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Japan's new security policy: normalizing or remilitarizing?
By Kim Won-soo
The Japanese government has announced a new security policy aimed at acquiring counter-strike capabilities and doubling its defense expenditure over the next five years. This is a significant departure from Japan's long-held policy of limiting its security posture strictly to self-defense. It is also the second step taken by the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)-led government to expand the mandate of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF). The first attempt came in 2015 in the form of a new security law authorizing the JSDF's overseas deployment for U.N. peacekeeping operations and collective self-defense activities.
The latest security policy should be understood in the broader context of a rising security dilemma in East Asia. A recent opinion poll shows that the Japanese public's support for counter-strike capabilities has risen in response to the heightening of perceived threats from its neighbors. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and North Korea's repeated missile tests over the territorial waters of Japan have both contributed to underpinning this perception.
In the face of an increasingly uncertain and volatile security landscape, many regional states now feel less safe. This is why they are strongly motivated to take all necessary measures to enhance their security. But such measures are bound to be met with countermeasures due to a deepening........
© The Korea Times


