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US seeks Japanese government support for war on Iraq
By James Conachy
3 September 2002
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US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage arrived in Tokyo
on August 27, seeking the open endorsement of the Japanese government
of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi for US war plans against Iraq.
According to the Japan Times, Armitage told Japanese
Defense Agency head Gen Nakatani that the Bush administration
believed close consultation with, and the understanding
of, its allies will be necessary to strike Iraq. During
a meeting with the heads of the three Japanese government parties,
Armitage requested Japan consider how it can help the US
efforts to eradicate terrorism and assured them that the
Bush administration would keep Koizumi closely advised of the
timetable for a second Gulf War.
On August 28, Armitage held further strategic dialogue
talks over Iraq and North Korea with Japans Vice Foreign
Minister Yukio Takeuchi, and also with a senior representative
of the Australian Foreign Affairs Department, Ashton Calvert.
Later in the day, Armitage told a press conference: It is
our view that an Iraq left unattended is a threat to its neighbours
and a threat to ourselves. The US could make a compelling
case for the overthrow of Saddam Husseins regime,
he said.
Koizumi did not, however, provide Armitage with an unqualified
endorsement for US plans and the indications of support remain
relatively low key. A Japanese Defense Agency spokesman stated
that Japan was considering a further extension to the tour of
duty of three destroyers and two supply ships currently working
with US naval forces in the Indian Ocean. Their continued presence
would ensure that Tokyo has forces on hand to contribute to a
war on Iraq.
The Japanese ships were deployed last November to provide logistical
support in the war on Afghanistanthe first active role in
a war by Japanese military personnel since World War II. An initial
six-month time limit was extended in May until November 19, ostensibly
due to the ongoing campaign against the remains of the Al Qaeda
network.
Following September 11, the Koizumi government backed US military
deployments in Central and South East Asia. Last October, it pushed
emergency anti-terror legislation through the parliament
that enabled Koizumi to bypass the countrys constitution
and deploy naval and air units to assist with the invasion of
Afghanistan. Japans postwar constitution, which renounced
the use of armed force as a means of settling international
disputes, limits the military to territorial defence.
In February, during a visit to Japan by Bush, Koizumi proclaimed
his unconditional support for the war on terrorism.
Whereas European leaders have raised differences with any unilateral
US attack on Iraq, Koizumi has publicly declared that such a war
was a legitimate option for the Bush administration.
Vice Foreign Minister Takeuchi reportedly told Armitage that Japan
wont stint on cooperation with Bushs Iraq policy.
Koizumis support for Washington is bound up with Tokyos
response to the conditions ushered in more than a decade ago by
the collapse of the Soviet Union and the opening up of China to
capitalist investment. Amid sharpening rivalry for markets and
profit, a section of the Japanese ruling elite views a close alliance
with Washington as the best means, at present, of securing strategic
and economic advantages in the region and internationally.
Under Koizumi, Japan has backed the hardline stance of the
Bush administration toward North Korea and China, assisting Washington
to force concessions from Pyongyang and Beijing and undermining
the efforts of Russia and the European powers to establish a greater
influence in the region. In the Middle East and Central Asia,
Tokyo is hoping to guarantee stable energy supplies and to secure
lucrative contracts for Japanese firms in the exploitation of
oil and gas resources. In the aftermath of the war on Afghanistan,
Japanese companies are pursuing investments in a proposed gas
pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan.
Of longer term significance, Koizumi has exploited the war
on terrorism to legitimise the use of Japans military
to pursue foreign policy objectives. In August, Tokyo announced
it was eager for a greater role in UN peacekeeping operations
and would seek the command of future operations in the Asia-Pacific.
Some 700 Japanese troops are currently in East Timor.
The closeness of US-Japan ties is underlined by Koizumis
planned visit to the US from September 9 to 14, to take part in
ceremonies to mark the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks.
He is scheduled to hold talks with Bush on September 12 and will
deliver a speech to the UN General Assembly the following day.
His main theme is expected to be Japans support for the
war on terrorism. Koizumi is then going to North Koreathe
first visit by a Japanese prime ministerwhere, with Washingtons
backing, it is anticipated he will seek major political concessions
in Pyongyang.
Divisions in the ruling elite
Koizumi has not yet given explicit support for a US war on
Iraq as he faces opposition at home, including inside the ruling
LDP. While his basic agenda of remilitarisation and a more assertive
foreign policy is broadly supported in the Japanese political
establishment, there is widespread disquiet over the consequences
of being too closely linked with the reckless policies of the
Bush administration.
