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Streaming video

Title Foreign Correspondent: Japan - Return of the Samurai
Published Australia : ABC, 2014
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (25 min. 53 sec.) ; 156549682 bytes
Summary Ever since it surrendered to the allies at the conclusion of WW2 Japan's military effort has been homebound. The Japanese Self Defence Force has been precisely that - remaining vigilant to outside threats but constitutionally restrained from striking the first blow. Now, with an assertive China throwing its weight around in North Asia, there's a developing inclination among Japan's leadership to take its tactical lead from a another playbook: that the best form of defence is attack. Many in Japan - young and old - worry that's leading their nation down a path to war.Young Japanese fighter pilot Sho Yoshida drills to get himself and his F15 jet-fighter ready in 5 minutes. In the air from Okinawa, he can be over his neighbourhood's biggest flashpoint in 20 minutes. Japan's hold on the Senkaku islands is being disputed and occasionally challenged by China. Japan's not going to give them up lying down."As I don't know the purpose and intention of unidentified aircraft approaching our air space, I always become tense." - Sho Yoshida - Fighter Pilot, Japan SDFIn Tokyo Harbour, the destroyer Myoko is tied-up dockside. But even standing still it's a lethal war machine. On board, the Combat Information Centre is a super-sophisticated response room - its super-computers can read threats and respond to scores of of them within 500 kilometres, all at the same time. A barrage of nearly 100 missiles can be despatched within minutes.At Japan's elite military college enrolments are at record levels and a recruitment campaign pitching military service as cool is helping to attract large numbers of new recruits.In the old days, the Self Defence Force (personnel) were seen as tax thieves who did nothing. But through disaster relief and international contributions their role has been recognized and their prestige has grown. - Michio Onji - Officer in TrainingLegally, Japan's military is strictly charged with defending the nation, not attacking others. Increasingly though that constitutional decree is being massaged and manipulated.The government of Shinzo Abe is endeavouring to reinterpret the constitution and put Japan's military on an offensive footing.The moves are being propelled by what Japan's leadership sees as pushy Chinese territorialism and a wildly unpredictable North Korea. North-Asia Correspondent Matt Carney has secured carte blanche access some of Japan's most fearsome and sophisticated military installations at a key time for the nation. Militarism is on the march and extreme nationalism is coat-tailing it."The SDF is lacking capability to attack enemy countries. Therefore unless it has the power to strike, it cannot become a so called deterrent power." - Toshio Tamogami - Former SDF Air Force GeneralOverwhelmingly though, Japanese young and old are opposed to moves transforming their military into aggressors. Including some with long memories like Tadamasa Iwaii a WW2 vet who became a pacifist."The pre-war system is simply a system that dragged people into war. People couldn't criticize or oppose it. Prime Minister Abe is trying to revive this (system)" - Tadamasa Iwaii - WW2 veteran
Event Broadcast 2014-08-19 at 20:00:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Japan. Kaijo Jieitai.
Military policy.
Military training camps.
Offensive (Military science)
Military readiness -- Planning.
Japan -- Okinawa-shi.
Form Streaming video
Author Carney, Matthew, host
Abe, Shinzo, contributor
Matsumi, Toshinori, contributor
Sato, Tsuyoshi, contributor
Tamogami, Toshio, contributor
Yoshida, Sho, contributor