By Ankit Panda
March 04, 2015
Japanese lawmakers in the ruling coalition are debating the merits of allowing greater weapons use by the Japanese military.
The minutiae of the debate revolve around the specific conditions under which SDF troops would be able to discharge their weapons. According to the Yomiuri‘s reports, there are two primary categories. Under the first, SDF troops would only discharge their weapons in “self-preservation” scenarios, otherwise minimizing the use of weaponry. Under this set of rules, SDF troops would be permitted to use their weapons to save their own lives or the lives of civilians under their protection.
The second category — “mission execution” — would allow SDF troops to discharge their weapons more liberally in eliminating resistance to any potential mission, or suppressing targets during an operation. Until today, Japanese SDF troops have used their weapons in line with the first category. The LDP is keen to expand this to include “mission execution” scenarios. New Komeito continues to insist that short of a formal constitutional amendment, the SDF cannot radically alter its current “self-preservation” stance on the use of weapons. ”We are far from a conclusion,” one Komeito member told the press.
The debate highlights some of the frictions within the ruling coalition that will make complete constitutional overhaul, as per the LDP’s latest proposals, a challenging endeavor. Following December’s snap election, the LDP-New Komeito coalition won a supermajority in the House of Representatives, the lower house of the Diet, and a simple majority in the House of Councilors. While the current coalition’s influence in Japanese politics is unquestionably high, there remain considerable disagreements on national security issues and particularly the role of the Japanese military.
In early 2015, the execution of two Japanese citizens at the hands of Islamic State terrorists slightly shifted the debate in favor of the LDP, resulting in wider sympathies for a more activist and global Japanese security presence. Still, without the support of New Komeito and less conservative LDP members, the Abe government has a long way to go in navigating the long road to constitutional overhaul.
The current debate among legislators in the ruling coalition could lead to important legislation. The LDP, for example, imagines a law that would allow the Japanese government to deploy the SDF abroad as necessary. To make this law practically viable, LDP legislators see a need for relaxing the SDF’s restrictions on the use of weaponry.
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