Showing posts with label Constitution Revision. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Constitution Revision. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Abe Cabinet says Article 9 does not ban possessing, using N-weapons, chemical weapons and biological weapons

On 26 April, 2016, the Abe Cabinet has decided that same theory (as nuclear weapons in the below article) applies to biological weapons and chemical weapons (including toxic gas) i.e., the war-renouncing Article 9 of the Constitution does not necessarily ban Japan from possessing and using chemical/biological weapons.
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At the same time, they also explained that Japan has signed and ratified Biological Weapons Convention and Chemical Weapons Conventions.

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Abe Cabinet says Article 9 does not ban possessing, using N-weapons
AWJ by Asahi Shimbun : 2 April 2016

The Abe Cabinet has decided that war-renouncing Article 9 of the Constitution does not necessarily ban Japan from possessing and using nuclear weapons. In an April 1 written answer to opposition lawmakers in the Diet, the Cabinet also says the government “firmly maintains a policy principle that it does not possess nuclear weapons of any type under the three non-nuclear principles.”
The address was adopted at a Cabinet meeting in response to memorandums of questions submitted to the Lower House by Seiji Osaka of the largest opposition Democratic Party and Takako Suzuki, an independent.

Successive administrations have maintained a constitutional interpretation that Paragraph 2 of Article 9 does not ban Japan from possessing armed forces that is the minimum necessary for self-defense.
In a statement to the Diet in 1978, Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda said Article 9 does not absolutely prohibit the country from possessing nuclear weapons as long as it is limited to the minimum necessary level. But Fukuda added that it is Japan’s national principle to abide by the three non-nuclear principles, introduced by Prime Minister Eisaku Sato in 1967.

The written address adopted by the Abe Cabinet on April 1 maintains the previous governments’ interpretation of the Constitution that Article 9 allows the country to possess an armed force that is the minimum necessary for self-defense.

“Even if it involves nuclear weapons, the Constitution does not necessarily ban the possession of them as long as they are restricted to such a minimum necessary level,” it says.
The written address also referred a controversial remark by Yusuke Yokobatake, director-general of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, at the Upper House Budget Committee on March 18 that he does not believe the Constitution bans the use of any type of nuclear weapon. It says Yokobatake’s remark only reaffirmed the government’s principle.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Japan’s Double Standard on Freedoms and Rule of Law

PM Shinzo Abe is maintaining a double standard on democracy, human rights and the rule of law.

The Diplomat : 20 April 2016

A number of domestic and international developments have revealed a glaring disconnect between the Japanese government’s preaching and its practice on the issue of universal values.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe proudly declared a values-based diplomacy for Japan in both his first (2006-07) and second administrations (2012-), emphasizing universal values such as democracy, human rights and the rule of law. In January 2013, not long after the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) regained power, he outlined the basic principles on which his government’s diplomacy would be based. One of these fundamental principles was the concept of “universal values.” A month later, he publicly repeated this commitment to “diplomacy that places emphasis on universal values.”

As a diplomatic tool, rhetoric such as “democracy, human rights and the rule of law” justifies the Abe government’s continuing alignment with Japan’s long-standing democratic allies and with other semi-democracies in Asia that share his strong reservations about China’s unpeaceful rise. It also pointedly excludes China by definition from any putative coalition of democratically aligned states.
On the other hand, several recent actions and policies of the Abe administration, particularly in the domestic domain, suggest that the prime minister’s declarations of a commitment to universal values are primarily a diplomatic device for international consumption. They do not represent a guide to the government’s stance at home on a number of key issues. Quite the contrary, the prime minister’s record clearly shows that his government is taking Japan in an authoritarian direction that is unprecedented in the postwar era. What is more, these steps seriously question Abe’s commitment to universal values.

Among a series of deleterious developments, the Abe administration’s record in dealing with the media demonstrates that it is falling well short of observing first principles of democratic accountability. Amongst the most egregious examples of media-muzzling are attempts to silence media critics, including creating an atmosphere of fear and intimidation amongst journalists and other commentators who dare to question the government’s and ruling party’s policies, personnel and actions. In addition to the administration’s explicit actions to control the message, the 2013 State Secrets Law compounds the threat to freedom of news reporting by hanging over journalists’ heads like the sword of Damocles.

In the education sector, the Abe government has censored school textbooks, ensuring that the latest versions for students follow the government’s uniform line on history and territorial issues. The bottom of this slippery slope will land Japanese students in the same position as those in China, for whom only official accounts of the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre are available and who are taught that the Dalai Lama is a terrorist.

The Abe government has also heavied universities to rid themselves of humanities and social science departments, arguably, amongst other things, to discourage the training of students’ critical thinking skills, thus silencing another potential source of criticism of the government.

Yet another and possibly the most disturbing example is the proposed content of the LDP’s May 2012 draft revisions to the 1947 Constitution. In glaring contrast to the human rights Abe cites internationally as “universal,” the draft explicitly rejects this notion. It states that human rights derive from a country’s history, culture, and traditions, and are, therefore, qualified to the extent that they are influenced by these factors. Indeed, the maintenance of so-called “public order” is elevated over all individual rights, raising the question, “public order” as defined by whom? Presumably “the government of the day.” Instead of universal human rights, Japanese citizens will be given “duties and obligations” (unspecified) – no doubt, once again, to be defined by public authorities. At the same time, the prime minister has undermined the rule of law by claiming in the Diet to be the ultimate source of authority regarding interpretation of the Constitution, an act for which he will be judged by the electorate. In short, the meaning of the constitution is what the prime minister says it is, which would potentially remove the Japanese constitution’s safeguards against the rise of authoritarianism.

Last but not least is the Abe government’s flouting of the ruling of the highest court of the UN, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Japan’s whale hunt in the Southern Ocean. In March 2014, ICJ ruled that Japan’s Antarctic whale hunts were unscientific and ordered it to stop hunting. Only three months after this ruling, in June 2014, Prime Minister Abe told the Japanese parliament that he wanted to aim for the resumption of commercial whaling by conducting whaling research. He thus personally endorsed the resumption of commercial whaling, which Japan had been conducting on spurious scientific grounds under the politicized term “research whaling” (chōsa hogei) used ubiquitously by Japanese authorities and in the media.

Japan has since resumed lethal research whaling under the much publicized heading of NEWREP-A and stated that it will not accept the jurisdiction of the ICJ on marine living resources, reflecting a clear double standard in its stance on the rule of law internationally. Nor does Japan recognize the Australian Antarctic Territory’s EEZ, or its Whale Sanctuary, or the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

The reality is that Japanese whaling is neither scientific nor commercial. It is a government-subsidized and sponsored industry conducted for the benefit of the Japanese whaling industry-cum-lobby and is certainly not for the benefit of Japanese consumers. This lobby is headed by the semi-governmental Institute of Cetacean Research, charged with propagandizing the virtues of whaling and an affiliated organ (gaikaku dantai) of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF). Apart from providing plum positions for retired bureaucrats, many such groups play key roles in the ancillary apparatus of government intervention by undertaking regulatory and/or allocatory functions as well as participating directly in markets.

Whaling is defended against international attack on spurious cultural grounds, traditionally the last defense of the protectionists. The Japanese government tried the same defense of its rice industry at the Uruguay Round of the GATT, proselytizing the notion of rice as quintessentially a cultural good in Japan. Here it was considerably more successful, extracting a concession that allowed rice to be spared from tariffication under the 1994 Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA).

http://thediplomat.com/2016/04/japans-double-standard-on-freedoms-and-rule-of-law/

Friday, April 1, 2016

EDITORIAL: Watchdogs of state secrets designations fail in first reports

AJW by Asahi Shimbun : 31 March 2016

The Board of Oversight and Review of Specially Designated Secrets of both Diet houses on March 30 submitted their first annual reports to the president of the Upper House and the speaker of the Lower House. The boards are tasked with checking the designation and declassification of state secrets by the government under the state secrets protection law, which came into force at the end of 2014.

Sadly, the documents indicate the watchdogs have done a poor job of monitoring the government’s moves to classify or declassify specific information. They can hardly claim to have carried out their responsibilities as the Diet organs consisting of lawmakers representing the people. The boards examined a total of 382 cases in which 10 government organizations, including the defense and foreign ministries, designated about 189,000 pieces of information as state secrets. To carry out their tasks, the panels referred to related documents, including a record book about the designation of specific pieces of information as state secrets, in addition to interviewing officials of the 10 organizations.

But only a few pieces of classified information have been disclosed as a result of the boards’ efforts. Most of the accounts about classification contained in the record book submitted by the government are too vague to help the boards judge whether the designation was appropriate or not. One typical description about classified information in the document is “information provided by a foreign country.”

The biggest problem is the flawed secrecy law itself, which doesn’t clarify the criteria for classification and could allow arbitrary and capricious withholding of information by the government.
The opposition parties demanded that the government be mandated to submit information about designated secrets to the Diet. But the ruling coalition led by the Liberal Democratic Party rejected the demand, saying the government’s administrative power should be respected from the viewpoint of separation of powers.

Why, then, did the ruling camp agree to set up secrecy watchdogs within the Diet?
The checks and balances system based on separation of powers requires the legislature to monitor and check the actions of the administrative branch of the government.  The watchdogs are the only institutions that can monitor the implementation of the state secrets law from outside the government.
The Diet should be alarmed by the situation and take steps to enhance the capabilities of the monitoring bodies.

What is especially disappointing is the boards’ failure to make any judgment about the government’s decisions to classify specific information. Instead, the bodies only called for improvements in the way the law was implemented as their “opinions.” It is hard to think of any good reason why they didn’t admonish the government to mend its way.

