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Japanese government withdraws its troops from Iraq
By Joe Lopez
24 July 2006
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The arrival of 220 Japanese troops in Kuwait last week marked
the complete withdrawal of Japans 600-man Ground Self-Defence
Force (GSDF) from Iraq.
If one were to believe Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumis
announcement on June 20, the Japanese troops are on their way
home because their humanitarian mission has been accomplished.
Japans GSDF troops in the region have played a considerable
role in providing humanitarian and reconstruction support. That
is why we have decided to withdraw, Koizumi declared.
In reality, the deployment of Japanese troops in early 2004
had nothing to do with helping the Iraqi people. Their two missions
in Iraq were to secure Japans oil interests in the country
by strengthening the US-Japan alliance; and to send ground troops
to a combat zone for the first time since World War II, setting
a precedent for more active Japanese military interventions in
the future.
Koizumi made the decision to withdraw before he steps down
as prime minister in September, mindful of the mass opposition
of ordinary Japanese people to the troop deployment, and concerned
to ensure a smooth leadership transition within the ruling Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP). An opinion poll by the Asahi Shimbun
newspaper revealed late last year that 69 percent of respondents
were opposed to Japans continued presence in Iraq.
The 600 Japanese troops were dispatched to the southern Iraqi
city of Samawa, which the government depicted as a non-combat
zone after Bush declared in May 2003 that major combat operations
in Iraq had ended. However, with the violent insurgency inflicting
increasing numbers of severe US casualties, British and Australian
forces were sent to Samawa to protect the Japanese soldiers. In
addition, Tokyo paid huge sums of money to the local Samawa elite
to ensure the security of its troops. Once the British and Australian
forces declared they would hand security over to Baghdads
puppet regime, the risk facing the Japanese troops increased,
and Koizumi decided to act.
Last December, an article on the Japan Focus website,
entitled What Have Japans Self-Defence Forces Accomplished
in Iraq? pointed out that the Japanese troops had done little
for the stricken residents of Samawa, and that they faced growing
hostility. At the beginning, there was false hope among local
Iraqis that Japanese companies like Sony and Toyota
would come, set up production and provide jobs and essential infrastructure.
However, one and a half years have passed since then and
such hopes and illusions have faded away.
Citizens began to feel that the SDF hadnt solved the problems
of blackouts, water failures and unemployment, it noted.
The article quoted Muhammad Al-Galawi, a representative of
Shiite leader Moqtada-al Sadrs office. As Japan will
never forget the [atomic] bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
we insist to the Japanese government that if the SDF continues
their presence here, we cannot deny the possibility that we will
attack the SDF. As long as they keep staying here, we regard them
as occupation forces. Thus, the SDF is one of our targets. The
friendship between the SDF and Samawa citizens will never be produced.
Al-Galawi went on to say: It is not troops that Iraq
needs, but citizens power. We will welcome you if you take
off your military uniforms and weapons. I would like you to think
about the Iraqi side not just the SDF side.
Competing oil interests
Despite Koizumis carefully presented image of the Iraqi
mission as pacifist, its underlying imperialist agenda
of plundering the oil-rich country has been no different to that
of the US, Britain or Australia. In fact, Japan has not ended
its military involvement in Iraq. The Koizumi government has announced
it will expand its 200-man Air Self-Defense unit based in Kuwait,
which has been transporting US-led forces and supplies into Iraq.
A further 10 personnel will be added to the existing unit and
its operations expanded to include flights to Baghdad and the
northern city of Arbilsomething that Japan had previously
refused to do because of the dangers posed to its forces.
The purpose of Tokyos participation in the US-led occupation
of Iraq has been to guarantee Japanese access to Middle Eastern
oil and gas. Japan imports no less than 90 percent of its oil
from the region. Not long after the GSDF deployment to southern
Iraq was announced in late 2003, reports emerged about the involvement
of Japanese companies in talks with senior officials of the Iraqi
Oil Ministry to secure contracts over oil and gas fields. Among
them was a Japanese consortium, headed by the Mitsubishi Corporation,
which was seeking the rights to develop the one-billion-barrel
Al Gharaf oilfield in southern Iraq.
Samawa, which is situated just 65 kilometres from Al Gharaf
oilfield, was selected as the destination for the Japanese troops
precisely for the purpose of looking after Japans oil interests.
In 2003, Japan pledged $5 billion in low-interest loans to
Iraq for the purposes of reconstructionincluding
a large portion earmarked for the oil sector. The Koizumi government
also promised to train 1,000 Iraqi oil and gas engineers, starting
in 2006.
