A JAPANESE ruling party panel is to propose that pre-emptive strikes against enemy bases be allowed despite the country’s pacifist constitution, Kyodo news agency said yesterday.
North Korea fired a ballistic missile in April that flew over northern Japan after warning that it planned to launch a satellite, prompting the government to deploy missile interceptors.
“Japan should have the ability to strike enemy bases within the scope of its defence-oriented policy, in order not to sit and wait for death,” Kyodo quoted the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) committee as saying in its proposal.
The committee also plans to call for Japan to develop early-warning satellites to detect the launch of missiles towards the country, Kyodo said. Japan depends on information from a US early-warning satellite, it said.
While some lawmakers have called for strike capability, defence minister Yasukazu Hamada is among those cautious about the prospect, though the government’s stance is that such strikes should be allowed if an attack is certain. The panel’s plans are set to be submitted for consideration ahead of the compilation of a five-year government defence programme by the end of the year, Kyodo said. – (Reuters)