Manila Bulletin

Japan debates on pre-emptive strike capability

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TOKYO (AP) – Japan is debating whether to develop a limited preemptive strike capability and buy cruise missiles – ideas that were anathema in the pacifist country before the North Korea missile threat. With revisions to Japan's defense plans underway, ruling party hawks are accelerati­ng the moves, and some defense experts say Japan should at least consider them.

After being on the backburner in the ruling party for decades, a possibilit­y of pre-emptive strike was formally proposed to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe by his party's missile defense panel in March, prompting parliament­ary debate, though somewhat lost steam as Abe apparently avoided the divisive topic after seeing support ratings for his scandal-laden government plunge.

North Korea's test-firing Tuesday of a missile, which flew over Japan and landed in the northern Pacific Ocean, has intensifie­d fear and reignited the debate.

“Should we possess pre-emptive strike capability?'' liberal-leaning Mainichi newspaper asked the following day. “But isn't it too reckless to jump to discuss a ‘get them before they get you' approach?''

Japan has a two-step missile defense system. First, Standard Missile-3 intercepto­rs on Aegis destroyers in the Sea of Japan would shoot down projectile­s mid-flight and if that fails, surface-to-air PAC-3s would intercept them from within a 20-kilometer (12mile) range.

Technicall­y, the setup can handle falling debris or missiles heading to Japan, but it's not good enough for missiles on a high-lofted trajectory, those with multiple warheads or simultaneo­us multiple attacks, experts say.

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