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: Japan
Tokyo extends troop deployment in Iraq
By Joe Lopez
23 December 2004
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The Japanese government earlier this month approved plans to
extend its deployment of troops in Iraq for a further 12 months.
As a result, 550 Japan Self Defence Force soldiers will remain
stationed in the southern Iraqi city of Samawah until the end
of 2005.
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, an ardent supporter of the
US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, justified the governments
decision by saying that the troops were needed to help stabilise
the country and continue the fight against terrorism.
The deployment is the first time since World War II that Japanese
soldiers have been sent to an active war zone.
In order to sidestep the pacifist clause in the Japanese constitution,
Koizumi maintains the pretence that the troops are in Iraq solely
for humanitarian purposes. While they have been assigned to non-combat
duties, the soldiers are armed and authorised to use deadly force.
Japanese troops are more likely to be thrown into combat situations
after the Dutch forces currently protecting them leave Iraq in
March 2005.
If troops are killed or injured, it will only fuel already
widespread opposition in Japan to the deployment. According to
a poll in the Mainichi newspaper taken after the governments
decision to keep troops in Iraq was announced, Koizumis
approval rating had plummetted to just 37 percent, its lowest
since he took office in April 2001. The poll found that 62 percent
of respondents opposed the extended deployment outright, while
84 percent believed that Koizumi had not offered enough information
to justify the decision.
The Asahi Shimbun published a warning by an Islamic
cleric linked to Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr. Abd al-Razaq called
on Japanese forces to leave Iraq, saying: We will continue
our peaceful resistance against the [Japan] SDF. If they do not
withdraw, the peaceful resistance will change to a different kind
of resistance... In the beginning, we heard it was for just a
year. Since they are part of a multinational force, they are occupying
forces and should withdraw from this city.
The dispatch of Japanese troops to Iraq has nothing to do with
humanitarian concerns about the plight of the Iraqi people. By
actively participating in Washingtons global war on
terrorism, Koizumi is seeking to strengthen his alliance
with the Bush administration. At the same time, he is using the
war in Iraq to press ahead with the long-held ambitions in Japanese
ruling circles to remove the present restraints on the activities
of the countrys military.
Since the first Gulf War in 1990-91, sections of the ruling
elite have been pushing to remove or render ineffective Article
9 of the Japanese constitution prohibiting the use of the military
except for self-defence. As tensions between the major powers
have risen through the 1990s, so has the pressure in Tokyo to
be able to use the armed forces to pursue Japans economic
and strategic interests.
Under a variety of pretexts, Japan has over the last decade
sent troops to take part in UN peace-keeping operations in Cambodia,
Mozambique and East Timor. As far as Koizumi is concerned, the
Bush administrations war on terrorism and the
invasion of Iraq is the ideal opportunity for legitimising a more
aggressive role for the Japanese military in the Asia Pacific
and internationally.
For Japan, the Middle East is a vital strategic regionthe
source of 90 percent of its oil imports. Despite US opposition
Tokyo signed a $2 billion agreement with the Iranian government
earlier this year to develop the large Azadegan oil fields. The
base for the Japanese troops in Iraq is conveniently located near
the substantial Al Gharaf oilfield in southern Iraq which Japanese
corporations are seeking rights to develop.
The day after Koizumi announced the extended troop deployment
in Iraq, Japans defence ministry released a policy statement
which foreshadows a more belligerent military stance in North
East Asia. The document, to be formally presented to the Japanese
parliament in January, names China and North Korea for the first
time as security threats and calls for an end to the current ban
on arms exports, initially to enable Japan to collaborate with
the US in developing a missile defence shield.
Japans annual defence spending is around $46 billion,
one of the largest military budgets of any country other than
the US. The new policy statement calls for the defence budget
to be cut by 3.5 percent annually for five years. The Self Defence
Forces, however, are to be revamped and refocused so as to play
a role in global security that better matches Japans economic
strength.
US based thinktank Stratfor described Japans new military
policy as the first major departure from its pacifist stance since
World War II. Having Japan as a reinvigorated military power
will significantly alter Asias political and security environment
and give other regional powers something else to consider in their
own planning, it commented.
In relation to China, the Japanese defence ministry outline
states: China is pushing forward its nuclear and missile
capabilities and modernisation of its navy and air force. It is
also trying to expand its scope of naval activities and attention
must be paid to these developments.
The statement refers to last months incident during which
a Chinese submarine strayed into Japanese waters and was chased
out by the Japanese navy. The media and politicians in Tokyo seized
on the episode to whip up fears over the threat posed by China
and to justify a more aggressive military posture in North East
Asia. The new defence policy specifically mentions a long-running
dispute between the two countries over gas and oil deposits in
the East China Sea.
Beijing responded angrily to the Japanese defence policy. Chinas
foreign ministry issued a statement declaring: It is extremely
irresponsible for an official Japanese document to embellish the
so-called China threat without any factual basis whatsoever. The
Chinese side expresses its dissatisfaction.
There is no doubt that the reemergence of Japan as a military
power will provoke concerns throughout Asia where there are still
bitter memories of Japanese colonial rule during the first half
of the twentieth century. More broadly, whatever the current alliances,
the resurrection of Japanese militarism only heightens the danger
of a conflict between the major powers as rivalry over economic
and strategic interests intensifies.
See Also:
Japan uses submarine incident
to whip up anti-Chinese nationalism
[29 November 2004]
Japanese parliament ratifies
troop deployment for Iraq
[7 February 2004]
Japan stakes its claim to
Iraqi oil and gas
[26 January 2004]
Koizumi sends Japanese
troops to Iraq
[16 December 2003]
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