Even so, the boards’ “opinions” contain some ideas worth serious consideration. For example, they proposed that the Cabinet Office’s inspector general for public records management, who is responsible for reporting on the appropriateness of classification to the prime minister, should also report to them. The government should give serious thought to this proposal. The new national security legislation took effect on March 29, giving the government more power and discretion to take policy actions concerning the deployment of the Self-Defense Forces and other issues.
If the secrecy watchdogs lack the teeth needed to properly monitor the way the secrecy law is implemented, the government could make a wide range of arbitrary decisions without knowledge of the people.

The Diet needs to recognize its responsibility to monitor the government’s actions in this respect as the representative of the public and make constant efforts to improve the implementation of the law and rectify its problems. Such efforts would put necessary pressure on the government. The boards must not become watchdogs in name only that merely rubber-stamp the government’s decisions.
--The Asahi Shimbun, March 31

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/views/editorial/AJ201603310027
 

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Japan's opposition regroup to protect constitution

New Democratic Party wants to save Japan from one of 'deepest crises of democracy the nation has faced in 70 years'.
Al Jazeera / Shingetsu News : 27 March 2016

Tokyo, Japan - Since his return to power in December 2012, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has sailed with remarkable smoothness through the usually choppy waters of Japanese political party politics.

He has already led the ruling party to three landslide victories in national elections, and if he succeeds again in the House of Councillors elections this July, his ruling coalition might gain two thirds majorities in both parliamentary houses and could push through just about any legislation they desire.

For Abe and Japanese conservatives like him, this summer will present an unparalleled opportunity to rewrite the nation's pacifist constitution and to reshape the education policies, business practices, and the political culture of the Japanese nation according to their own vision, often drawing their inspiration from those elements of pre-World War II Japan that conservatives wish to revive. 

For the defenders of the pacifist culture and moderate legacies of post-1945 Japan, however, the current juncture is not one of opportunity at all, but in fact one of the deepest crises of democracy that the nation has faced in seventy years.

It is in this context that Japan's No. 1 and No. 3 opposition parties - though divided in many of their policy preferences - came together today into a merged political party. The new political party will be called Minshinto in Japanese, which will be rendered into English as The Democratic Party (DP).

At the founding convention of the DP held in Tokyo, Secretary-General Yukio Edano painted a dire picture of the current situation. "The Abe administration is destroying constitutional government, democracy, and the livelihoods of the people. There is not much time remaining to save Japan," he declared.

Challenges

Public opinion polls suggest that the new opposition force still has a very long way to go. A recent Sankei Shimbun-FNN poll put Shinzo Abe's ruling party at a 36.7 percent support rate and the new DP at only a 12.8 percent rate.

Almost no analyst believes that the DP can achieve its overall goal this year of becoming a party that could decisively defeat Abe and form their own government, but the more realistic - and many would say necessary - objective is to at least prevent Abe from gaining supermajorities in both houses of Japan's parliament, which would make him virtually unstoppable. A majority of 2/3 by the ruling coalition, according to Japan's parliamentary system, would allow it to pass any desired legislation, and even at the committee level they can pass their policies with minimal disruption as they would control most of the assignments and debate time.

As part of their efforts to fulfil this blocking role, one of the few opposition lawmakers to draw blood from Abe in recent parliamentary debate, Shiori Yamao, has been catapulted into the position of policy chief of the DP.

Yamao, a 41-year-old second-term House of Representatives lawmaker, has become a rising star after embarrassing the prime minister in debate over the lack of daycare facilities for working mothers and Abe's absence of a policy to address that shortcoming.

More broadly, however, the new DP shares one of the same vulnerabilities as its predecessor, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) - a lack of a consensus among its lawmakers about most specific policy issues or even whether the party should be identified ideologically as basically conservative, moderate, or liberal.

Coordination and alliances

House of Representatives lawmaker Takatane Kiuchi responded to this concern, telling Al Jazeera that "the important thing is that we need to become the ruling party again. We can think about the policies then."

Policy coordination is likely to become even more difficult as the DP is expected to absorb several liberal micro-parties in the months ahead.

Another challenging issue for the DP is what posture to take toward the Japan Communist Party (JCP), which has recently become the second-largest opposition force and often polls a respectable 5 percent public support level nationally.

On the one hand, the DP cannot afford to fight a two-front battle against both Abe's ruling party and the Communists and still expect to have hope of making major headway. Election cooperation with the Communists, therefore, does seem a necessity.

On the other hand, Prime Minister Abe has already been denouncing the Democratic Party-Communist alliance, causing considerable annoyance to the many conservative lawmakers within the opposition.

For his part, Kiuchi declares, "I am allergic to communism and so are all of my supporters."
But he then adds that the practical policy of DP should be to proclaim disdain for Communists in public while working with them closely "under the table."

Michael Cucek, adjunct professor at Waseda University and renowned analyst of Japanese politics, on the other hand, told Al Jazeera he believes a better approach for the DP is to go to the public and to "explain what the 'constitutionalist alliance of parties' means and why cooperating with the Communists makes sense."

Indeed, as discussed during the convention, the basis of DP-JCP cooperation is their shared perspective that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is threatening the very foundations of constitutional government in Japan and that he must be stopped very soon. They also agree that the controversial security legislation passed last September is unconstitutional and must be abolished as soon as possible.

Members of the general public did not express any enthusiasm over the establishment of The Democratic Party in response to inquiries from Al Jazeera.

A 47-year-old man on the streets of Tokyo, walking near the venue where the new opposition party was being formed, said, "the DPJ was a very irresponsible party while they were in authority, so I don't want to see them return."

A 25-year-old man wasn't as opposed to the DPJ government of 2009-2012, but stated that he wasn't excited about politics generally and that he felt "nothing is going to change" with the establishment of the new political party.

From this weak new starting point the liberal and centrist opposition parties are entering what could be the decisive struggle over Japan's pacifist constitution.


http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2016/03/japan-opposition-regroup-protect-constitution-160327100815531.html


 

Sunday, March 20, 2016

No specific ban on N-weapons, says key Cabinet legal expert

AJW by The Asahi Shimbun :  19 March 2017

The head of the nation's legal watchdog said Japan's Constitution does not necessarily ban the use of nuclear weapons, but qualified the remark by saying their use is restricted under domestic and international laws....
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“I am not thinking that the use of all kinds of nuclear weapons is banned under the Constitution,” Yusuke Yokobatake, director-general of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, told the Upper House Budget Committee on March 18 in response to a question from Shinkun Haku of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan.
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He made the remark after saying, “Limitations exist (on the use of nuclear weapons) under Japanese laws and international laws.” Given the Japanese government's policy of “three non-nuclear principles” to not possess or manufacture nuclear weapons or allow them into Japanese territory, it is extremely rare for a person in Yokobatake's position to mention the use of nuclear weapons, even though he also referred to limitations.
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“Nuclear weapons are a kind of weapon. My understanding is that, irrespective of whether they are nuclear weapons or not, any weapons should be used under the limitations permitted by domestic laws and international laws,” Yokobatake said.
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In a news conference the same day, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga doused any notion of Japan using a nuclear weapon, saying, "Impossible."
However, Suga did not take issue with the substance of Yokobatake’s argument. "I have received a report from the Cabinet Legislation Bureau that he (Yokobatake) made the reply based on remarks made by officials of the bureau in the Diet in the past,” Suga said.
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http://ajw.asahi.com/ar…/behind_news/politics/AJ201603190027

Monday, March 7, 2016

Article Nine in Context – Limitations of National Sovereignty and the Abolition of War in Constitutional Law

The Asia Pacific Journal - Japan Focus : 6 June 2009

Constitution revisionists such as Abe and his supporters, and Politic lobby "Japan Conference" express "Current Japanese constitution are insisted by GHQ MacArthur, the representative of the occupant USA, so we have to change it to our native one." However, various official records evidenced that pacifist article 9 was proposed by Japanese prime minister of the time.
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I. When we discuss Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, we have to take into account the history and purpose of postwar constitutions in other countries as well, with regard to peace, disarmament and an international order that would be based on principles of justice and enforceable law. Central issue here is the collective security of the United Nations that would enable all countries to disarm, and resolve their conflicts peacefully.

Early on, while the Japanese Constitution was still in the making, The New York Herald Tribune reported that France had become “the first nation . . . to take up the question of World Peace in its Constitution,” approving “restriction of its National Sovereignty,” to abolish the instrument of war as a means for resolving conflicts. The new provision was welcomed as “a first step and preparation for the day when hopefully all states will accept such laws and . . . make such determination . . . to participate in a world-wide organization” that would be based on binding and enforceable legal norms as a guarantee for peace (20 February 1946). A half year earlier, U.S. President Truman had declared in his V-J (Victory over Japan) Day speech to the Armed Forces, beginning of September 1945: “War must be abolished from the earth if the earth, as we know it, is to remain.” 

Following the victory of the United Nations over the Axis powers—the term “United Nations” was proposed by Franklin D. Roosevelt and first officially employed in the Declaration of the United Nations signed by 26 states on 1 January 1942—central concerns of liberated France were national security and a durable peace in Europe and the world. The first constitutional draft, originally proposed by the French socialists, had been approved in February 1946, and the constitution was finally adopted on 27 October after a public referendum. In the new Constitution, France renounced war as a political means and subjected herself to the rules of public international law (Paragraph 14 of the Preamble). The pivotal Paragraph 15 of the Preamble prescribes that France “on condition of reciprocity accepts the limitations of sovereignty necessary for the organization and defense of peace.” With this France had, once and for all, defined its position within the community of nations. The renunciation of sovereignty, which was essential for an effective system of collective security, was linked to Article 24 of the UN Charter, which stipulates in its first paragraph that “in order to ensure prompt and effective action by the United Nations” all nations should “confer on the Security Council primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security.”

