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TOKYO, Sept. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and Defense Agency Director General Shigeru Ishiba stressed here Wednesday that Japan's Self-Defense Forces (SDF) should take a flexible strategy in the future to respond to new threats and play a more active role in the world as the force is celebrating its
50th anniversary.
Flanked by former and incumbent Defense Agency and
SDF senior officials, Koizumi addressed a commemorative ceremony at the Defense
Agency. He vowed to make active contribution to the global peace and praised the
performance of the SDF personnel stationed in Iraq.
"Nowadays, the world is confronted with new threats,
including terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Wemust
review our defense capability and take a flexible approach todeal with the new
security environment," Koizumi said.
Tokyo is working on a draft of National Defense
Program Outline which is expected to take shape at the end of this year.
The outline is aimed to enable Japan to establish a
more flexible defense mechanism, featuring missions against new threat slike
terrorism.
The current policy centered on possessing the minimum
necessary defense capability against limited foreign attacks.
The international contribution such as peacekeeping
operations would be upgraded to the principal mission from the current
collateral status, according to Japanese media reports.
To that end, Japan will move toward to set up special
forces for overseas missions and terrorist and guerrilla wars. Heavy equipment,
such as artillery and tanks, will be curtailed. Meanwhile, intelligence
gathering and analysis capability are to be beefed up.
Defense Agency officials also are arguing for an
elimination oftarget figures for troops and equipment, saying such figures
impede a flexible military buildup, Major Asahi Shimbun said.
Citing the risk of ballistic missile attacks, Tokyo
plans to spend billions of US dollars to introduce US SM-3 and PAC-3 air defense
missile systems as early as the end of 2005.
The National Defense Program Outline document, dating
back to 1976, lays out the mission and scale of the SDF. It was revised in1995
following the end of the Cold War.
Ishiba said at the ceremony that the SDF should find
solutions to pending issues -- How to safeguard Japan's national interests in
face of threats that the current deterrence may not effectively deal with; how
to fulfill Japan's responsibility as a member of international community and as
the United States is adjusting its global strategy, what Japan should do on the
basis of the Japan-US security arrangement.
"I must say it is an extremely difficult task to
break away from the conventional concept of deterrence and one-country pacifism
and also have those who might threaten us understand" that they would not win a
fight against Japan or the Japan-US security system, he said.
"This is the very reason why I ask you to examine
whether the legislation, operation and equipment are most effective in their
current states," Ishiba said.
He also glorified SDF members for their operations in
the world, ranging from East Timor to Iraq.
Evolving for 50 years, the SDF is now able to engage
more than a defense battle. Relatively modest in scale as the SDF is, the
personnel are well-trained and equipped with high-quality weapons.The defense
budget for the world's second-largest economy reached approximately 4,900
billion yen (44.5 billion dollars) in 2004, next only to the United States.
Given Japan's aggression in the World War II, it's
post-war pacifist constitution renounces "war as a sovereign right of the nation
and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes," and
says any war potential "will never be maintained". The basic law also denies the
right of belligerency of the state.
Japan, however, has been rolling out legislations to
circumventthe barrier to make the SDF play a freer and expanded role. The SDF's
minesweepers were sent to the Arabian Sea after the first Gulf War in 1991,
signaling the first offshore operation for the defense-oriented force. In the
following years, the SDF went to more places by taking part in UN peacekeeping
efforts.
Shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the
United States in 2001, Japan decided to cooperate with US military in fighting
terrorism, finding a new approach to unleash its militarypotential. Under
related laws, warships and supply vessels were later dispatched to the Indian
Ocean to provide US-led forces withlogistic support.
Japan adopted a package of contingency laws in 2003
and 2004. The legislations strengthened the commanding power of the prime
minister over the SDF and endowed Japan with the pre-emptive strike
capabilities.
Authorized by a controversial special law, more than
500 groundtroops entered into Iraq's southern city of Samawah early this year to
engage in a one-year rebuilding mission in southern Iraq. They are backed up by
as much air and maritime troops in Kuwait inthe largest overseas operation in
the SDF history.
Calling for revising the constitution is rising. A
latest poll by Kyodo News showed that up to 84 percent of Japanese lawmakers
support to revise the war-renouncing constitution. Koizumi had made it clear
that Japan should have an army rather than merely a defense force. Enditem
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