Continuity, Economy & Militarism: New Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga Of Japan's Plate Is Full
Continuity, Economy & Militarism: New Prime
Minister Yoshihide Suga of Japan’s Plate Is Full
On ailing but long-serving
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s resignation, earlier this month, Japan’s Conservative
Liberal Democratic party (LDP), elected his Chief Cabinet Secretary as Party
leader.
Most of the LDP
factions united to give Suga a 70% majority on September 14th. Two days later, Yoshihide Suga was elected prime
minister by Japan’s Diet.
71 year old Suga has, in recognition of the
support he has received, swiftly reappointed most of the heavyweights in Shinzo
Abe’s outgoing cabinet. However, a new
face is attracting both interest and attention. It is Shinzo Abe’s younger brother
Nobuo Kishi, appointed defence minister.
The Abe cabinet’s
defence minister, Taro Kano, also a former foreign minister, was shifted to Administrative
Reforms.
With increased
Chinese and North Korean belligerence on Japan’s doorstep, Shinzo Abe was already building a consensus on
whether Japan should militarise more sharply. In fact, Japan has been steadily
improving its indigenous armaments industry under Abe.
Now Kishi, though new
to the defence arena, will take the agenda forward. In a pointedly pacifist
Japan post WWII, it was only allowed a token military capacity. Japan has been
long dependent on American military protection, including its nuclear weapons
umbrella. This protection applies to Taiwan in the region as well.
But giving the vastly
altered political, economic and military landscape in 2020, the time has come
to accelerate Japan’s own military preparedness in the face of an ever growing
Chinese military.
Japan, like Taiwan, recognises it needs a much
improved and bigger offensive capacity in the event of war. It must vastly
upgrade its Army, Navy and Air Force. It needs weapons that can strike missile
launch sites in North Korea and China.
That Shinzo Abe
signed a treaty with India for mutual access to each other’s military
facilities just days before handing over the baton is indicative. Suga and
Kishi are likely to take matters forward.
As the world’s third largest, Japan’s economy,
already long in recession, plagued by indebtedness, an ageing population, labour shortages, is now
in distress. The Covid-19 pandemic has damaged the Japanese economy further. For
Suga, as he has already indicated, economic issues will take centre stage. He
wants to move sharply on greater digitisation for example.
There is the
difficult question on when to hold the Tokyo Olympics, expected to be a
substantial revenue earner, but postponed for a year by the pandemic already.
Economic issues may
also become crucial in order to win the next elections. This even though the
Japanese opposition is in fair disarray.
A number of Japanese
manufacturers are being assisted financially by the Japanese government to move
out of China. They will relocate, to India, and other countries. Japan enjoys a
very good relationship with Vietnam also.
Taro Aso, a former
prime minister was retained by Suga as the finance minister, as was Toshimitsu
Motegi, Japan’s seniormost diplomat, as foreign minister. Suga himself has
travelled very little outside Japan, though he has been successful at developing
tourism to Japan.
Overall, Yoshihide
Suga is credited with being an excellent administrator. He was virtually Abe’s
shadow prime minister. Suga has risen to the top job in Japanese politics despite
having no family background in it. He is the son of a strawberry farmer from
Akita Prefecture. Suga is certainly no political blueblood like his mentor
Shinzo Abe. But this may work well for him and the LDP with the every-man on
the street.
This change of guard
in Japan comes at a critical juncture for India and its place in the
world. Its nearly five month old
military and economic confrontation with China promises to be a game-changer.
It is qualitatively different from the policy positions India has taken in the
past. This time, India is pushing back against Chinese imperialism in no
uncertain terms. The outcome, is thought
by many learned observers, as likely to go in India’s favour. This, if an armed
conflict, even a two-front war breaks out, involving both China and its ally
Pakistan. India is battle hardened with
professional soldiers, and China is practically untested and has a largely
conscripted military low on morale and ability.
The way the world is
looking at this stand-off is already significant. Even before it has come to
war, it is already impacting strategic calculations. The ground is shifting in
South Asia, the Indian Ocean region, West Asia, South-East Asia and the
Asia-Pacific. That India is standing up to Chinese bullying without flinching
is an inspiration to many other countries.
It is also germane to
the US and NATO alliance and its notions of geo-politics in the region, the
Indo-Russian relationship, the emerging Quad Nations of Japan, the US,
Australia and India. It has intensified the developing relationship with Israel
and the Gulf countries of West Asia. They too are overcoming old dogmas and
forging historical ties never seen before. China may be with Iran, Turkey and
Pakistan, but is it working for them?
China is in truth on
the backfoot. This is of course, not just because of India. Japan is watching
closely. The freedom of the seas and its sea lanes in the South China Sea, the
safety of the Japanese islands in the East China Sea, affect Japan - but others
in the region as well. South Korea,
Thailand, Vietnam, The Philippines, Indonesia, are all being intimidated by
China as well.
Several countries are
reeling from the debt traps they have walked into with the Chinese, including
Cambodia and Sri Lanka, and of course, Pakistan. Others, like Bangladesh and
Myanmar are teetering on the brink.
China’s sharp trade
practices, including dumping of goods at vastly reduced prices to cripple
competition and industry from elsewhere, is also now being challenged with
boycotts and sanctions.
All this flux for
China could well present huge economic opportunity for Japan, as more and more
countries turn away from predatory China following India’s lead.
Suga may well see in
an economic boom for Japan if he plays his cards right. That the pushback to
China is backed by the Western powers provides an excellent backstop.
The relationship with
India, is ripe for improving to the next level. It has been warming up ever
since the arrival of the Modi administration in 2014 and the personal chemistry
between Shinzo Abe and Narendra Modi. Now, if both countries strike while the iron is hot,
it could assume stellar proportions.
(1,059 words)
September 17th,2020
For: WIONEWS
Gautam Mukherjee
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