The French concluded that the international community could “not advance without [reliable and effective, global] ‘institutions’. To create these was only feasible and made sense only when states delegated to [these institutions] certain competencies which they had earlier exercised themselves.” (REUTER: 97) In this way individual nations eventually could be relieved of their traditional obligation to look after their and their populations’ own peace and security. Consequently it was the obligation of other states, according to the stated principle of reciprocity, to take the steps needed on their part for putting into practice the security system of the United Nations. Germany was seen as chief postwar ally to cooperate in this task. “So long as the dogma of sacrosanct national sovereignty is not overthrown,” a delegate said before the European Congress at The Hague in May 1948, and so long as the nations have not yet “thrown together their governments,” as Paul-Henri Spaak, the Belgian socialist leader, and one of the founding fathers of the European Union, expressed it, permanent, durable peace would not be achieved.

André Philip, the chairman of the Constitutional Commission of 1946, later remembered (in Le Monde, 9 June 1954): “We still had no precise ideas about the conditions for European unity, but we did feel the need to create supranational authorities, if possible at the global level, but if not, [at least] at the regional level.” Winston Churchill, in his famous Zurich University address in September 1946, a few weeks before the entry into force of the new French Constitution, had also declared: “Our constant aim must be to build and fortify the strength of [the] UNO … and within that world concept … recreate the European family in a regional structure.” To do so would be, according to Churchill, above all a matter of cooperation between France and Germany. (Emphasis added; CHURCHILL: 198)

This principle—agreement to limitations on sovereignty in the interests of a comprehensive, common, collective security system—was one of several reasons why the French National Assembly in 1954 rejected France’s accession to the proposed European Defense Community (EDC). It was also one of the reasons for the French “Non!”-vote in the May 2005 referendum, rejecting the European Union’s proposed constitution, which pacifists criticized for its militarist provisions, authorizing the EU to carry out world-wide interventions, and pursuing an aggressive armaments policy, with the aim to “strengthen the industrial and technological base of the defence sector.” (Article 1.41.3 Treaty of Lisbon) It would no doubt be more in accordance with the Europeans’ claim to put “right over might” if the Europeans gave the UN the powers to function effectively as a system of collective security, and to disarm and dismantle their arms industries, as had been envisaged by the historic McCloy-Zorin Accord between Russia and the United States in 1961.

With the entry into force of the new Constitution of the Fifth Republic on 4 October 1958, Paragraph 15 was incorporated into the Preamble of the new document, which “reaffirmed and complemented the Preamble of the Constitution of 1946.” It is legally binding and continues to be valid, as an essential component of the “political and social philosophy of the state.” (BURDEAU: 419-21) On a similar footing, Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, too, has been recognized as being part of the “basic philosophy of the non-resort to the use of force.” (Foreign Minister Kōno Yōhei in September, 1994, and Prime Minister Hashimoto Ryūtarō on 24 September, 1996, before the UN General Assembly.)

II. Like France, Japan also gave itself a new Constitution after the Second World War, which was ended with the dropping of the two atomic bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. The victorious powers (without France) had decided in the Potsdam Declaration of 26 July 1945 upon the total disarmament of Japanese troops, the punishment of war criminals, the prohibition of industries which could make possible Japan’s rearmament, as well as the establishment in Japan of a peace-loving responsible government (Arts. 9-12). The Declaration was signed by the United States of America, the United Kingdom, China, and later also by the Soviet Union. On 10 August 1945, compelled by the atomic blasts on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Russian declaration of war on August 8, the Japanese government announced that it was “disposed to accept” the Potsdam Declaration. On the following day the Allies communicated to the Japanese government: “The ultimate form of Japan’s government will, in keeping with the Potsdam Declaration, be determined through the freely expressed will of the Japanese people.” On 14 August the Emperor ordered acceptance of the Potsdam terms, and with this the war in the East was ended and peace finally achieved. On 2 September the articles of surrender were signed on board the US-battleship Missouri.

In order to discuss constitutional reform, at the beginning of October 1945 the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in the Far East, General Douglas MacArthur, met with Prime Minister Shidehara Kijūrō, a long-time diplomat distinguished for his services as Foreign Minister in the 1920s and “one of Japan’s most respected and experienced diplomats.” (MacARTHUR: 293) Shidehara was considered to be a pacifist (McNELLY 1981: 360n15) and known for his persistent policies of opposing militarism and refusing cooperation with the militarists. In a 12-point declaration of 4 October 1945 the Japanese government had ordered (in Point 10) the elimination of any military influence over the government. A total revision of the old Meiji Constitution of 1889, however, was not yet an issue.

Also in October 1945, Shidehara set up a commission, the Kempō Mondai Chōsa Iinkai, which had the task of investigating constitutional reform and whose chairman was “minister without portfolio” Matsumoto Jōji. Up to its final meeting on 26 January 1946, this commission met fifteen times. In spite of having been given no specific mandate for writing a new constitution, the “Matsumoto Committee” came up with two drafts, representing two mutually contending opinions. One, known as “Draft B,” prepared by the whole committee, in conforming with Shidehara’s instructions to “simply delet(e) those articles that pertained to the military” (HELLEGERS: 787n2)2,  contained no stipulations about a military establishment, while the other, a less liberal “Draft A,” prepared by Matsumoto himself, stipulated: “The system of armed forces is retained”—even though it was to be subject to civilian control. (James E. AUER in LUNEY/TAKAHASHI: 70)

In any case Prime Minister Shidehara, who was to be ultimately responsible for any action concerning constitutional revision, had in the meantime given much thought to what role Japan should play in the world in the years to come.3  Between the end of 1945 and the first days of 1946 Shidehara was suffering from a lung infection. His friend Ōdaira Komazuchi, after visiting him during his convalescence, wrote down what has come to be known as the Ōdaira Memo, recording Shidehara’s “Thoughts about Various Things.” In the foreground of these thoughts were the “dread of future wars, in which horrible weapons like atomic bombs would be employed, and the question of how one can keep the world peaceful.” (TANAKA: 94) Shidehara, whose pacifist foreign policy of non-intervention had successfully restrained the Japanese military when he was foreign minister in the 1920s, had also been one among several diplomats extending peace feelers during the war with China, and he actively tried to avert war with the United States. (SCHLICHTMANN II: 136 and 133) In his own later recollections Gaikō gojūnen, which were recorded in 1950-51 by reporters from the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, Shidehara told how the idea of Article 9 came to him during a train ride through a landscape devastated by war:

“Contrary to expectation I was entrusted with putting together a cabinet . . . at that time I recalled a scene on the train soon after the day of the surrender. This thought suddenly rose in my head when I took over the office of Prime Minister. I had decided to follow the call and somehow use my office to carry out the will of the people. I decided to thoroughly change the ways of politics so that war would be made impossible for all time, and to write this into the constitution. In other words, to renounce war (sensō o hōki shi), and to completely abolish armaments. These goals must be brought about under conditions of democracy. For me this is an absolute conviction which I have spoken of [many times] before. This thought was dominant in my head like a spell (isshu no maryoku) . . . Today Americans often come to Japan and ask if the new Constitution is of Japanese origin, or if the Japanese had been forced to write it by the Americans; but I must say that for me this is irrelevant, since I was under compulsion from nobody.” (SHIDEHARA: 213)

On 24 January 1946, a month after the conclusion of the plans to demilitarize Japan, Shidehara paid MacArthur a visit to thank the American commander for the penicillin that he had arranged to have delivered, in response to Shidehara’s personal request, during his recent convalescence. This occasioned a 150-minute-long conversation, during which Shidehara, according to the Ōdaira Memo, talked about abolishing war from the world; Japan should as a part of that endeavor renounce the right to go to war in its constitution. And for that purpose a renunciation of a part of its sovereignty was said to be necessary. (TANAKA: 94) In all likelihood Shidehara had also come to know about the provision in the new French Constitution. After their conversation MacArthur informed the head of the political section of his headquarters, General Courtney Whitney, about what he and Shidehara had discussed.

“I (Whitney) was not present during the discussions that followed. But I did go in to see MacArthur immediately after Shidehara’s departure at two thirty, and the contrast between the expressions on MacArthur’s face before and after the interview told me immediately that something of importance had happened.

“MacArthur explained what it was: Prime Minister Shidehara, after expressing his thanks for the penicillin, had proposed that when the new constitution was drafted, it contain an article renouncing war and the maintenance of a military establishment once and for all. By this means, Shidehara had said, Japan could safeguard itself against the reemergence of militarism and police terrorism . . . Shidehara further pointed out that only if relieved from the oppressive burden of military expenditures could Japan have the slightest chance of providing the minimum necessities for its expanding population, now that all its overseas resources were gone. It was this that they had discussed for two and one-half hours. (WHITNEY: 257)
Shidehara suggesting the abolition of war to MacArthur in a popular history manga. However, with the Gulf War and the criticism heaped on Japan for its “check-book diplomacy,” the bubble with Shidehara’s suggestion was shifted to come from MacArthur.
 
MacArthur could not have agreed more. There is no doubt that the January 24 meeting between MacArthur and Shidehara took place. Both Shidehara’s and MacArthur’s accounts agree that it was Shidehara himself who suggested that an article similar to or identical in content with the later Article 9 be included in the Japanese Constitution. In his memoirs MacArthur wrote: “It has frequently been charged, even by those who should be better informed, that the ‘no war’ clause was forced upon the [Japanese] government by my personal fiat. This is not true.” (MacARTHUR: 302)

The origin of Article 9 has been a matter of controversy and obscure. The standard interpretation that has emerged over the years, also in Japan, especially after the Gulf War, is that it was foreign-conceived and imposed. (HOOK and McCORMACK: 2; INOUE: 16ff; KOSEKI: 82; McNELLY in ULEMANN: 18;4  MARTIN: 289ff, 294) However, in my own research I have found no proof of anyone having been the author other than Shidehara. Some authors, like Nakamura, have argued that Article 9 “prescribed the renunciation of war in order to assuage Asian fears of the emperor system’s continuation.” (NAKAMURA: 158) However, this does not take into account the purpose of Article 9 (and related provisions), i.e. to achieve collective security and abolish war as an institution.