Koizumis pro-Bush foreign policy provoked sharp ruptures
within his cabinet last year. In order to align Japan with the
war on Afghanistan he was compelled to wage a factional struggle
within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to politically
defeat Makiko Tanakaformerly one of his key allies. Last
year, her backing was a critical factor in Koizumi winning the
post of prime minister. Tanaka, however, used her position as
foreign minister to promote an orientation away from Washington
and toward stronger independent relations in Asia, particularly
with China. On the basis of factionally-motivated allegations,
she was removed from cabinet in January and then in May barred
from contesting the party leadership for two years. Last month,
she resigned from parliament.
Concerns over the US-Japanese alliance go beyond Tanaka and
have been heightened by Washingtons preparations for a preemptive
strike against Iraqwithout UN support or any evidence backing
its allegations against Baghdad. Two former prime ministers, leading
LDP members, opposition parties and major newspapers have publicly
advised Koizumi not to back the US without the sanction of the
UN and the European powers, and at least some support from Middle
Eastern states.
A major fear in Tokyo is that a war in Iraq may end up being
a military debacle or could inflame and destabilise the Middle
Eastthe source of 85 percent of Japans oil imports.
According to press reports, an LDP advisory panel warned Koizumi
before Armitages visit that backing the US could antagonise
Arab states and make it difficult for Japan to secure its
energy from those countries. LDP secretary-general Yasu
Yamasaki commented on August 28: I believe an independent
decision by the US would create international distrust of the
US, and Japan as an alliance partner.
Naoto Kan, the secretary general of the opposition Democratic
Party of Japan (DPJ), stated on August 15 that his party would
not support any attack on Iraq without concrete evidence
that Baghdad had assisted terrorist groups. An editorial in the
Mainichi Shimbun on August 28 declared: If the US
surges ahead on the basis of its own particular reading of international
law, believing the rest of the world will clean up after it performs
the dirty work, it should be aware that neither Japan nor any
other country is prepared to follow its lead.
The Stalinist Japanese Communist Party (JCP), which bases its
criticisms of Koizumi on crude anti-Americanism, is one of the
most vociferous advocates of a break with the US alliance. In
the partys official statement on August 15, the anniversary
of Japans surrender in World War II, JCP secretary Ichida
Tadayoshi denounced the cabinet for its extraordinary submission
to US foreign policy and a complete lack of independence and autonomy.
Unease within the LDP and its coalition partner New Komeito
over the US war plans has already forced Koizumi to repeatedly
delay a second round of anti-terror legislation. Its
purpose is to remove an array of restrictions on the use of the
Japanese military in direct combat roles and thus to provide the
legal basis for participation in a war on Iraq.
The other major concern in ruling circles is that Japans
support for a US invasion of Iraq could provoke widespread domestic
opposition. Koizumis advisors warned on August 24 that it
was not known whether the support of the Japanese people
could be obtained. The Asahi Shimbun editorialised
along similar lines on August 29, declaring that Koizumi
should learn to say no to Bush as the division
of domestic opinion in Japan will be incomparably greater than
it was during the bombardment of Afghanistan.
The fear is that opposition to war could become the outlet
for the long pent-up social discontent. For over a decade, Japanese
working people have borne the brunt of the countrys economic
stagnation in the form of collapsed real estate values, declining
real wages and record levels of unemployment. The political establishment,
especially the LDP, is seen as corrupt and incompetent. Popular
illusions in Koizumi, who was promoted by the media in May 2001
as a reformer who would transform Japanese politics, have evaporated
and support for his cabinet has slumped to 45 percent, compared
with 80 percent a year ago.
Despite the risks, Koizumi is giving every indication he will
push for his government to participate in any war on Iraq. In
doing so, he rests on the fact that, whatever their fears, the
dominant sections of the Japanese ruling class do not believe
at this point that an alignment with the European Union, or with
regional powers such as China, provides a viable alternative to
pursuing their interests through an alliance with US imperialism.
See Also:
Cheney's brief for war: a mass of lies
and historical falsifications
[2 September 2002]
German chancellor lines up
with US critics of Bush war plans vs. Iraq
[26 August 2002]
British establishment divided
over US war against Iraq
[23 August 2002]
Corruption allegations against
Tanaka intensify factional warfare in Japan
[11 April 2002]
Bush visit to Japan cements
closer ties against China
[1 March 2002]
Japanese parliament
votes for military role in Afghan war
[31 October 2001]
In the aftermath
of the US election:
Discussion intensifies in Japan over remilitarisation
[8 January 2001]
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