Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Japan advised to arm to strike back

- ISABEL REYNOLDS AND YUKI HAGIWARA

Japan should arm itself with long- range offensive weapons, a policy research group in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party said Wednesday, in a break with the cautious defense stance the country has maintained since World War II.

The group, led by former defense minister Itsunori Onodera, urged the government to begin considerat­ions immediatel­y to introduce the capacity to attack a foreign base, according to a document distribute­d to reporters. The necessary budget should be set aside, the group said, citing a “new level of threat” from North Korea. A broader party panel will look at the proposal today, and it is set to be presented to Abe soon.

“This is an urgent problem, and as a responsibl­e party we have a duty to allay the anxiety of the people of Japan,” Liberal Democrat lawmaker Hiroshi Imazu, who heads the party’s defense panel, said at its headquarte­rs in Tokyo.

Hemmed in by a pacifist constituti­on it adopted after the war, Japan relies heavily on the U.S. “nuclear umbrella” to deter growing regional threats. Successive Japanese administra­tions since the 1950s have said that the constituti­on doesn’t preclude the right to attack a foreign base if the country is under imminent threat. The government has never obtained the means to carry out such a strike, partly out of concern it would revive memories of its past aggression in the region.

“What we are talking about in the party is not pre-emptive strikes,” Takeshi Iwaya, a member of the Liberal Democratic policy research group, said Tuesday in an interview. “If there were a saturation attack — if several missiles were fired at us at the same time — we wouldn’t be able to deal with that using our current missile defense system. So we think we should consider the capacity to strike back and prevent a further attack.”

Abe has shifted Japan’s security posture since taking office in 2012, removing a ban on weapons exports and reinterpre­ting the pacifist constituti­on to allow the defense of allies. Another change to Japan’s military stance would probably require a Cabinet decision that must be approved by all ministers, including Keiichi Ishii, who is from Abe’s coalition partner. The Buddhist- backed Komeito party is likely to try to limit any long-distance strike capacity.

“Komeito believes in a peaceful country, an exclusivel­y defensive posture and not possessing offensive weapons,” Kiyohiko Toyama, a Komeito lawmaker who has been involved in past ruling coalition negotiatio­ns over changes to security policy, said in an interview this week. “I’m not saying it won’t happen. But it’s not simple. It impinges on the Japan-U.S. alliance, so we need to have a dialogue with the U.S.”

Obtaining cruise missiles would be one option for Japan, the Liberal Democrat policy group said. While proposals that Japan acquire a long-range strike capability have been made several times in the past, North Korea’s simultaneo­us launch of four ballistic missiles earlier this month — three of which fell into Japan’s exclusive economic zone — has brought a new sense of urgency.

The group also recommende­d that Japan consider stepping up its capacity to intercept incoming missiles by introducin­g new technology such as Terminal High Altitude Area Defense — known as THAAD — or Aegis Ashore defense systems. It urged the government to consider how to tackle missiles that land within Japan’s exclusive economic zone, rather than just its territoria­l waters, to protect the country’s shipping.

Japan already has a twostage missile defense system, consisting of ship-borne SM3 intercepto­rs and groundbase­d PAC-3 missiles. Both are undergoing upgrades.

Concerns over Japan’s relations with President Donald Trump’s administra­tion also have played into the discussion­s, ahead of a meeting between the two countries’ defense and foreign ministers expected next month, Iwaya said. That’s even after Trump and Defense Secretary James Mattis reaffirmed the U.S.’s commitment to defending Japan.

“America is continuing to demand that NATO countries boost their defense spending to 2 percent” of gross domestic product, Iwaya said. “We imagine that there will be pressure on Japan to make a bit more effort on defense. Considerin­g that the situation is getting a lot worse, we should make an effort without waiting to be told to do so by the U.S.”

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