Kuwait Times

Japan public split on idea to cite military in constituti­on

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Poll results released yesterday show that about half of Japan’s population supports a constituti­onal revision that would clarify the legality of the country’s military, a new approach Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is proposing as his party struggles to gain public support for a change. Abe proposed recently that Japan in some way indicate the existence of the SelfDefens­e Forces, which is not spelled out in Article 9 of the constituti­on. The article renounces war and the use of force to settle internatio­nal disputes.

He made the proposal this month in what was seen as a compromise, but opponents see it as a step to justify expanding Japan’s military capabiliti­es, which currently have to be kept to a minimum. In the Nikkei newspaper poll, 51 percent of 1,595 respondent­s supported including a reference to the Self-Defense Forces in Article 9. Thirtysix percent were opposed. Recent polls by other major media outlets also showed mixed results.

Japan decided it had the right under the 1947 constituti­on to have a military for selfdefens­e, but some legal experts have questioned that, though fewer people do so now. Abe and his party have maintained the constituti­onality of the Self-Defense Forces, saying every nation has the right of self-defense as allowed under the United Nations charter. Citing his party’s position, opponents have grown skeptical over Abe’s latest proposal and intention of bringing up the Self-Defense Force legality issue. Experts say Abe’s proposal could lower a hurdle for public support and may be good enough for a symbolic first change to the constituti­on, which Abe said he wants enacted by 2020.

Japan’s 70-year-old constituti­on has never been revised. Japan’s ruling party has long advocated a more drastic revision, but the public generally supports the war-renouncing article. The party and its nationalis­tic supporters view the country’s postwar constituti­on as the legacy of Japan’s defeat in World War II and an imposition of the victor’s world order and values weighing too much on individual­s’ rights. The party-proposed revisions to the constituti­on released in 2012 called for upgrading the SelfDefens­e Forces to a full armed forces and establishi­ng a military court. — AP

 ??  ?? In this April 17, 2017 photo, Japan’s ground self-defense force troop members wait to board the plane as they start leaving South Sudan as part of the process to end their five-year participat­ion in the ongoing UN peacekeepi­ng mission. — AP
In this April 17, 2017 photo, Japan’s ground self-defense force troop members wait to board the plane as they start leaving South Sudan as part of the process to end their five-year participat­ion in the ongoing UN peacekeepi­ng mission. — AP

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