ID | 134099 |
Title Proper | Collective defense |
Other Title Information | Abe's new security plan |
Language | ENG |
Author | Menenberg, Aaron |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Since the end of World War II, Japan has relied on the United States for its security, an arrangement enshrined in the US-written Japanese Constitution of 1947 and augmented by subsequent agreements between the two allies. Article IX of the Constitution prohibits Japan from taking part in any conflict or building a traditional military. (When President George H.?W. Bush organized the "coalition of the willing" against Iraq in 1991, Japan was able only to offer financial assistance because of this stipulation.) But with the rise of China and its assertion of sovereignty in regions Japan claims as its own, Tokyo has begun to expand its military capability. Some government officials wonder how these moves will affect relations with the United States, Japan's protector for the last half-century. |
`In' analytical Note | World Affairs US Vol.177, No.3; Sep-Oct.2014: p.68-72 |
Journal Source | World Affairs US Vol.177, No.3; Sep-Oct.2014: p.68-72 |
Key Words | Japan ; Political Allies ; Conflicts ; Coalition ; Military Capabilities ; World War - II ; Warfare History ; US - Japanese Relations ; International Relations - IR ; Contemporary International Politics - CIP ; Abe's Regime ; United States - US ; Defence Strategy ; Collective Defence |