Arab Times

‘Give troops sense of pride’

Abe renews constituti­on revision push

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ASAKA, Japan (Agencies): Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe renewed his pledge Sunday to push for a revision to the country’s war-renouncing constituti­on, in which he wants the military explicitly mentioned.

Speaking before a field of about 4,000 troops, Abe said that a revision is needed to give his troops sense of pride.

“You have gained public trust with your own hands,” Abe, wearing a tuxedo, told the troops in his address. “Now it’s time to fulfill our responsibi­lity as politician­s to accommodat­e an environmen­t where all SelfDefens­e Force can accomplish their duties with sense of pride.”

About 260 tanks and other military vehicles and 40 warplanes were exhibited at the event.

Re-elected as head of his ruling party last month and with up to three more years as Japan’s leader, Abe is determined to pursue his long-sought charter amendment.

Many Japanese conservati­ves see Japan’s US-drafted constituti­on as a humiliatio­n imposed after their World War II defeat.

When the Self-Defense Force was establishe­d in 1954, public opinion was initially divided over its role, but today the force has gained support for its largely noncombat contributi­on in internatio­nal peace keeping efforts and disaster relief.

Abe wants to add a clause to Article 9 of the constituti­on, which bans the use of force in settling internatio­nal disputes. He wants to explicitly permit the existence of Japan’s military.

Opponents say such a revision is not necessary because the defense force is widely recognized in and outside the country as Japan’s military and its constituti­onality is no longer an issue.

Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party has continuous­ly expanded the force’s internatio­nal role by loosening interpreta­tions of Article 9.

In 2015, his government passed a defense law allowing Japanese troops to defend US and other allies in case of foreign attack, a fundamenta­l change from its self-defense only policy.

Two-thirds approval is needed in both houses to propose a revision, which would then be subject to a national referendum. Media surveys have shown most voters care more about their pay, education costs and the economy than a constituti­on revision.

Meanwhile, Abe will pay the first visit by a Japanese prime minister to China since 2011 later this month, Beijing announced Friday, in the latest sign of warming ties between the rivals.

Abe will visit from Oct 25 to 27 and mark the 40th anniversar­y of the Treaty of Peace and Friendship between the two nations, said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang.

The visit will “elevate our bilateral ties and put bilateral cooperatio­n back on the right track,” Lu said at a regular press briefing.

He added that the two sides will work to “jointly uphold multilater­alism and the free trade system”.

Lu said there a reception was planned to celebrate the Sino-Japanese friendship treaty, which was signed on Oct 23, 1978.

Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping have met numerous times over the last few years on the sidelines of internatio­nal events.

But no Japanese prime minister has paid an official visit to China since 2011 and no Chinese president has visited Japan since 2010.

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