これは大問題ですね。
アメリカの国防予算(2016年度)には、日本が安保法制を制定することが確定することを前提として組まれています・・・・・・???????
アベシが国内での議論をつくし国会で承認され、国民が納得した上で安保法制関連の予算を組んでいるなら、アメリカの国防予算に組み込まれても納得はできる。しかし、現段階では、法案も通っていない状況の中で、アメリカが安保法制が制定されると確信しているのは、アベシが勝手に推し進めていること。
爺さんの元首相 岸と同じで、アメリカの使い走り!
日本は、アメリカに尻尾を振る犬と同じですな!
一般国民の生活は苦しくなるだけで、大企業のみ儲かる仕組みを作り、国民の年金を勝手に株に投資し官制相場を作り利益を上げている。国の借金は1000兆円と返す当てもなく、あとは戦争に突入して超インフレを引き起こし、借金をチャラにすることを考えているのでしょうかね・・・・福島を中心に多くの人々が放射能汚染を気遣い子供たちを連れて避難していることを無視して帰還させる・・・・海外に援助金として52兆円もの金をばらまくならば、放射の汚染から逃避する人たちを守ることに使うべきでしょう。おまけに、東京オリンピックの国立競技場は2500億円と、歴代各国が投資した額(300-600億円)から見ると異常な無駄金使い・・・・・・建設後に維持費も異常ですべて国民負担・・・・・
こんなアベシ政権・自民党はつぶしてしまわなければ、本当の美しい日本は甦らない・・・・
以下 Stars and Stripes の記事を転載します。
原文はこちら
Home /News /Pacific
US defense budget already counting on Japan self-defense plan
By Erik Slavin
Stars and Stripes
Published: May 13, 2015
us japan flags
A flag display for a meeting between Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr. and Gen. Harukazu Saito, the chief of staff of Japan Air Self-Defense Force, at Tokyo, Japan, March 23, 2015.
GABRIELA GARCIA/USMC
RELATED
Defense cooperation guidelines with US present new roles, risks for Japan
The new Japan-U.S. defense guidelines approved Monday will transform the nature of the Self-Defense Forces’ overseas operations, eliminating geographical limits on the nation’s military cooperation with U.S. forces.
An U.S. Air Force pararescueman explains some of the equipment used during missions to visiting members of the Japan Self Defense Forces' Deployment Air Force for Counter-Piracy Enforcement at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, Dec. 3, 2013. Chad Thompson/U.S. Air Force
Japan reinterprets constitution, can defend allies in combat
Japan’s ruling coalition adopted a resolution Tuesday that — for the first time in the post-World War II era — will allow the nation’s armed forces to defend the country’s allies in combat.
Japan Defense Minister Gen Nakatani, left, and U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter speak with reporters at the Japan Ministry of Defense in Tokyo on April 8, 2015. The nations are working on the final details of the 1st revision to their bilateral national defense guidelines since 1997. Erik Slavin/Stars and Stripes
US, Japan announce expansion of defense ties
The U.S. and Japan will expand defense ties over cyberspace and regional security threats as they finalize the first revision of security guidelines between the two allies since 1997, defense chiefs from both nations said.
Pivoting east: Defense chief Carter heading to Asia
YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — The latest 2016 U.S. defense bill assumes Japan will adopt government-backed proposals on defending its allies, even though Japanese lawmakers have yet to vote on them.
“The United States supports recent changes in Japanese defense policy, including the adoption of collective self-defense and new bilateral guidelines for U.S.-Japan Defense Cooperation,” according to the House Armed Service Committee’s current version of the National Defense Authorization Act.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet signed off on a reinterpretation last year of Japan’s pacifist, post-WWII constitution that would allow the nation to engage in “collective self-defense” with its allies for the first time since the war.
However, it isn’t a done deal yet, and the details on what situations collective self-defense would include — and under what circumstances it would be approved — have not yet been publicly debated.
Although the 2016 defense bill appears ahead of itself for now, most analysts believe it will eventually be correct in its assessment.
Abe’s party holds a comfortable majority and faces fragmented opposition in Japan’s national Diet, which makes it likely that revisions to about 10 laws will pass when introduced.
“The security-related bills are expected to face large opposition in the Diet,” said Tsuneo Watanabe, senior fellow at the Tokyo Foundation, a think tank. “But no matter how fierce the opposition may be, the ruling parties have enough seats to pass them.”
Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party rules in coalition with Komeito, a smaller party founded by a large Buddhist denomination.
The historically pacifist Komeito and the LDP have privately negotiated over the past year on limits to Japan’s future defense posture under the changes.
Without Komeito’s influence, authorization for collective self-defense wouldn’t pass the Diet, Watanabe said.
The measures could be opened to legislative debate later this month, according to a recent Asahi Shinbun report.
Abe’s security aspirations are widely supported by the Pentagon and the White House but remain controversial among Japanese.
Polls show support for missions like helping defend a U.S. warship under attack or rescuing Japanese hostages abroad — both of which are currently illegal under current law.
However, when asked if Japan “should play a more active military role” in regional affairs, only 23 percent agreed, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll.
When Abe visited the United States in April, the U.S. and Japan agreed to a revision of their bilateral security guidelines for the first time since 1997. The guidelines don’t specifically mention collective self-defense, but they leave room for “appropriate operations” if a Japanese ally is attacked.
Japan’s government views an attack on a close ally, such as the United States, as potentially threatening to Japan’s survival, according to the guidelines.
slavin.erik@stripes.com
Twitter: @eslavin_stripes
アメリカの国防予算(2016年度)には、日本が安保法制を制定することが確定することを前提として組まれています・・・・・・???????
