Japan seeks to revive threatening more than just East Asia
2026-05-28 10:24:52 source:Global Times

Illustration: Xia Qing/GT
On
Wednesday, a law to establish the "National Intelligence Council" was
passed during a plenary session of Japan's House of Councillors. The
introduction of this legislation not only marks a fundamental overhaul
of Japan's postwar intelligence system, but also drives a dangerous
institutional wedge that will enable Japan to fully break free from its
postwar peace framework and accelerate its "remilitarization."
The
Sanae Takaichi government's restructuring of the intelligence apparatus
is far from a mere administrative adjustment - it is a systemic
transformation designed to propel the militarization of the Japanese
state apparatus at full speed. The new bill will create a planned
"National Intelligence Council" led by the prime minister as the supreme
decision-making center, supported by a newly established "National
Intelligence Bureau" as its executive body, thereby establishing a
centralized and vertically integrated intelligence system.
This
not only dismantles the postwar system of checks and balances
deliberately maintained across the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
the Ministry of Defense, the police, and other agencies - a system born
from reflection on past militarism - but also grants the National
Intelligence Council extraordinary powers to compel all government
departments to share intelligence.
Even more dangerously, the
bill explicitly incorporates "foreign intelligence activities" into its
mandate, shifting Japan's intelligence functions from a domestic
security focus to the collection of overseas military and security
intelligence - and even permitting espionage and infiltration operations
abroad.
This highly centralized intelligence restructuring,
which serves Japan's "remilitarization" ambitions, has drawn strong
criticism within Japan itself. Some Japanese scholars have pointed out
that the new intelligence body lacks effective oversight and checks and
balances, and could become a modern reincarnation of the notorious
pre-WWII "Special Higher Police" (Tokko). It risks becoming a tool for
right-wing conservative ruling authorities to abuse executive power -
not only severely infringing on citizens' privacy and freedom of speech,
but also serving as an instrument to monitor and suppress dissent.
Regrettably,
despite strong concerns and opposition from various sectors of Japanese
society - including some opposition parties, local bar associations,
civic groups, mainstream media, and scholars - the bill passed with
relative ease. This reveals a significant weakening of the checks and
balances within Japan's increasingly right-leaning political landscape.
Japan
repeatedly claims that its "exclusively defense-oriented" principle
remains unchanged. But what does "exclusively defense-oriented" actually
mean? It should mean refraining from preemptive strikes, responding
only with the minimum necessary self-defense after coming under armed
attack, not attacking others' bases, and not possessing strategic
offensive weapons. Yet today, Japan is deploying long-range missiles
with so-called "counterstrike capabilities" against enemy bases,
building what are effectively "aircraft carrier" battle groups, lifting
restrictions on the export of lethal weapons, and openly discussing the
possession of "counterattack capabilities." Which of these is not an
offensive military posture? The Japanese government may repeat the
phrase "exclusively defense-oriented" countless times, but the range of
its missiles has not shrunk by a single kilometer because of it.
Expanding military capabilities in concrete terms while simultaneously
claiming adherence to the path of a "peaceful nation" is a contradiction
that cannot deceive the international community.
In fact,
Japan's growing concentration of intelligence and security powers is
closely linked to its expanding military activities abroad. The Takaichi
government has actively promoted military aid and arms sales to the
Philippines, sent the Self-Defense Forces to participate in the
US-Philippines "Balikatan" military exercises, and even fired its Type
88 coastal surface-to-ship missile system. These actions reveal
increasingly assertive ambitions for external expansion. If Japan once
again becomes a country capable of waging war, the Asia-Pacific region
will face escalating arms races, greater risks of strategic
miscalculation, and a sharp rise in the danger of conflict.
More
importantly, the dangers of this "remilitarization" extend far beyond
East Asia. It signals that a key pillar of the postwar international
order is beginning to erode. Documents such as the Potsdam Declaration
and the Japanese Instrument of Surrender clearly stipulated that Japan
should be "completely disarmed," while Japan's Peace Constitution
imposed strict limits on military force and the right to wage war.
Japan's current trajectory represents an attempt to break free from the
constraints of the postwar order. The harder it pushes in that
direction, the more vigilant other countries should become.
Japan
is once again attempting to race down the old path of domestic
centralization of power and external expansion. This resurgence of
militarism will not only seriously undermine regional stability and
order, but will ultimately backfire on Japan's own security and
development.
The Asia-Pacific region should remain a highland
for peaceful development and cooperation, not a geopolitical arena where
a handful of countries stir up division and confrontation. Japan should
squarely face the concerns voiced both domestically and
internationally, deeply reflect on its history, genuinely uphold the
commitment of its Peace Constitution, and stop moving further down the
dangerous road of remilitarization and bloc confrontation. Any attempt
to overturn the postwar international order will inevitably face firm
opposition from countries in the region and the broader international
community.