Whoever authored the provision, the aim was certainly not to unilaterally disarm Japan, but to abolish war; and everyone knew that abolishing war required limiting sovereign powers in favor of a system of collective security functioning effectively under the United Nations.

Shidehara’s suggestion, if indeed it was his, then appeared in the famous “MacArthur Memo” in typed-out form on 3 February 1946 (SCHLICHTMANN 2009 II: 213). Point 2 states:
“War as a sovereign right of the nation is abolished. Japan renounces it as an instrumentality for settling its disputes and even for preserving its own security. It relies upon the higher ideals which are now stirring the world for its defense and its protection.
No Japanese Army, Navy, or Air Force will ever be authorized and no rights of belligerency will ever be conferred upon any Japanese force.”

The second paragraph especially prohibits any permanent institutionalized military establishment. Shidehara and MacArthur must have spoken in greater detail of those “higher ideals” on which he based his position to abolish war as an institution. Article 9 was, in Shidehara’s view, to become a cornerstone of the United Nations system of collective security that would enable all nations to disarm. In the present, ongoing discussions in Japan, any change to the second paragraph of Article 9 and final institutionalization of the military establishment would annul that purpose and have grave consequences with regards to maintaining peace in the Japan area and the world. Furthermore, changing the second paragraph would be contrary to the spirit of Article 10 of the US-Japan Security Treaty which stipulates that the alliance be relinquished if and when the UN System of Collective Security becomes operative in the Japan region. It is apparent that without an effective system of collective security neither nuclear nor conventional disarmament are feasible.

After the conversation with Baron Shidehara, MacArthur was, as he himself described it, “confronted with a time problem,” (MacARTHUR: 300; WARD: 293) and all the more conscious of his own responsibilities. He was determined to bring the question of reforming the constitution quickly to a resolution. The constitutional draft, i.e., the less liberal “Draft A” of the Matsumoto Committee was presented on 8 February. On February 1 there had appeared, however, an unauthorized advance publication of “Draft B” in the Mainichi Shimbun, which prompted MacArthur’s immediate rejection of this draft on the same day, since it also differed little from the old Meiji Constitution. (Political Reorientation of Japan: 101) It may well be that Shidehara himself planted the evidence, since the draft was apparently found in the room which was Shidehara’s “favorite napping spot.” (HELLEGERS: 478, 515, 518)

The premature publication prompted MacArthur to take action and, on February 10, nine days after the Mainichi leak, he put forward a draft conceived by the Political Section of GHQ, which corresponded largely to the academic Kempō Kenkyūkai proposal that had earlier been translated by GHQ in its entirety, and been used by the Americans as they wrote the Government Section draft. This draft was printed on February 12 and accepted by the Japanese government on February 22. MacArthur, at a meeting at the residence of Foreign Minister Yoshida Shigeru on February 13, also suggested putting the question of the constitution directly to the Japanese people in such a way that there would be adequate time for discussions. (WARD: 996) MacArthur’s and the American occupiers’ popularity among the population generally worked in favor of the latter’s support in carrying out their policies. (REISCHAUER: 187-188) Thus, the Japanese public and academic opinion directly and indirectly had a bearing on both Japanese and Americans, and found expression in the new constitution, even against the disposition of more conservative forces.

On March 6 the Shidehara cabinet made public the English and Japanese texts. Between early March and the opening of the parliamentary debates in June 1946, there were lively discussions among the public. On March 27, Shidehara expressed himself as follows on Article 9 at a meeting of the War Investigation Commission, which had been established by the Japanese government in November 1945 and whose chairmanship he had assumed:

“No precedent for this kind of constitutional stipulation can be found in the constitution of any other country. Furthermore, at a time when research on atomic bombs and other powerful weapons is continuing unabated, there may be people who think that the renunciation of war is utopian nonsense. However, no one can guarantee that, with the subsequent technological advance and development, new destructive military weapons tens or even hundreds of times more powerful than the atomic bomb won’t be discovered. If such weapons are discovered, the possession of millions of soldiers and thousands of warships and airplanes will still not ensure national security. When war starts the cities of the fighting countries will be totally reduced to ashes and their residents will be annihilated in a few hours. Today we hold aloft our declaration renouncing war and go forward alone on the vast plain of international politics. But a new day will surely come when the world will awaken to the horrors of war and march with us under the same banner.”5

With the opening of the 90th session of the Imperial Diet the Government Draft was debated in parliament, and some alterations were made. The new Constitution was accepted August 24 by a vote of 421 to 8—six Communist representatives as well as two independents voted against it—and subsequently submitted to the Privy Council, which endorsed it on October 29. On November 3, the birthday of the Meiji Emperor, the new Constitution was promulgated in a solemn ceremony and published in the legislative gazette. The London Economist of 9 November 1946 positively assessed the new Constitution:

“The new Constitution is . . . quite admirably democratic and corrects the notably undemocratic features of its predecessor. But this merely brings Japan tardily into line with the parliamentary-democratic states of the world, and gives it no occasion for moral superiority over other nations. It is otherwise with the clauses by which Japan renounces to wage war even in self-defence. No nation has ever before thus adopted complete non-violence as part of its political structure; not even Mr. Gandhi’s India is proposing to do so. The Japanese Prime Minister has spoken of the example Japan is setting to the world, and the Japanese are apparently almost as pleased with themselves as if they had won the war . . . Japan has moved to a higher moral plane . . . The cynic may say that, as Japan has been disarmed anyway by the Allies and is to be kept disarmed, this spectacular renunciation of war is only making a virtue of necessity. But, after all, there is a skill in making a virtue of necessity; it is judo, the ‘soft art’, in which the wrestler throws his opponent by yielding quickly in the direction of pres¬sure.”

Indeed, as a Dutch scholar and war veteran and a very special friend of mine (who passed away in 2006), Martin Knottenbelt, maintained, with Article 9 Japan has “staked a claim, as of right, to enforceable world law.” The Constitution entered into force on 3 May 1947, carrying, among others, Shidehara’s signature. (See image with Shidehara’s signature, above!)

III.
Italy followed suit in 1948 (1 January), also agreeing to the limitations of her sovereignty “necessary to an organization which will ensure peace and justice among nations;” subsequently, Germany (23 May), Costa Rica (8 November) and India (26 November) in 1949 also committed to renouncing war as an institution. These, together with those of France and Japan, were examples of the new trend toward greater democratic and parliamentary responsibility that served as a model for other constitutions to follow. It was the lesson learnt from the failure of the League of Nations collective security, conceived in the interwar period, and the roots of which went back all the way to the Hague Peace Conferences. Other countries would be obliged, under the ius cogens (binding law) of reciprocity, to agree likewise to the limitations of their national sovereignty in favor of collective security.

Although Costa Rica did not exactly follow the Japanese or French (or Italian) example, in Article 121, No. 4, para 2, it did envisage “transferring certain jurisdictional powers to a communitarian juridical order for the purpose of realizing common regional objectives.” Unlike in the Japanese Constitution, but similar to the German and other constitutions, the limitation of sovereign powers here envisaged has not yet been carried out. In addition, in the case of Costa Rica, it is limited to regional objectives. It could, theoretically at least, include a military alliance, as set down in Article 12, “organized under a continental agreement.” Article 12 of the Costa Rican Constitution reads: “The army as a permanent institution is abolished.” However, military forces “may . . . be organized under a continental agreement or for national defense.” If we read this conditional clause carefully, it appears that Costa Rica does not differ very much from Japan, except that it has been able to afford to forego—unlike Japan—maintaining national self-defense forces. In any event, as Professor McNelly stated, “Japan’s unilateral constitutional disarmament is an extremely valuable, perhaps necessary, first step in the direction of universal disarmament.” (McNELLY 1962: 23) No doubt, so far, an inherent “weakness of constitutional disarmament,” in McNelly’s judgment is “the absence of an effective supranational supervisory agency.” (McNELLY 1962: 26)

Many scholars and even some peace activists believe the disarmament part in the Japanese Article 9 is the most important feature, and indeed Shidehara rejected Japanese rearmament. (KADES: 41-2) However, most researchers agree that it is not possible to disarm into a vacuum, as this would pose the danger of causing significant security gaps. The pacifist and 1911 Nobel Peace laureate Alfred H. Fried said in this regard that "armaments are reasonable as long as the system is unreasonable". Article 9 aims at a system that can do away with the institution of war. Already more than 100 years ago at the Hague Peace Conferences the understanding was that in order to disarm one needs to create an international legal system with binding powers. When there is a dispute countries would be prohibited to go to war and instead have to go to court. It’s amazing that this very simple and basic idea and its history are not better known. It of course implies a limitation of national sovereignty, aimed at an effective international organization. This is the main part in the Japanese Constitution, not the disarmament part. In accordance with this, Article X of the US-Japan Security Treaty stipulates that the treaty will become obsolete if and when the UN system of collective security becomes operative in the Japan area.

