai / Reuters |
Young people protesting in front of Japan's Diet building where the ruling coalition railroaded two security bills on Thursday were voicing their concerns about the direction their country is taking.
They, among scholars, housewives and old folks, believe that the bills will drag Japan into US wars, despite Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe saying, after the vote, they are absolutely necessary to prevent war.
The bills will change the missions for Japan's quasi-military Self-Defense Force. The first bill amends 10 security laws that would effectively remove the restrictions on Japan's right to exercise collective self-defense.
Last year, Abe's cabinet reinterpreted Article 9 of Japan's Constitution to allow this right. With the reinterpretation and this new bill, Japanese troops would be permitted to participate in a campaign under the justification of collective self-defense either when Japan's survival is at stake, or when a close ally suffers an armed attack and there are "no other appropriate means" to safeguard Japanese interests and citizens.
The second bill streamlines Japanese government's procedures to dispatch the SDF abroad to provide logistical support for an ally, removing the cumbersome necessity of having the Diet pass a unique, temporary law for each such operation.
Japan is forcefully asserting its interests in the region and on the world stage, both in collaboration with the US and other allies, and independently.
The country makes no secret of citing the "changing situation around Japan" - now familiar shorthand for a rising China - as the ruse for the new bills and its military buildup.
Speaking in Washington on Thursday, Japan's top military commander Katsutoshi Kawano said his country would possibly conduct patrols and surveillance activities in South China Sea in the future because he expects China to become increasingly assertive.
Ramming the bills through, rather than amending Japan's Constitution, has stretched the pacifist clause in the Constitution, in which Japan renounces war as a sovereign right and even vows not to keep a standing army. As a result of which, Japan's SDF, formed in 1954 and among the world's most sophisticated armed forces, cannot call themselves an army. The new bills carry deep implications for Japan's neighbors, as they signify a fundamental shift in Japan's defense policy. In fact, change started once Abe took office for the second time in December 2012.
The Abe cabinet unveiled new 10-year National Defense Guidelines and the country's first National Security Strategy in December 2013, outlining a drive to strengthen the Japan-US alliance, expanding Japan's military buildup in its southwestern maritime region facing China and building Japan's own network of alliances.
The Abe administration has lifted the decades-long ban on weapons exports, allowing Japan to jointly develop weapon systems with the United States and other countries. It has revised Japan's foreign aid charter, allowing Japan to fund the non-military operations of foreign forces. And early this year, the cabinet passed a record defense package worth 4.98 trillion yen ($42 billion), topping the previous peak set in 2002 and the third consecutive annual rise.
Japan and the US finalized a new set of defense cooperation guidelines during Abe's visit to the US in April. The guidelines emphasize an increasingly global role for the Japan-US alliance and are in line with Abe's vision of a "normal" Japan.
The concerns of Japan's neighbors about the country's unprecedented security policy shift are valid because Abe has revisionist views on history, including Japan's wartime atrocities, and constantly seeks to whitewash this shameful chapter in the country's past.
Abe's pursuit of the right to collective self-defense and remilitarization is fueling the uncertainty and tensions in the region.
The author is China Daily's Tokyo bureau chief.
caihong@chinadaily.com.cn
I’ve lived in China for quite a considerable time including my graduate school years, travelled and worked in a few cities and still choose my destination taking into consideration the density of smog or PM2.5 particulate matter in the region.