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Japan militarisation accelerates after sinking of alleged
North Korean spy ship
By James Conachy
9 January 2002
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The Japanese Coast Guards sinking of an alleged North
Korean spy ship last month has accelerated Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi administrations push for an end to the postwar limitations
on Japans use of military power.
Though scarcely reported in the United States or Europe, the
incident dominated the Japanese media. On December 22, Japans
military launched a major operation to intercept an unidentified
ship near the Amami-Oshima islands, which are in the East China
Sea to the north of Okinawa, the location of one of the largest
US military bases in the region. When first detected on December
18, the ship was within Japans 200 kilometre exclusive economic
zone (EEZ)an area of fishing and mineral rights.
According to various media accounts, the ship was a 100-ton
Chinese-type squid-fishing boat, but did not have fishing equipment.
It was marked with Chinese characters, flying a Chinese-style
flag and painted in Chinese fashion. Its design was unusual, in
that its engine was located under the foredeck toward the front
of the vessel. Normally, ships engines are toward the aft
or rear of the ship. The Japanese media insinuated that the ship
was built to carry special equipment on its aftdeck, such as small
landing craft, and claimed the design was the hallmark of North
Korean ships.
After a protracted air and sea chase by at least 25 Coast Guard
ships and 14 aircraft, during which the unidentified vessel was
repeatedly shot at and set alight at one point, four Japanese
patrol boats surrounded it in Chinese-claimed waters over 400
km from the Amami-Oshima islands. The Japanese government alleged
that two-and-half hours later the crew of the vessel, in attempt
to break out of the encirclement, fired automatic rifles and rocket
launchers at its ships. On the grounds of self-defence,
the Japanese patrol boats fired 20mm machine guns directly into
the ship, which exploded and sank at 10.13 pm. No attempt was
made to rescue the crew, believed to number 15, despite a group
of them being seen alive in the water. The bodies of two Asian
men wearing Korean-marked life-vests were recovered and autopsies
confirmed that they had drowned.
The sinking is the first time since World War II that any arm
of the Japanese Self-Defence Force (SDF) has used deadly force
and inflicted casualties. In the most high-profile previous military
incident, in March 1999, the Coast Guard pursued and shot across
the bows of two suspected North Korean spy ships in the Sea of
Japan but did not pursue them out of Japanese waters. By its own
admission, the Coast Guard has sent ships to investigate at least
20 other recent intrusions into Japans waters but has not
fired upon them. This time, however, a decision was taken by the
Koizumi administration to turn what could have been a routine
operation into a military precedent.
Rising tensions
Koizumi, a member of the most right-wing faction of the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), assumed office last April as unemployment
reached its highest level in 55 years and Japan slumped toward
its third recession in 10 years. His administration has called
for Japan to play an international military role commensurate
with its economic clout and used nationalist demagogy to divert
public attention from the countrys growing social tensions.
Koizumis response to the sinking has been to make unsubstantiated
allegations that North Korea was attempting to smuggle drugs or
deploy terrorist operatives into Japan, and call for even greater
powers to be given to the military. Significant sections of the
media have backed him.
Summing up the anti-Korean propaganda, the Yomiuri Shimbun,
Japans major conservative daily newspaper, editorialised
on January 7: The terrorist attacks on the United States
and the confrontation with an armed spy ship believed to come
from North Korea have forced Japan to fundamentally change its
Cold War perception of its own security... People increasingly
take it for granted that laws are needed to deal with contingencies
and that restrictions on the use of weapons by the SDF must be
loosened.
There is a history in Japan of exploiting an exaggerated threat
from North Koreaan economically devastated country that
is incapable of feeding its own populationto increase the
SDFs powers. In August 1998, North Koreas firing of
a long-range missile was used to justify Japanese participation
with the US in developing a proposed theatre missile defense system.
In 1999, the government used media hysteria about North Korean
espionage to push through legislation allowing the SDF to actively
support US forces during a crisis within the region.
Tensions are rising between the major political and economic
powers in East Asia. While North Korea has denied any connection
to the alleged spy vessel, if it were conducting a spying operation
it would not be alone. The region is one of the most militarised
in the world, where the US, Japan, China, Russia, Taiwan and the
Koreas all have competing strategic interests and certainly spy
on one another. Just last April, a US spy plane collided with
a Chinese fighter in the South China Sea.
The Bush administrations installation has served to heighten
regional suspicions. Washington has made threatening statements
against North Korea, recently naming it alongside Iraq and other
Middle Eastern states as a potential target in the war on
terrorism. While US-China relations currently appear relaxed,
the Republican stance that China is a strategic competitor
has not changed. The Bush administration has also offered to sell
Taiwan modern conventional submarines and other advanced military
hardware, despite Beijings opposition.
This tense atmosphere makes Japans December 22 action
all the more provocative, particularly against China, in whose
territory it took place. China has clashed diplomatically with
the Koizumi administration on several occasions last yearover
Koizumis tolerance of right-wing revisionist history textbooks
and his nationalist visit to the Yasukuni Shrine to Japans
war dead. Following the Koizumis dispatch of warships to
take part in the war on terrorism Beijing issued carefully
worded warnings against Japanese remilitarisation.
In response to the December 22 incident, the Chinese government
has expressed concerns over Japans use of force in
waters in the East China Sea. The Chinese militarys
newspaper, the Peoples Liberation Army Daily, declared
in an editorial: In order to realise the dream of becoming
a regional military power and to increase and expand the space
for its self-defence forces into the high seas, Japan could well
continue to create similar incidents in the future.
The Koizumi administration is wasting no time in taking advantage
of the political climate to advance its remilitarisation agenda.
It has prepared new legislation that would permit the military
and coast guard to launch pre-emptive attacks on suspicious
ships or aircraft, both within and outside Japanese territory.
Cabinet secretary Yasuo Fukuda attacked the self-defence limitations
on the military, declaring in late December: If we dont
suffer casualties when we are shot at, does this mean we cant
do anything? The legislation is expected to go before parliament
on January 21.
Koizumi is also drafting crisis legislation, which
would enable a type of state of emergency to be declared that
suspends constitutional limitations on the militarys actions
within Japan itself. Details that have been reported include granting
the armed forces the power to utilise property without the owners
consent and control civilian movements. The law would concentrate
emergency powers in the hands of a Security Council, headed by
the prime minister, which could bypass parliament.
Another piece of legislation is being drawn up to facilitate
holding a referendum on the revision of the Japanese constitution.
The main clause being targeted is Article 9, which prohibits war
or the use of force as a means of settling international
disputes. While legislation passed on October 29 permitted
the SDF to give logistical support to US forces involved in the
war against Afghanistan, the constitution only permits the SDF
to engage in offensive operations within Japans air, land
and sea territory.
The drive by Japan to bolster its armed forces parallels similar
moves in Europe and elsewhere. With the US utilising unilateral
military might in Afghanistan to secure economic and strategic
advantages in Central Asia and the Middle East, Koizumi is seeking
to prepare the legal and ideological basis for an equally aggressive
assertion of Japanese interests.
See Also:
Japanese parliament
votes for military role in Afghan war
[31 October 2001]
Koizumi's visit to
the Yasukuni shrine legitimises Japanese militarism
[17 August 2001]
Japanese history textbook
provokes sharp controversy
[7 June 2001]
In the aftermath
of the US election:
Discussion intensifies in Japan over remilitarisation
[8 January 2001]
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