Japan public split on idea to cite military in constitution
TOKYO — Poll results released Monday show that about half of Japan’s population supports a constitutional revision that would clarify the legality of the country’s military, a new approach Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is proposing as his party struggles to gain public support for a change.
Abe proposed recently that Japan in some way indicate the existence of the Self-Defence Forces, which is not spelled out in Article 9 of the constitution. The article renounces war and the use of force to settle international disputes.
He made the proposal this month in what was seen as a compromise, but opponents see it as a step to justify expanding Japan’s military capabilities, which currently have to be kept to a minimum.
In the Nikkei newspaper poll, 51 per cent of 1,595 respondents supported including a reference to the Self-Defence Forces in Article 9. Thirty-six per cent were opposed.