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Japanese government pushes through law to allow naval support
for Afghan occupation
By Peter Symonds
18 January 2008
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Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda last Friday used his governments
two-thirds majority in the lower house of parliament to force
through legislation restarting Japans naval refuelling assistance
to the US-led occupation of Afghanistan. The vote not only overruled
the opposition-controlled upper house, but also ignored widespread
popular opposition in Japan to the Bush administrations
war on terror.
The naval mission was abruptly terminated on November 1 when
Fukuda failed to renew the special anti-terrorist
legislation passed in 2001 to effectively override the so-called
pacifist clause in the countrys constitution. Then prime
minister Junichiro Koizumi was an enthusiastic supporter of Bushs
global war on terrorism as a means for ending constitutional restrictions
on the military and advancing his own plans for a more aggressive
assertion of Japanese interests in Asia and internationally.
Koizumis commitment of Japanese forces to support the
US occupation of Afghanistan and particularly Iraq provoked widespread
opposition and was a significant factor in the political demise
of his immediate successor, Shinzo Abe. Abe resigned suddenly
last September following a devastating defeat for the ruling Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) in upper house elections, ongoing scandals
and hostility to the impact of the government regressive economic
policies. The immediate trigger for Abes resignation was
the refusal of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)
to renew the anti-terror legislation.
Fukuda, a longstanding LDP politician and minister, was installed
as prime minister in a bid to salvage the government. He described
his ministers as a do-or-die cabinet, warning that
if it failed, the LDP would be ousted from power. All efforts
to reach a compromise with the DPJ on the anti-terror law, including
an offer to form a government of national unity, failed and the
legislation expired.
Japan was under considerable pressure from the Bush administration
to renew the naval mission. While the military assistance involved
was limited, the mission signalled Tokyos continued commitment
to the bogus war on terror after Japanese troops were
pulled out of Iraq in 2006. If Japan ended its support for the
occupation of Afghanistan as well, it would undermine US efforts
to press its European allies to play a more active military role
in Afghanistan.
The government called an extraordinary session of the Diet
and introduced new legislation which passed the lower house on
November 13. Days later Fukuda flew to Washington where he reaffirmed
that the US remained the one and only ally of Japan.
I told President Bush that I will make the utmost efforts
for an early enactment of legislation so that Japans naval
refuelling mission in the Indian Ocean will resume as soon as
possible, Fukuda told reporters. We should never allow
Afghanistan to once again become a hotbed for terrorism.
Faced with continuing DPJ opposition in the upper house, Fukuda
resorted to drastic measures to enact the legislation. The government
used its numbers in the lower house to extend the extraordinary
session of the Diet twice by the maximum allowable limit, forcing
parliament to sit over the Christmas and New Year period for the
first time in 14 years. The government then invoked Article 59
of the constitution, which allows a two-thirds majority of the
lower house to override the upper house if it rejects a bill or
fails to vote on it within 60 days. With the 60-day limit about
to expire, an upper house committee voted against the legislation
on January 10 and the government overturned the vote the following
day.
The governments use of Article 59 was the first since
1951. In part, the virtually unprecedented character of the move
is explained by the unusual balance of parliamentary forces: the
LDP controls the lower house with a large majority, but faces
a hostile upper house after last years election loss. At
the same time, the use of this mechanism is a sign of mounting
social and political tensions, as it represents the breakup of
Japans consensus politics that dominated much of the postwar
period.
The DPJ, which is largely an amalgam of LDP factions that broke
from the party in the 1990s, has no fundamental differences with
the government. It is, however, seeking to capitalise on antiwar
sentiment, hostility to US militarism and anger over the social
impact of the governments economic restructuring program.
The Democrats did not oppose the US occupation of Afghanistan
as such or rule out Japanese military support, but insisted that
it required UN endorsement and accused the government of slavishly
following Washington.
In a televised debate with Fukuda last week, DPJ leader Ichiro
Ozawa accused the government of failing to establish clear rules
for the dispatch of Japanese forces overseas. Considering
the countrys past, the judgment must not be left up to the
powers-that-be of the time. That could mislead our nation,
he said. The vague reference to the countrys past
is designed to appeal to deeply felt opposition to war engendered
by the record of Japanese militarism in the 1930s and 1940s.
Koizumis dispatch of Japanese troops to Iraqthe
first to an overseas war zone since World War IIprovoked
protests. While the LDP has attempted to justify the US occupation
of Afghanistan as part of the war on terror, it is
also deeply unpopular. A Kyodo News survey found that 44.1 percent
of respondents backed the new anti-terror bill, but 43.9 percent
were opposed. The same survey also found sharp divisions over
the use of Article 59 to pass the legislation46.7 percent
were in support, but 41.6 percent declared it was inappropriate.
DPJ parliamentarian Yoshito Sengoku told the Washington
Post: This is a clear abuse of power. The government
will now surely lose the trust of the people. Yet, the opposition
parties have not to date used their majority in the upper house
to pass a no-confidence motion in the government. Such a motion
would not constitutionally force the government to dissolve the
lower house and hold new elections, but would heighten the pressure
on Fukuda to do so.
The DPJs reluctance to press the issue further demonstrates
that its differences with the government are tactical. While advocating
a more independent foreign policy, the opposition party is not
opposed to the US-Japan military alliance and does not want to
alienate Washington. The DPJ is now focussing on the parliamentary
budget session due to start today with a call last weekend for
cuts to petrol taxes. This is a major theme for forcing
a snap election. It is directly related to the lives of the people
and we are resolved not to retreat one step, DJP secretary
general Yukio Hatoyama told Fuji TV on Sunday.
The budget itself only requires lower house approval, but various
supplementary bills must also be passed by the upper house. These
measures need to be passed in time for the start of Japans
new fiscal year on April 1. As a result, the standoff over the
anti-terror law could be reproduced in the budget session and
may force an early election which is not formally due until September
2009.
The LDP is keen to put off a lower house poll for as long a
possible. Support for the Fukuda cabinet has fallen since its
installation last September. A Nikkei poll in mid-December showed
its approval rating at 43 percent, down 12 percent from November,
and its disapproval at 46 percent. A policy document presented
to an LDP convention yesterday described the situation as the
worst crisis in the partys history. I am painfully
aware that you must all feel voters lack of trust in politics
and dissatisfaction with the LDP on a daily basis, Fukuka
told delegates.
The prime minister has hinted that he might call an election
after hosting the annual summit of the G-8, due to take place
in the Lake Toya resort in early July. Instead of resolving the
current political deadlock between the upper and lower houses,
an election could create a full-blown constitutional crisis. While
the DPJ is confident of winning office for the first time, it
may fall short, opening up the prospect of weak LDP government
lacking the two-thirds majority needed to overrule the DPJ-dominated
upper house. Increasingly what is being mooted is a government
of national unity amid growing resentment, hostility and opposition
to the entire political establishment.
See Also:
Japan withdraws naval
support for US war in Afghanistan
[6 November 2007]
Japan's new prime
minister: a recipe for another short-lived government
[26 September 2007]
Japanese prime minister
resigns abruptly
[14 September 2007]
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