IV. In Germany, Carlo Schmid, the “superb enlightener . . . statesman . . . [and] advocate of humanity” (as publicist Walter Jens has called him), had argued in 1948-49 before the Parliamentary Council for putting limitations on sovereignty into the Bonn Constitution (Basic Law). Carlo Schmid, who was then Professor at the University of Tübingen and State Minister of Justice, also had the UN in mind. The committee under his chairmanship dealing with questions of peace and security was “unanimously of the view that the Constitution should provide that the Federation can, through a law passed and adopted by a simple majority vote, delegate sovereign rights to international institutions.” (Der Parlamentarische Rat—hereafter PR: 206) This would be the logical and suitable follow-up to the Japanese precedent, which many see as a “motion” to abolish war, in need of being “seconded” by some other country or countries.


A report of the German Constitutional Convention referred to Paragraph 1 of Article 24 in these words:
“This [provision] is meant to facilitate the creation of international organs which might be set up in order to . . . look after matters which previously were left to the various national sovereignties. The German people resolve to henceforth renounce war as a means of policy and to draw the necessary conclusions therefrom.” (PR: 207)

The delegates were well aware that a mere declaration of intent to renounce war as a policy means was insufficient, but that with it should come a delegation, or giving up, of certain sovereign powers in favor of a system of collective security. Thus in order
“not to be defenseless and subject to alien force, what is required is the inclusion of the territory of the Federation in a system of collective security which guarantees the peace. In the unanimous opinion of the committee the Federation should be prepared, in the interest of peace and of a durable order of European relations, to consent to those limitations of its sovereign powers which would result from such a system.” (PR: 207)

The creation of an effective global security system had priority over the organizing of purely European relations, since the global system would guarantee peace and integrity to the Europeans, which is made clear also by the wordings of some of the proposals, which stated that the limitation of national sovereignty in favor of the world organization, is the precondition “through which a peaceful and lasting organization of European relations can be attained and put securely in place.” (Dr. Theo Kordt, Nordrhein-Westfalen) (PR: 207) Or:
“The Federation may consent to limitations of its national sovereignty if it is made part of a system of collective security through which a peaceful and lasting organization of European relations will be put securely in place.”

According to one delegate, Dr. Kurt Seebohm, this transfer of sovereign rights was “the most important thing” which the German Federation should aim to accomplish, to achieve a permanent peaceful order in Europe and the world. The inspiration for Paragraph 2 of Article 24 “drew on the corresponding provision of the French Constitution,” whereby it was given special weight. (PR: 353) However, in contrast to the French Constitution, the constitutional convention delegates omitted in the Bonn Constitution the “condition of reciprocity.” This was because the committee was “aware of the fact” that Germany was expected to take the initiative, i.e. the committee was “of the view that after the things that have happened in the name of the German people, such an initiative, which [would] bring in its train corresponding actions by other countries, is appropriate.” (PR: 207) As far as security is concerned it is clear that a system of reciprocal and collective security is to be understood as something “essentially different” (FORSTHOFF: 335) from “collective self defense,” granted to all member states under the UN Charter’s Article 51. The chairman of the constitutional committee, Professor Hermann von Mangoldt, stated what the majority opinion was: “The system of mutual collective security is the world system of the United Nations.” (Stenographic Minutes: 772) Prof. Carlo Schmid declared with urgency and conviction: “We must definitely join such organizations; otherwise we will perish (sonst gehen wir zugrunde).” (Stenographic Minutes: 454) In practice, Article 24 has until now, however, been applied only in regard to European integration and not in connection with measures to prevent and abolish war. And, some might argue, that is why wars have not been prevented and war not been abolished so far.

V.
A year earlier Italy had also favored a strong commitment to organizational pacifism in its new postwar constitution. Article 11 of the Constitution of 1 January 1948 reads:
“Italy renounces war as an instrument of offense to the liberty of other peoples or as a means of settlement of international disputes, and, on conditions of equality with other states, agrees to the limitations of her sovereignty necessary to an organization which will ensure peace and justice among nations, and promotes and encourages international organizations constituted for this purpose.”

As earlier in France and Japan, and a good year later in Germany, with the wording of this Article 11 of its Constitution, Italy felt that after the inferno of the Second World War the Italian state must be assured an honorable place in the family of nations. Already prior to the founding of the United Nations Organization there had been a strong public interest in the new global organization. The Allies had concluded an armistice with Italy in September 1943, and in early 1945 numerous detailed reports in the Italian press dealt with the upcoming UN conference in San Francisco (25 April through 26 June 1945). “Liberated” Italy was deeply disappointed not to be invited to the conference.

In March and April 1947 the Constitutional Assembly discussed the proposals for the new constitution. A court decision was later required, to determine that the laws of the European Community did not contravene Article 11, even if strictly speaking European integration was not an original purpose of the provision. (PERGOLA/DUCA: 598) Like in Germany, the universal objectives of Italy’s Article 11 were temporarily subordinated to the aims and purposes of European integration. In the words of the chairman of the commission that had in 1947 prepared the constitutional draft:
“The burning desire for European unity is very much an Italian principle, but in this historical moment an international organization can and must, in view of the fact that other continents, like America, wish to take part in international organizations, extend beyond the borders of Europe.” (Atti dell’Assemblea Costituente: 243)

This was the view generally held at the time. In spite of relatively little resistance to membership in NATO, the later proposal for a European Defence Community treaty was rejected also in Italy. In December 1955, one year before Japan, Italy became a member of the United Nations, after the Soviet Union—ever since Italy’s first application for membership in 1947—had repeatedly used its veto to prevent Italy’s joining the world body.

VI. We should also mention some the other, mostly European constitutions in which a similar transfer, limitation or delegation of sovereign powers is specifically envisioned for the purpose of preventing and abolishing war and of creating, in the course of this endeavor, the necessary supra-state institutions. Here the Danish Constitution, which entered into force in June 1953, is likewise of exemplary significance for the postwar period.

Of relevance to its preliminary history, there had taken place in Bern (28 August - 2 September 1952) a Conference of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), an international association of elected members of national parliaments founded in 1889 as a model for a future world parliament. (Japan became a full-fledged member in 1910.) At the 1952 IPU Conference it was resolved that the participating states should adopt in their national constitutions provisions aimed at effective international cooperation in the fields of economics, politics and culture. Toward this goal the parliamentary delegations were to submit proposals.

Principal issues of the IPU Conference debates were limitations on the sovereignty of individual countries and the question of how to legitimately represent the various nations at the global level in an eventual world parliament. The members of a Danish constitutional commission had already proposed a text in 1946, which ultimately was adopted in the course of making the new constitution of 1953:
“Article 20. (1) Powers which according to this constitution rest with the authorities of the kingdom, can, through a bill, to a specifically defined extent, be transferred to international authorities, which are instituted by mutual agreement with other states to promote international legal order and cooperation.” (ANDERSON: 654)

As in the German and Italian constitutions, lawmakers are given special executive powers to shape the future international organization and to prevent war, by the transfer of specified legislative, judicial and executive powers to an international institution such as the UNO. In the report of the constitutional commission the control of atomic energy was given particular attention in this context.

Also as a result of the 1952 IPU Conference, in the Netherlands a similar Article entered into force in 1953, and was reconfirmed in the constitution of 1983. (PANHUYS: 540-541; 551-552) Executive powers to effect a universal system of collective security and peaceful cooperation are also granted to parliamentarians in the following constitutions, in alphabetical order: Argentina (1994), Austria (1981), Belgium (1971); Burundi (1981), Republic of Congo (1979), Costa Rica (1968); Greece (1975); Guatemala (1985), Ireland (1937); Luxembourg (1973); Norway (1814/1905), Portugal (1982), Singapore (1980), Spain (1978), Sweden (1976), East Timor (2002), and Zaire (Democratic Republic of Congo, 1978). A frequently recurring constitutional formula (e.g., in Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Brunei, Jamaica, Lesotho, Malawi, Vanuatu, Zimbabwe) is: “The parliament may make laws for the peace, order and good government [of the state].”

In the countries of the Anglo-Saxon “legal orbit” such as the United States and the current or former British Commonwealth states, the relevant formula is that “The law of nations is a part of the law of the land” (BLACKSTONE: 67) and thus a component of “common law”—which is automatically given priority over “domestic law.” It has sometimes been said that “in substance” the traditionally uninhibited ‘right of belligerency’ of continental European coinage was hardly any different from Anglo-Saxon doctrine. But this is not true. There was and is, in the Anglo-Saxon countries—and also in France and the ‘Latin’ countries—a much greater interest in institutionalizing the international ‘rule of law’, i.e. despite resistance from some European countries where international law does not automatically precede domestic law. Thus, in states which are outside the Anglo-Saxon legal orbit, international law must be first transposed, or “transformed,” to become effective. In the Bonn Constitution (i.e., Basic Law), Article 25 specifically states, for example:
“The general rules of public international law constitute an integral part of Federal law. They take precedence over statutes and directly create rights and duties for the inhabitants of the Federal territory.”

As far as Japan is concerned, it has already made a lasting contribution by adhering to Article 9 of the Constitution, which is indeed a cornerstone of the prospective future collective security of the United Nations.

VII. Some Contradictions

Many misconceptions have arisen with regard to Article 9 over the years. The erosion of the original content of the war-abolishing provision parallels the decline of the original intent and meaning of collective security. In spite of that, Japanese governments deserve credit for upholding Article 9 for so long, more than 60 years, still keeping its core provision intact. No doubt, in this respect the Japanese people also have played a crucial role in keeping politicians “on track.”

