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ID128428
Title ProperAbe's gambit
Other Title InformationJapan reorients its defense posture
LanguageENG
AuthorMiller, J. Berkshire
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)China's aggressive actions in the East China Sea, combined with other factors, especially North Korea's continuing intransigence, have created an increasingly hostile security environment for Japan. Its response to these events can be seen in the impressive political rebirth of Shinzo Abe and the Liberal Democratic Party. While Abe, currently serving as prime minister for a second time, was elected largely because of his economic policies and the ineptitude of the formerly ruling Democratic Party of Japan, he has used his mandate to press forward with long needed, albeit controversial, defense and security reforms that indicate the seriousness with which Tokyo takes its current situation. With China looming up in front of them, and Pyongyang posing lesser but still worrisome threats, the Japanese have become acutely aware of the fact that their Self-Defense Forces (SDF) have one hundred and forty thousand ground troops, one hundred and forty-one maritime vessels, and four hundred and ten aircraft, while China's People's Liberation Army has one million six hundred thousand troops and North Korea has one million soldiers. Meanwhile, North Korea maintains a significant, if decaying, navy and air force, with one hundred and ninety vessels and approximately six hundred aircraft. China's much more capable maritime and air assets include nine hundred and seventy vessels and two thousand five hundred and eighty aircraft.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.6; March-April 2014: p.55-61
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.6; March-April 2014: p.55-61
Key WordsChina ;  Japan ;  North Korea ;  East Asia ;  Chinese Aggression ;  East China Sea ;  Shinzo Abe ;  Liberal Democratic Party ;  Political Troop ;  Military Troops ;  Defense Posture ;  Maritime Security ;  Maritime Assets ;  Bilateral Relations ;  International Relations ;  Strategic Relations ;  Economic Policies ;  Foreign Policy ;  Military Policy ;  Sino - Japan Relations ;  Asia - Pacific