Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Japan to mull pre


Credit: Reuters/Issei Kato


Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force's 1st Airborne Brigade soldiers walks toward to a CH-47 helicopter for parachute drop training during their military drill at Higashifuji training field in Susono, west of Tokyo, July 8, 2013.


The expected proposal, which will almost certainly sound alarm bells in China, is part of a review of Japan's defense policies undertaken by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government, an interim report on which could come as early as Friday.


The hawkish Abe took office in December for a rare second term, pledging to bolster the military to cope with what Japan sees as an increasingly threatening security environment including an assertive China and unpredictable North Korea.


Article 9 of Japan's constitution, drafted by U.S. occupation forces after its defeat in World War Two, renounces the right to wage war and, if taken literally, rules out the very notion of a standing army. In reality, Japan's Self-Defense Forces are one of Asia's strongest militaries.


The Defence Ministry is likely to call in the report for consideration of acquiring the ability to make a pre-emptive strike when an enemy attack is imminent, and creating a Marines force to protect remote islands such as those at the core of a dispute with China, Japanese media said.


"The acquisition of offensive capability would be a fundamental change in our defence policy, a kind of philosophical change," said Marushige Michishita, a professor at the National Graduate Institute of Policy Studies.


Obtaining that capability, however, would take time, money and training, meaning any shift may be more rhetorical than real. "It's easier said than done," Michishita added.


The updated guidelines could also touch on Abe's moves toward lifting a self-imposed ban on exercising the right of collective self-defence, or helping an ally under attack, such as if North Korea launched an attack on the United States.


The defence review may also urge replacing a self-imposed ban on arms exports, that has been eased several times, making it easier for Japan's defence contractors to join international projects and reduce procurement costs.


Some experts stressed that the changes were evolutionary rather than a sudden transformation in Japan's defence posture.


QUESTIONS OVER HARDWARE, COST


"It's all part of a process of Japan edging away from the most restrictive interpretation of Article 9," said Richard Samuels, director of the MIT-Japan program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


Still, given Japan's strained ties with China over disputed isles and how to frame the narrative of Japan's wartime history, China is likely to react strongly to the proposals, which come after Abe cemented his grip on power with a big win in a weekend election for parliament's upper house.


"No matter how Japan explains things, China will attack it pretty harshly," said Michael Green of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.


Although China has been a nuclear power for decades and North Korea is developing nuclear arms, Japan says it has no intention of doing so.


Support has grown in Japan for a more robust military because of concern about China, but opposition also remains.


Japan last updated its National Defence Programme Guidelines in 2010 when the Democratic Party of Japan was in power.


Those changes shifted Japan away from defending areas to its north, a Cold War legacy, to a defence capability that could respond with more flexibility to incursions to the south, the site of the row with China over tiny, uninhabited islands.


Japan has for decades been stretching the limits of Article 9 and has long said it has the right to attack enemy bases overseas when the enemy's intention to attack Japan is evident, the threat is imminent and there are no other defence options.


But while previous administrations shied away from acquiring the hardware to do so, Abe's Liberal Democratic Party in June urged the government to consider acquiring that capability.


Just what hardware might come under consideration is as yet unclear. And with a huge public debt, Japan may be in no position to afford the bill.


Japan already has a very limited attack capability with its F-2 and F-15 fighter jets, mid-air refueling aircraft and Joint Direct Attack Munition guidance kit. Tokyo also plans to buy 42 Lockheed Martin's F-35 stealth fighters, with the first four due for delivery by March 2017.


Acquiring the ability to hit mobile missile launchers in North Korea - the most likely target - would require many more attack aircraft as well as intelligence capability for which Japan would most likely have to rely on the United States, Michishita said. Cruise missiles might also be considered.


Obtaining the ability to strike missile bases in mainland China would be an even bigger stretch, experts said, requiring for example intercontinental missiles. "It would cost lots of money, and take time, training and education to acquire a robust and meaningful capability," Michishita said.


(Additional reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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