Article 9 is the “dot on the i” of a development that got officially under way with the Hague Peace Conferences in 1899 and 1907. The great powers, the USA, Russia, Britain and France, since they attempted at these conferences to create an international legal system with an international court with binding powers, have quite persistently followed up on their initial endeavours that had unfortunately been brought to nought by their adversaries. While at the Hague conferences collective security, i.e. an international executive, was not yet an issue (it was going to be at the planned Third Hague conference in 1914, which never happened), after the First World War the victorious powers established the principle of collective security as part of the League of Nations system. However, the League Council, including Japan as one of the great powers, lacked provisions for allowing member states to delegate competencies or responsibilities to the organization—a necessary condition, as they soon realized, for establishing an effective world executive that would be competent to oversee and secure international disarmament and relieve nations of their responsibility to take measures for safeguarding their peace and security by themselves. After the Second World War the victorious powers took care while creating the new world organization, to make the international court a part of the UN system (the international court had been an institution separate from the League) and secondly to open the Security Council to allow members to delegate executive powers to it in a democratic, legislative act, through passage of a bill enacted by parliament. Toward this end, and to facilitate the process, the Japanese adopted Article 9.

In Japan the discussion among politicians, academics and the people (who are said to have internalized Article 9) as to whether it may be necessary to bring the ideal of a warless world down from its heights to the level of the existing reality (of an armed peace), and consequently change the constitution, or whether and how to lift reality to the level of the ideal has been going on for decades. This in itself is an astounding fact. But the fact also is that it has been very difficult to communicate the idea to the outside world, in spite of the fact that the UN Charter, too, is a blueprint for getting from the present state of an armed peace to an unarmed peace.

At this time the criminal omission, with regard to putting the UN System of Collective Security into effect, has given rise to a critical situation.

The Japanese Cabinet Legislation Bureau (CLB), which is the “primary authority on the interpretation of Article 9,” (Martin: 316ff) has, as Craig Martin has shown, been extremely conscientious in keeping the core essence of Article 9 intact. What the CLB has been doing, since it was instated by Prime Minister Yoshida Shigeru in 1957, is something well known to jurists, i.e. applying remedies (J. kyūsaisaku), to protect the provision’s legal substance. In other words, the changing interpretation over the years is nothing else but the application of remedial measures to protect Article 9. Remedies are legitimate instruments to uphold an important legal principle in a changing environment. The concept of “self-help” (jiriki kyūsai), in relation to Article 9, is also important in this regard, since it explains and gives credence to the existence of the SDF. In this author’s view, the Japanese government should be seen not as bent on “revision by interpretation” to undermine Article 9, but as a responsible agency attempting, in an unfriendly international environment, to uphold the clause against many odds, including foreign pressure. In the process a certain erosion of the “outer layers” has been inevitable and could in the end affect the core, if no action is taken by the international community to restrict and ultimately abolish the institution of war. The consequences of such inaction should be obvious.


This is a revised, expanded and updated version of a German-language article that appeared in 1996; a Japanese version appeared in the March 2005 issue of SEKAI (World). It was prepared for The Asia-Pacific Journal.

Klaus Schlichtmann is lecturer in peace studies at the Japan Women’s University and the author of Japan in the World: Shidehara Kijūrō and the Abolition of War. (2 vols.).

Recommended citation: Klaus Schlichtmann, “Article Nine in Context – Limitations of National Sovereignty and the Abolition of War in Constitutional Law”  The Asia-Pacific Journal, Vol. 23-6-09, June 8, 2009.




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Notes
1 This article is based on one previously published in German: Klaus SCHLICHTMANN, “Artikel 9 im Normenkontext der Staatsverfassungen. Souveränitätsbeschränkung und Kriegsverhütung im 20. Jahrhundert,” Gewollt oder geworden, Referate des 4. Japanologentages der OAG in Tokyo, ed. Werner SCHAUMANN, Munich: iudicium, 1996, pp. 129-50. A Japanese version appeared in the March 2005 issue of SEKAI (World).
2 SHIDEHARA, as John DOWER and others have pointed out, was not keen on constitutional revision or writing a new constitution. (DOWER: 351) However, DOWER appears to have been ignorant of SHIDEHARA’s instructions concerning the military provisions, and instead maintains that “Shidehara apparently gave his advisory [MATSU-MOTO] committee no serious instructions…” (DOWER: 352)
3 Herbert BIX paints SHIDEHARA in very dark colors. (BIX: 231 and 241-243; 556) I certainly don’t agree that SHIDEHARA had been “the main defender of the Kwantung Army during its 1931 Manchurian aggression.” (BIX: 556) My interpretation is that he was genuinely concerned with restraining the army, while at the same time trying to uphold law and order in the region. (SCHLICHTMANN II: 106)
4 I have had a long, personal correspondence with Professor McNELLY on the issue of the authorship of Article 9. Although we agreed to differ on this question, Professor McNELLY conceded that it was “my [his] view that in his two long sessions with MacARTHUR, it seems quite plausible that SHIDEHARA discussed or proposed that Japan renounce war as a matter of policy or even as a constitutional provision . . . There is no question that SHIDEHARA was a strong advocate of Article 9.” (Email dated 30 July 2000) While McNELLY stuck to his point, rejecting SHIDEHARA’s authorship, if not his involvement, my conclusion is based on the general history of the movement to abolish war as an institution (war outlawry movement), beginning with the Hague Peace Conferences, and SHIDEHARA’s involvement in and knowledge of this movement—something McNELLY did not consider in his argumentation.
5 Cited in MARUYAMA Masao, Thought and Behaviour in Modern Japanese Politics, London 1969, p. 308 (my emphasis); see also loc. cit., “Shidehara’s statement foresaw the new meaning of Article IX in a thermonuclear age and he curiously assigned Japan the mission of being a vanguard in international society.” Chapter 10, ‘Some Reflections on Article IX of the Constitution,’ is an adaptation of a report delivered at the regular ninthly meeting of the Association for the Study of Constitutional Problems. See also Richard STORRY, A History of Mod-ern Japan, Penguin 1960, p. 244.
- See more at: http://apjjf.org/-Klaus-Schlichtmann/3168/article.html#sthash.h6MCu3GT.dpuf
 

Sunday, March 6, 2016

­Japan’s Democracy at Risk – The LDP’s Ten Most Dangerous Proposals for Constitutional Change

The Asia Pacific Journal - Japan Focus : 14 July 2013

Is it time to bring Japan’s postwar experiment in liberal democracy to an end?  Prime Minister Abe Shinzo and his followers seem to think so.  In April 2012, the LDP published a clear blueprint for constitutional revision that would go a long way toward achieving this goal.

The Liberal Democratic Party has advocated fundamental revision of Japan’s Constitution since its founding in 1955. Nearly seven decades after the end of World War II, LDP leaders remain humiliated by the thought that the country is governed under a constitution largely drafted by a team of foreign military officers.1  Abe is working hard to build a coalition with the power to rip the “imposed constitution” out by its philosophical roots. He and his followers, who dominate the LDP, envision an “autonomous constitution” (jishu kenpō) that would radically adjust the balance between government power and individual rights.

This is a critical moment in Japan’s history.  In parliamentary elections held on Sunday, July 21, the LDP gained thirty seats, giving the Party a total of 115 in the 242-seat Upper House.  Following its sweeping victory in December 2012 Lower House elections, this means that together with its coalition partner Komeito, the Party holds secure majorities in both Houses of the Diet.  Although the LDP does not control the two-thirds parliamentary majorities required to pass resolutions for constitutional change, it does control Japan’s political agenda.  Abe and his followers are in a good position to continue their push to revise the constitution.

Under the present constitution, the Japanese people recovered from the unimaginable suffering of total war and have come to enjoy several generations of peace and prosperity.  That constitution has acted as a powerful restraint on the nation’s rulers.  It has never been amended.  The constitution is the “supreme law” of the land.  As we show below, the LDP seeks fundamental change that could have far-reaching effects.

What exactly do they have in mind?  The LDP plan was spelled out in a comprehensive series of proposals (“nihon koku kenpō kaisei sōan” or Draft Reform to Japan’s Constitution. Q & A”) published by the Party on April 28, 2012, a date selected to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the end of the Occupation.  Six months later the Party published a pamphlet in user-friendly “Q&A” format to assist readers in working through the dry language of the revision proposals. All of this material is available on the LDP website.2

The LDP revision plan would affect nearly all of the 103 articles of the 1947 Constitution.  Most proposals are for minor changes in wording or technical adjustments that would not make a significant difference. But some LDP proposals could have a potentially devastating impact on individual rights protection in Japan.  Here are the Ten Most Dangerous Proposals:

1.  Rejecting the universality of human rights

The LDP proposals start with a thorough rewriting of the Preamble. Several ringing declarations of democratic ideals would disappear:  “We, the Japanese people….do proclaim that sovereign power resides with the people…”  Deleted.  “Government is a sacred trust of the people….This is a universal principle of mankind….”  Deleted.  “…we have determined to preserve our security and existence, trusting in the justice and faith of the peace-loving peoples of the world…”  Deleted.  (The official English version of the constitution is available here.)

In place of these ideals, the LDP Preamble would emphasize the strength of the Japanese nation, lauding the people’s pride in their country and their willingness to defend it.  It would also express pragmatic goals such as a desire to “pursue friendly relations with all nations under a philosophy of peace” and to promote “education, science and technology.”

But, in contrast to the universal principles of the present constitution, the overriding theme of the LDP version is that Japan is different from other countries.  Thus, the first sentence of the LDP Constitution would read: “Japan is a nation with a long history and unique culture, with a tennō [Emperor] who is a symbol of the unity of the people….”  (Appendix One presents the full English texts of the present Preamble and the proposed LDP version.)

