Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Abe renews pledge to change Japan’s charter to boost troops

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JAPANESE Prime Minister Shinzo Abe renewed his pledge yesterday 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 Self-Defense 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 U.S.-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 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 U.S. 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.

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