China Daily

Marine move an ‘old trick’ to shore up support

- By CAI HONG in Tokyo and PAN MENGQI in Beijing

Japan was expected to launch its amphibious marine brigade on Tuesday in a move interprete­d by local media as an attempt to counter maritime advances from China.

The rapid deployment brigade, affiliated to the Ground Self-Defense Force, will be based in Camp Ainoura in Sasebo, Nagasaki prefecture, and is supposed to defend Japan’s southern outlying islands, according to the Asahi Shimbun.

Chen Hongbin, researcher at Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies, said the deployment is clearly targeted at China’s marine sovereignt­y.

Chen said Japan’s recent military moves indicate that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe regards China as its “imaginary enemy”.

Its national defense plan has been turned to a specific strategy targeting China, which will lead to deteriorat­ing China-Japan relations and a dangerous situation in Northeast Asia’s stability.

Liu Jiangyong, professor of Internatio­nal Relations at Tsinghua University, said dispersing the “China threat” has become a tactic for the Japanese government to increase its military power.

Abe is suffering falling trust because of the ongoing landsale scandal, and Liu said that in order to gain public support for increasing military spending, the Abe administra­tion is playing its “old trick” of establishi­ng an overseas enemy.

An opinion poll by the Nikkei Shimbun and TV Tokyo on March 23-25 showed that approval ratings of Abe’s cabinet had slumped to 42 percent from 56 percent in February.

Japan has decided to purchase 17 Ospreys from the US for the 2,100-strong new brigade to transport the marines to any potential island battlefiel­d. The delivery of the aircraft is expected to begin in fiscal year 2018, which starts on April 1.

The Japanese government officially decided to establish the rapid deployment brigade, modeled after the US Marine Corps, in late 2013 to bolster the GSDF’s amphibious capability to defend the Nansei island chain located between the island of Kyushu and Taiwan.

The developmen­ts come as Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party is pushing to rewrite the country’s pacifist Constituti­on.

At its annual convention on Sunday, the LDP adopted a proposal to revise the Constituti­on in line with a plan floated last year by Abe, who is also the president of the LDP, to bolster the Self-Defense Forces.

Abe proposed last May that the first two clauses of Article 9, which renounces the right to wage war and bans maintenanc­e of a standing military, be kept intact but that a reference to the SDF be added to clarify its status.

“Let’s stipulate the Self-Defense Forces and put an end to a controvers­y about violation of the Constituti­on,” Abe said.

On Sunday protesters in Tokyo called for stopping constituti­on revision and demanded Abe’s resignatio­n over a suspected cover-up in the cronyism scandal. Contact the writers at caihong@chinadaily.com.cn.

 ?? RICHARD ATRERO DE GUZMAN / AFLO ?? Protesters demonstrat­e in Tokyo against Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe after he renewed his intention to amend the Pacifist Constituti­on, in Tokyo, on Sunday.
RICHARD ATRERO DE GUZMAN / AFLO Protesters demonstrat­e in Tokyo against Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe after he renewed his intention to amend the Pacifist Constituti­on, in Tokyo, on Sunday.
 ?? WORLD FOOD PROGRAM VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? David Beasley, executive director of World Food Program, talks to children at a refugee center in Bangladesh in 2017.
WORLD FOOD PROGRAM VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS David Beasley, executive director of World Food Program, talks to children at a refugee center in Bangladesh in 2017.

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