Regarding human rights, the LDP Q&A Pamphlet further explains,
….[r]ights are gradually formulated through the history, tradition and culture of each community.  Therefore, we believe that the provisions concerning human rights should reflect the history, culture and tradition of Japan.3

This replacement of universal human rights principles with a unique system of rights based on Japan’s “history, culture and tradition” has profound implications for the people of Japan and for Japan’s relations with the world.  Recognition of the universal nature of human rights is the fundamental principle that underlies the postwar global human rights regime.  The first article of the UN charter proclaims that “promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all” is one of the UN’s primary purposes. One year after Japan’s Constitution took effect, the UN General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations….” and described its purpose as securing “their universal and effective recognition and observance….”4  (For the full text of the Universal Declaration, go here.)

The LDP program clearly rejects this global consensus on human rights.  Japan has been an important supporter of the UN since it joined in 1956.  Denial of the universal nature of human rights would not only have an impact on the Japanese people, but would also mark a major change in Japan’s foreign policy.

What elements of “history, culture and tradition” should provide the basis for human rights in Japan?  The Q&A’s authors do not tell us directly, but several proposed changes in constitutional wording and statements in the Q&A pamphlet indicate a clear direction.  We will examine some of these proposals below. 

2. Elevating maintenance of “public order” over all individual rights

The LDP would revise key language of Article 12 of the Constitution to read that the people “shall be aware that duties and obligations accompany freedoms and rights and shall never violate the public interest and public order.…”

What are these “duties and obligations”?  The LDP doesn’t say.  Such open-ended language would serve as an invitation to zealous officials eager to identify duties and obligations that may limit or even override individual rights.  The most disturbing aspect of this text, however, is that “freedoms and rights” would be subordinated to “public interest and public order.” “Freedoms and rights” are specified in the present text of the constitution, but the new expression “public interest and public order” is undefined.  In their Q&A pamphlet, LDP authors explain,

“Public order” here is “social order” (shakai chitsujo); it means peaceful social life (heibon na shakai seikatsu). There is no question that individuals who assert human rights should not cause nuisances to others.5

So the LDP target appears to be individuals who “assert human rights” and thereby “cause nuisances to others.”  Although the public order limitation would apply to all constitutional rights, we can expect that it would have an especially powerful chilling effect on speech rights and other forms of protest.  Every public march or other political demonstration slows traffic and causes “nuisances” to others.  Most democratic societies accept such inconveniences as a necessary cost of freedom, especially for protection of the right to speak out.  Japan’s courts have shown little respect for such rights, however, repeatedly ruling in favor of police action to manage public demonstrations and otherwise restrict public speech.

Some readers may recall the case of  the “Tachikawa Three,” who were detained for 75 days in police jails in 2004 on trespass charges after they placed antiwar flyers in the mailboxes of Japan Self-Defense Force members. See here. Citing the present constitution’s free speech guarantee, a Tokyo District Court panel ruled the defendants not guilty/ But this judgment was overturned on appeal and the conviction was upheld by the Supreme Court.7

 Under the LDP plan, the hostile attitude of the police and the courts toward public demonstrations would gain an unshakable foundation in the constitution itself with express language declaring that an undefined (and therefore potentially limitless) “public interest and public order” would be superior to individual rights. 

3.   Eliminating free speech protection for activities “with the purpose of damaging the public interest or public order, or associating with others for such purposes

Just in case a future court might overlook the change to Article 12, the LDP would also revise Article 21 of the Constitution, which presently makes the simple, powerful declaration that “Freedom of assembly and association as well as speech, press and all other forms of expression are guaranteed.”
The LDP proposal adds this proviso:  “Notwithstanding the foregoing, engaging in activities with the purpose of damaging the public interest or public order, or associating with others for such purposes, shall not be recognized.”

This change not only strips free speech protection from activities that might have the purpose of damaging the “public order,” it would also remove protection from the right of association.  So even if I did not go down to the demonstration on that fateful day, if am a member of some citizens group that did, I might be prosecuted, too. 

4.   Deleting the comprehensive guarantee of all constitutional rights

Widespread recognition of the primacy of human rights as a fundamental condition of civilized society is a relatively recent phenomenon.  As noted above, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was not created until its drafters were driven by recent memories of the most destructive war in human history.

Article 97 of Japan’s Constitution delivers a stirring declaration of the heritage of these rights: “The fundamental human rights by this Constitution guaranteed to the people of Japan are fruits of the age-old struggle of man to be free; they have survived the many exacting tests for durability and are conferred upon this and future generations in trust, to be held for all time inviolate.” 

The LDP proposes to simply delete these words.  The Party provides no explanation for this in its Q&A pamphlet, so we can’t be entirely sure about its motivation.  I assume that Party leaders are most offended by the notion of an “age-old struggle of man to be free.”  It seems that the last thing they would recognize is the legitimacy of a “struggle” against an entrenched political structure.  Popular struggle clearly conflicts with their superior goal of maintaining public order.  For LDP leaders, perhaps the most shameful characteristic of these words is their obvious provenance.  The American military officer who drafted them was likely inspired by the 18th Century revolutions in France and America.  What could this possibly have to do with the “history, tradition and culture” of Japan? 

5.  Attack on the “individual” as the focus of human rights

The Western heritage of Japan’s Constitution is apparent throughout the document, perhaps most clearly in Article 13, which begins, “All of the people shall be respected as individuals,” and protects their “right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”  These words are a direct quotation from the U.S. Declaration of Independence.  The LDP drafters deleted Article 97, but couldn’t quite bring themselves to delete Article 13’s reference to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”  But they did insist on changing one especially offensive word: “individual.”  (kojin)  In the LDP version, “All persons shall be respected as people.” (hito)

The concept of the autonomous rights-bearing individual is the core of the Western theory of natural rights.  Such individuals are anathema to the LDP view of the relationship between people and government.  Immediately following its rejection of universal rights in favor of rights based on “the history, tradition and culture of Japan,” the LDP Q&A pamphlet addresses the western influence on Japan’s Constitution:  “[T]he current Constitution includes some provisions based on the western theory of natural rights. We believe these provisions should be revised.”8

Numerous LDP proposals, including the priority accorded to public order, identify the natural rights provisions the LDP wants to change.  The Party’s attack on the status of the individual and on individual rights would certainly result in a reduced constitutional status for Japan’s citizens.  Although they do not call for outright revival of the Meiji Constitution or imperial sovereignty, it appears that Party leaders believe the people should occupy a position closer to that of “subjects” under the Meiji regime.

In place of the rights enjoyed by citizens in a constitutional democracy, subjects are more likely to be obligated to fulfill duties owed to some superior power. 

6. New Duties for the People

The doctrine of “constitutionalism” holds that sovereign people adopt constitutions in order to create and empower governments and to impose limits on governmental powers.9  This idea of limitations on government power is a tough sell with Japanese powerholders.  As explained by one leading constitutional scholar, “The problem is that the idea of constitutionalism is a foreign concept to us Japanese….Before we learned the idea from Westerners, we did not know the idea of imposing law on rulers.  Law had always come from rulers; obedience to the law had been a virtue of the people; rulers had ruled by law instead of being ruled by law.”10 (emphasis added)

By declaring protection for a long list of constitutional rights and freedoms, the 1947 Constitution clearly imposes limitations on government power. The LDP proposes to flip this idea on its head. Instead of imposing limitations on government power, the LDP constitution would impose duties on the people.

The first set of new duties would appear right up front, in Article 3.  New language would state that “[T]he national flag is the rising sun flag (nishōki) and the national anthem is kimigayo,” and that “[T]he people must respect the national flag and national anthem.”

The flag and anthem are the most inflammatory symbols of the era of Japanese imperialism and war.  They are so controversial that when the Diet passed legislation formally recognizing them as Japan’s national symbols in 1999, then-Prime Minister Obuchi and other LDP leaders promised there would be no mandatory duties.  Nonetheless, local governments (led by Ishihara Shintaro’s Tokyo metropolitan government) adopted regulations mandating that public school teachers participate in flag and anthem ceremonies.  Many teachers view such ceremonies as a revival of rituals that attended their country’s disastrous age of militarism.  They refused to comply, claiming that the ceremonies caused them grave emotional anguish.  They were punished with pay cuts, removals from classrooms and other penalties.  (See here for an example of one teacher’s civil disobedience.)
In 2011, Japan’s Supreme Court cut off their constitutional protection by issuing a series of judgments rejecting the teachers’ claims to freedom of conscience guaranteed by Constitution Article 19 and upholding the orders to stand and sing. (See here.)

Tokyo and other local governments have exercised the power to force public school teachers to pay obeisance to these symbols against their will.  The LDP’s proposal would take the next step – it would empower the government to extend flag and anthem duties to the population as a whole.  This would include the descendants of Chinese, Korean, Okinawan and other people who bore the most terrible sufferings during Japan’s age of militarism.     
    7. Hindering freedom of the press and critics of government by prohibiting the “wrongful acquisition, possession and use of information relating to a person”  
The LDP proposes another set of duties through this provision: “No person shall improperly acquire, possess or use information concerning individuals” (proposed Article 19-2). This language does not create any rights at all. Instead, it imposes new constitutional duties -- and the potential application is extremely broad. “Information concerning individuals” is a virtually limitless category, including not only names, photographs, and vital data, but potentially any type of information describing any aspect of specific people.  This duty could be applied to news organizations, bloggers and writers of all kinds, a vast range of businesses and voluntary organizations.  All would face the risk that some government authority might interpret their activities as violations of the vague and subjective “improper” standard.  Government authorities would enjoy broad latitude in selecting organizations for investigation.

Does this LDP proposal suggest a ban on “improper” surveillance and creation of databases by the police or other government agencies?  It doesn’t say anything about the government at all. The prohibition would apply to “any person.”