アベシが国内での議論をつくし国会で承認され、国民が納得した上で安保法制関連の予算を組んでいるなら、アメリカの国防予算に組み込まれても納得はできる。しかし、現段階では、法案も通っていない状況の中で、アメリカが安保法制が制定されると確信しているのは、アベシが勝手に推し進めていること。
爺さんの元首相 岸と同じで、アメリカの使い走り!
日本は、アメリカに尻尾を振る犬と同じですな!
一般国民の生活は苦しくなるだけで、大企業のみ儲かる仕組みを作り、国民の年金を勝手に株に投資し官制相場を作り利益を上げている。国の借金は1000兆円と返す当てもなく、あとは戦争に突入して超インフレを引き起こし、借金をチャラにすることを考えているのでしょうかね・・・・福島を中心に多くの人々が放射能汚染を気遣い子供たちを連れて避難していることを無視して帰還させる・・・・海外に援助金として52兆円もの金をばらまくならば、放射の汚染から逃避する人たちを守ることに使うべきでしょう。おまけに、東京オリンピックの国立競技場は2500億円と、歴代各国が投資した額(300-600億円)から見ると異常な無駄金使い・・・・・・建設後に維持費も異常ですべて国民負担・・・・・
こんなアベシ政権・自民党はつぶしてしまわなければ、本当の美しい日本は甦らない・・・・
以下 Stars and Stripes の記事を転載します。
原文はこちら
Home /News /Pacific
US defense budget already counting on Japan self-defense plan
By Erik Slavin
Stars and Stripes
Published: May 13, 2015
us japan flags
A flag display for a meeting between Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr. and Gen. Harukazu Saito, the chief of staff of Japan Air Self-Defense Force, at Tokyo, Japan, March 23, 2015.
GABRIELA GARCIA/USMC
RELATED
Defense cooperation guidelines with US present new roles, risks for Japan
The new Japan-U.S. defense guidelines approved Monday will transform the nature of the Self-Defense Forces’ overseas operations, eliminating geographical limits on the nation’s military cooperation with U.S. forces.
An U.S. Air Force pararescueman explains some of the equipment used during missions to visiting members of the Japan Self Defense Forces' Deployment Air Force for Counter-Piracy Enforcement at Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, Dec. 3, 2013. Chad Thompson/U.S. Air Force
Japan reinterprets constitution, can defend allies in combat
Japan’s ruling coalition adopted a resolution Tuesday that — for the first time in the post-World War II era — will allow the nation’s armed forces to defend the country’s allies in combat.
Japan Defense Minister Gen Nakatani, left, and U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter speak with reporters at the Japan Ministry of Defense in Tokyo on April 8, 2015. The nations are working on the final details of the 1st revision to their bilateral national defense guidelines since 1997. Erik Slavin/Stars and Stripes
US, Japan announce expansion of defense ties
The U.S. and Japan will expand defense ties over cyberspace and regional security threats as they finalize the first revision of security guidelines between the two allies since 1997, defense chiefs from both nations said.
Pivoting east: Defense chief Carter heading to Asia
YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — The latest 2016 U.S. defense bill assumes Japan will adopt government-backed proposals on defending its allies, even though Japanese lawmakers have yet to vote on them.
“The United States supports recent changes in Japanese defense policy, including the adoption of collective self-defense and new bilateral guidelines for U.S.-Japan Defense Cooperation,” according to the House Armed Service Committee’s current version of the National Defense Authorization Act.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet signed off on a reinterpretation last year of Japan’s pacifist, post-WWII constitution that would allow the nation to engage in “collective self-defense” with its allies for the first time since the war.
However, it isn’t a done deal yet, and the details on what situations collective self-defense would include — and under what circumstances it would be approved — have not yet been publicly debated.
Although the 2016 defense bill appears ahead of itself for now, most analysts believe it will eventually be correct in its assessment.
Abe’s party holds a comfortable majority and faces fragmented opposition in Japan’s national Diet, which makes it likely that revisions to about 10 laws will pass when introduced.
“The security-related bills are expected to face large opposition in the Diet,” said Tsuneo Watanabe, senior fellow at the Tokyo Foundation, a think tank. “But no matter how fierce the opposition may be, the ruling parties have enough seats to pass them.”
Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party rules in coalition with Komeito, a smaller party founded by a large Buddhist denomination.
The historically pacifist Komeito and the LDP have privately negotiated over the past year on limits to Japan’s future defense posture under the changes.
Without Komeito’s influence, authorization for collective self-defense wouldn’t pass the Diet, Watanabe said.
The measures could be opened to legislative debate later this month, according to a recent Asahi Shinbun report.
Abe’s security aspirations are widely supported by the Pentagon and the White House but remain controversial among Japanese.
Polls show support for missions like helping defend a U.S. warship under attack or rescuing Japanese hostages abroad — both of which are currently illegal under current law.
However, when asked if Japan “should play a more active military role” in regional affairs, only 23 percent agreed, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll.
When Abe visited the United States in April, the U.S. and Japan agreed to a revision of their bilateral security guidelines for the first time since 1997. The guidelines don’t specifically mention collective self-defense, but they leave room for “appropriate operations” if a Japanese ally is attacked.
Japan’s government views an attack on a close ally, such as the United States, as potentially threatening to Japan’s survival, according to the guidelines.
slavin.erik@stripes.com
Twitter: @eslavin_stripes