Although Iraqi oil now accounts for just one percent of Japanese
imports, Tokyo decided to join the US-led occupation of the country
on the basis of more long-term considerations. As the worlds
second largest economic power, Japan is a resources-poor nation
and regards energy as its most critical strategic issue.
In an interview with the Japan Times in January 2005,
Sakai Keiko, a leading Japanese expert on Iraq and a member of
the Japanese government-affiliated Institute of Developing Economies,
bluntly pointed out that oil interests were the primary motivation
behind Tokyos deployment of troops to Iraq. She said the
high quality Iraqi oil was particularly suitable for the Japanese
refineries, especially the varieties of Kirkuk Light Crude and
Basra Light Crude. At present Japan buys large amounts of United
Arab Emirates oil, largely because of its similarity to Iraqi
oil, but ideally it wants the Iraqi variety.
In addition, Japan, like France, was one of Iraqs major
trading partners and investors in infrastructure projects in the
1970s and 80s. However, because of the war, many payments to Japanese
firms for construction projects remain unpaid. Keiko said the
sending of Japanese ground troops was to secure room for
Japanese businessincluding construction projects. If Japan
did nothing, all the projects would go to the US and British companies.
Keiko also warned of the underlying tensions between the US
and Japan. Still, the US wont allow Japan to get the
upper hand in Iraq. It doesnt want Japan getting too warm
and friendly with the governments of both countries [Iraq and
Iran]. Its one thing if trade in Iraq is done under the
control of US and British companies, but Japan wont get
the best petroleum or construction projects.
Japans ruling elite drew definite conclusions in the
aftermath of the 1990-91 Gulf War. In that first Iraq war, Japan
did not play a military role, due to constitutional and political
constraints. Article 9 of the Japanese constitution, drawn up
by the US after World War II, prohibits the use of military force,
except in a strictly defensive role.
Not only was Japan made to pay $13 billion for the US-led war,
it lost access to Iraqi oil and its influence in the Middle East
was significantly weakened. As a result, Japanese governments
from then on have conducted a consistent campaign to legitimise
the use of the military abroad in pursuit of its geopolitical
and economic interests.
Koizumi has participated in Bushs coalition of
the willing to ensure at least a portion of future Iraqi
oil goes to Japan, and to promote a more aggressive Japanese military
role by enhancing its relations with the US. In northeast Asia,
a stronger US-Japan alliance has allowed Tokyo to take a more
assertive role, especially against China.
But the prospect of complete US control of Middle Eastern oil
has the potential to undermine Japans energy interests.
Iran has warned Japan that the $2 billion deal signed between
the two countries in 2004 to develop the Azadegan oilfield could
be cancelled due to Tokyos cooperation with Washingtons
threats of economic sanctions or any support for US military action
against Tehran.
At the recent G8 summit, Koizumi tried to downplay Japans
vulnerability in relation to energy supplies. As oil prices
hit $75, some people say its a crisis. But the pinch can
turn to be a chance. In fact, Koizumi is well aware of the
growing risk to Japans energy security.
G8 Research Group director John Kirton warned that the Israeli
military offensive in Lebanon, and the general rise in tension
throughout the region, is once again forcing Japan to reconsider
its heavy reliance on Middle Eastern crude oil. In the long
run, Japan will be able to overcome the impact of the latest crisis,
with its experience of the previous oil crisis and its advanced
technology. But the crisis is still a concern about the prospect
for the Japanese economy, which is just getting out of deflation.
Tokyo is busily dispatching its oil companies to buy or invest
oil and gas assets around the world, in order to establish alternative
resources of energy. The most important project is a $15 billion
oil pipeline from Russian Siberia to the Pacific coast. However,
during the G8 summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin refused
to give Koizumi a guarantee that the project would ultimately
provide oil for Japan. China is competing to build the pipeline
into its own northeastern territory.
It is worth recalling that the rise of Japanese militarism
prior to World War II was intimately bound up with the devastation
caused by the Great Depression in the 1930s, and Tokyos
concern about its US and British rivals cutting off energy supplies
and mineral resources. After the US imposed an oil embargo in
1941, Japan felt compelled to attack Pearl Harbour. Today, economic
crises and great power rivalries are again driving the Japanese
ruling elite toward militarism.
The 600 Japanese soldiers may be pleased that they are finally
going home. But their deployment in Iraq has set a precedent for
many more young Japanese men and women to be sent overseas in
the coming period, to engage in ever-more dangerous missions.
See Also:
Japan plans aggressive global
energy strategy
[15 June 2006]
Japan outbids China
for Siberian pipeline
[14 February 2005]
Japan stakes its claim
to Iraqi oil and gas
[26 January 2004]
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