The new Article 19-2 is reminiscent of the LDP proposal to create a “human rights commission” a little over a decade ago.  This proposed body would have been under the direct control of the Ministry of Justice and its primary charge would have been to monitor the acts of private parties, especially the news media, not the acts of government agencies.  One provision of that bill would even have prohibited “excessive reporting.”

The wording of this proposal and LDP history on the issue suggests that the true intent is to create a new basis for government regulation of the news media and other writers.

8. Granting the prime minister new power to declare “states of emergency” when the government can suspend ordinary constitutional processes

What should be the powers of government in a national emergency?  Under the present constitution, the Diet is “the highest organ of state power” and the “sole law-making organ of the State” (Article 41).  In the exercise of executive authority, the prime minister and other officers are responsible to the Diet (Article 66).  The LDP proposes to grant power to the Cabinet to put this limitation aside.
Under the LDP’s new Article 98, the Prime Minister would be empowered to declare a national emergency “In the event of armed attacks on the nation from abroad, disturbances of the social order due to internal strife, etc., large-scale natural catastrophes due to earthquakes, etc., or other emergency situations as designated by law…”  This is an extremely broad and undefined range of potential circumstances.

What would be the effect of such a declaration?  According to LDP proposed Article 99(1), “the Cabinet may enact Cabinet Orders having the same effect as laws…”  (emphasis added) The constitution imposes various conditions on the lawmaking power of the Diet, including general requirements of public proceedings, recording of votes, and passage by majority vote in both Houses.  (Chapter IV)  Diet proceedings provide the most important venue for members of opposition parties to express opinion on all issues.  There are televised broadcasts of Diet proceedings and news reporters inform the people on the issues and the arguments and counterarguments.

No such rules apply to Cabinet meetings. If a Cabinet Order had “the same effect as law,” the nation could be ruled by secret government for as long as the declaration remained in effect.  The LDP proposal does say that emergency declarations must subsequently be approved by the Diet, but Diet majorities are ordinarily composed of members of the Prime Minister’s own party.  Diet members who sought to overturn their leader’s declarations would need the courage of mutineers.

The LDP plan was finalized with fresh experience of a devastating natural and nuclear disaster.  Government actions related to those events have been criticized on many fronts, especially related to the government’s failure to insist on adequate safety measures, its lack of advance preparations to manage and care for evacuees, and, above all, its failure to disclose critical information to affected persons in a timely manner.  None of these problems would be solved by a new constitutional emergency power. To the contrary, if the Cabinet is operating in secret, these problems could be exacerbated.

What about protections for the right to free speech and other fundamental rights during a “state of emergency?” The next sentence in the LDP proposal appears to address this problem by mandating that constitutional provisions “relating to fundamental rights shall be respected to the greatest extent.” (emphasis added) These words may sound reassuring, but recall the LDP proposal for Article 12.  As a general rule, individual rights would be respected only to the extent they do not conflict with “public interest and public order.” Unquestionably, the need to maintain public order would be felt most strongly during a national emergency.  Anyone with the temerity to speak out against government policy at such a time could expect harsh treatment.  Given the lax attitude of Japan’s Supreme Court in protecting individual rights under the existing constitution, which does not subordinate individual rights to the “public interest and public order,” there is little reason to expect the courts to step in if emergency powers were abused.11  

9.  Changes to Article Nine

LDP leaders clearly believe that in order to secure a respected place in the community of nations, they must be free to employ the country’s military without the extraordinary restraints imposed by Article 9 of the present Constitution.  Throughout the postwar era, debate over constitutional amendment has focused almost exclusively on Article 9.
 
When U.S. President George W. Bush ordered troops into Iraq in 2003, then-PM Koizumi Jun’ichiro swiftly declared his support for the action.  In January 2004, he even ordered a Japanese military force onto Iraqi soil and provided Japanese military aircraft to support U.S. forces in the war zone.  These acts incited various public displays of opposition in Japan.  They included the acts of the “Tachikawa Three” described above which led to harsh police action.  They also inspired a series of lawsuits seeking court declarations that the PM’s actions violated Article 9.  On April 17, 2008, a panel of the Nagoya High Court (an intermediate appellate court) agreed with a group of these plaintiffs and issued a judgment in which it declared Japan Self-Defense Force activities in the Middle East war zone in violation of Article 9.  See Craig Martin’s commentary here and a U.S. Library of Congress report here.

The decision had no legal effect because the court dismissed the case on procedural grounds (lack of standing).  Nonetheless, the court’s declaration made the front page of every newspaper in the country and served as a rare judicial shot across the bow of nationalistic politicians eager to join military ventures abroad.

Japan’s “history, tradition and culture” certainly includes a military component and a willingness to dispatch military forces abroad on missions of conquest.  Article 9 has been a powerful restraint on this element of Japanese tradition.  The LDP seeks a major change.  The next time a Prime Minister wishes to deploy troops abroad, they say, he should not be restrained by constitutional language.
The LDP Constitution would retain the present Constitution’s renunciation of war “as a sovereign right of the nation,” but would make several critical changes, including new language that would clearly declare that Japan could constitutionally maintain a modern military and that the government could deploy this force at home and abroad when it chose to do so.

The LDP’s Article 9 would do away with the “self-defense force” euphemism currently applied to Japan’s military and replace it with “national defense military” (kokubōgun) and would explicitly designate the Prime Minister as “supreme commander” (saikō shikikan).  It would delete the current prohibition on maintaining “land, air and sea forces” and the renunciation of the “right to belligerency.”  In the space vacated by these deletions, the LDP would insert a declaration that nothing in this provision would “prevent the exercise of the right to self-defense.”

The LDP’s military would not be limited to a narrow interpretation of “national defense.”  A lengthy new provision defining the scope of military action expressly states that the military could participate in “internationally coordinated activities to secure the peace and safety of international society” and “activities to preserve the public order or to protect the lives or freedom of the people.”  Again, we confront the phrase “public order” (oyake no chitsujo).  Thus, it appears the LDP military could be used as a domestic police force to put down internal threats to the established order.

As protection against any potential abuse of these powers, all actions of the new military force would be subject to law passed by the Diet.  However, the LDP authors make no mention in their Article 9 of how it should mesh with their new Articles 98 and 99, which would grant the Cabinet extraordinary powers in “states of emergency.”  Given the broad definition of this term, it is hard to imagine any circumstance in which the LDP military force might be deployed that would not qualify.  Accordingly, in cases where the Prime Minister chose to declare a state of emergency, it appears that at least in the initial stages of a deployment, it would be the Cabinet, not the Diet, with actual authority to decide the scope of military operations.

Whatever one’s position on Article 9, all must recognize that the Japanese people have avoided the suffering of war since it took effect.12  The LDP’s Article 9 would surely increase the risk of military conflict.

10. Lowering the Bar for Constitutional Amendments

The Prime Minister and his allies have proposed that, before the Diet considers any substantive change to the constitution, it should first relax requirements governing amendment.  Article 96 of the present Constitution requires that amendments be supported by a two-thirds vote of each House of the Diet.  The LDP proposal would change this to require only a simple majority of each House.  The present additional requirement of approval by a majority of the voters by referendum would remain unchanged.13

Approval by a supermajority vote of the national legislature is a standard requirement in democratic constitutions around the world.  The U.S. Constitution, for example, requires that amendments be approved by a two-thirds vote of each House of Congress and, in addition, by three-fourths of the states.

Advocates for such a high standard say that some individual rights – such as the rights to freedom of speech and freedom of religion – are so fundamental to the functioning of a free society and democratic government that they should not be subject to change by majority vote.  They fear that public opinion may fluctuate sharply in times of stress and temporary majorities may threaten fundamental rights.  In the words of U.S. constitutional scholar Cass Sunstein, “the goal is to ensure that the deliberative sense of the community will prevail over momentary passions.”  Japanese voters recently displayed the potential for “momentary passions” by granting the DPJ a great victory in 2009 and then delivering an equally great victory to its adversary, the LDP, only three years later.

The LDP proposal would empower temporary majorities to sponsor fundamental change.  It would expedite any and all constitutional amendments, including the LDP proposals to weaken protection for fundamental human rights.

Final Comments

Prime Minister Abe traveled to Washington for a meeting with President Obama held on February 22.  This was the first meeting of the two leaders after Japan’s December elections.  The White House transcripts of their statements are cold and brief.  The two leaders expressed only two ideas:  the importance of their military alliance in preserving regional security and the need to increase economic growth.  There were no statements of shared visions, philosophies or broader dreams for their people.14

It’s hard to imagine that a former community organizer and president of the Harvard Law Review15 and a man who has built his career on a campaign to rewrite his nation’s wartime history16 share common views about the role of government.  If there is any doubt on this score, the LDP revision proposals show that the political leaders of Japan and of the United States and other nations in the western political tradition do not share the same belief in free society and the role of government.  Japan’s dominant political party is on a very different track from its Western allies.

The LDP constitutional program includes significant proposals additional to those discussed above.  A revision to Article 20, for example, would open the door to direct government participation in Shinto rituals, to the extent that they “do not exceed the boundaries of social rituals or customary acts.”  Article 24 would include a new provision declaring that the family (not the individual) is the “natural and basic unit of society” and creating a constitutional duty for family members to support each other.  A revision to Article 63 would weaken the role of the Diet as a check on the executive branch and as a means to inform the people on matters of national interest by relaxing the requirement that Cabinet ministers appear at the Diet to respond to inquiries.  These and other proposals require additional study.  In this article I selected ten that could have an especially big impact on human rights protection.

It remains to be seen whether the LDP will be able to push through any or all of their constitutional revision proposals, but there should be no misunderstanding of the Party’s intentions.

Appendix

- See more at: http://apjjf.org/2013/11/28/Lawrence-Repeta/3969/article.html#sthash.vz5JI7II.dpuf