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China-Japan-Koreas
Japanese lawmaker floats sobering option: going nuclear
2009-04-22
This is going to twist some shorts in Beijing ...
Kyodo News -- Japan should consider possessing nuclear weapons as a deterrent to a neighboring threat, former Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa suggested Sunday. In a speech in Obihiro, Hokkaido, in reference to North Korea's rocket launch earlier this month that many believe was a ballistic missile test, the hawkish lawmaker said: "It is common sense worldwide that in pure military terms, nuclear counters nuclear."

In Sunday's speech, Nakagawa said he believes North Korea has many Rodong medium-range missiles that could reach almost any part of Japan and also has small nuclear warheads. "North Korea has taken a step toward a system whereby it can shoot without prior notice," he said. "We have to discuss countermeasures."

He added that public discussions must be promoted on what has long been considered a national taboo: whether Japan should possess nuclear weapons.

Nakagawa stepped down as finance minister in February over what appeared to be drunken behavior at an international news conference in Rome.

He has called for debate in the past on whether Japan should go nuclear, telling a TV program as chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party's Policy Research Council in October 2006 that the Constitution does not rule out Japan possessing nuclear arms.
A nuclear-armed Japan would be interesting, though the Peace Museum in Hiroshima would have to close. It would finally demonstrate to China that there are costs for not curbing their North Korean dog. And it might allow us to focus our attentions elsewhere.

And we could always follow up with a nuclear-armed South Korea if the Chinese don't get the hint ...
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China-Japan-Koreas
Japan objects to US N Korea move
2008-10-12
Japan has criticised as "extremely regrettable" Washington's decision to remove North Korea from its list of state sponsors of terrorism. Japan opposed the move because it first wanted North Korea to provide more information about Japanese citizens it abducted in the 1970s and 1980s. Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa said "abductions amount to terrorist acts".

The US removed the North after saying it had agreed to provide full access to its controversial nuclear programme. Mr Nakagawa objected to the move during a visit to Washington, where he was attending G7 talks.

A BBC correspondent in Tokyo says many in Japan will feel North Korea has been rewarded too soon. Tokyo argues North Korea should remain on the list because issues related to the abduction of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s have not been resolved.

South Korea, however, welcomed the US decision. "This government welcomes these moves as an opportunity that would lead to normalisation of the six-party talks and North Korea's eventual abandonment of its nuclear programmes," said Kim Sook, Seoul's nuclear envoy.
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China-Japan-Koreas
S. Korean FM: Japan should not develop nukes
2006-11-07
South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon said Monday he was concerned about recent comments by Japanese politicians that Tokyo should discuss developing nuclear weapons. "I don't think remarks like these are desirable for the future of Japan, which is one of the most important members of the United Nations and also a major power in Northeast Asia," Ban told reporters.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has declared that Japan would not consider developing its own nuclear weapons, but some high-ranking members of his ruling party have called for such discussions following North Korea's Oct. 9 nuclear test. Abe's protests have failed to squelch the debate. On Sunday, Shoichi Nakagawa, policy chief of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, reiterated his call for a debate on "contingencies" in the event of a North Korean nuclear attack.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Japan should debate going nuclear: ruling party MP
2006-10-16
TOKYO - Japan needs to discuss whether it should possess nuclear weapons in response to North Korea’s claimed nuclear test, the ruling party’s policy chief said on Sunday.
You knew this was coming.
Shoichi Nakagawa, chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Policy Research Council, said he believed Japan would adhere to its policy of not arming itself with nuclear weapons, but added that debate over whether to go nuclear was necessary. “We need to find a way to prevent Japan from coming under attack,” Nakagawa told a television programme, referring to what Tokyo should do following North Korea’s reported nuclear test. “There is argument that nuclear weapons are one such option. I want to make clear that I am not the one saying this, and Japan will stick to its non-nuclear principles, but we need to have active discussions,” he said.

Nakagawa also said that the constitution does not prohibit the possession of nuclear arms, adding that having such weapons may reduce or remove the risk of being attacked.

While some analysts have pointed out the possibility of Japan — the only nation to suffer an atomic bombing — seeking nuclear weapons in response to North Korea’s announced test, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has flatly rejected the idea.
He'll reluctantly allow his hand to be forced.
And victims of the 1945 atomic bombing on Hiroshima by the United States condemned Nakagawa’s remarks. “I question and I feel indignation towards such comments made by someone in such a responsible position,” said Sunao Tsuboi, co-chairperson of the Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations. “As an A-bomb victim, I cannot comprehend the idea of possessing nuclear weapons ... To think that because the other side did it, we can, is just so frivolous,” said the 81-year-old Tsuboi, who still has burns suffered from the bombing of his hometown 51 years ago.

Japan has stuck to its self-imposed “three principles” that ban the possession, production and import of nuclear arms, and politicians who even questioned the ban in the past have faced fierce criticism. But faced with the threat of North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes, the nuclear taboo is easing among the public and more lawmakers now challenge the ban without receiving the disapproval they would have in the past.
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China-Japan-Koreas
'Pakistan urging North Korea not to proliferate N-tech'
2005-01-10
"Thanks, Kim, but our pantry is full now."
Pakistan has told Japan that Islamabad was resolved to urge North Korea not to use or spread nuclear technology that it gained from nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, according to Japan's Kyodo News service. Shoichi Nakagawa, Japan's economy, trade and industry minister now visiting Pakistan, told Japanese reporters on Saturday that he wanted to restart yen loans to help peaceful development in Pakistan. Mr Nakagawa met President, Prime Minister and Commerce Minister. In their talks, Pakistani officials told Nakagawa that they were resolved to urge North Korea not to use or spread nuclear technology that it gained from nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, Kyodo said.
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China-Japan-Koreas
Japanese minister links sub intrusion with China's gas project
2004-11-14
A Japanese trade minister has linked the recent intrusion of a suspected Chinese nuclear submarine into Japanese waters with China's natural gas exploration near islands disputed by the two countries. "I cannot help but think that they are related," Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Shoichi Nakagawa said in a news show on Fuji TV network. He added that he took it "as a matter of course" that Chinese submarines had been intruding into Japanese territorial waters for some time. The Tokyo government has said that a nuclear submarine violated its waters for two hours last Wednesday. After a two-day chase on the high seas in the East China Sea, it declared that the vessel belonged to the Chinese navy and demanded an apology from Beijing. The Chinese government has only said it was investigating the Japanese claims.
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Axis of Evil
5 Japanese Abductees to Return Home
2002-10-09
After nearly a quarter century, five Japanese abducted by North Korea will be allowed to return home briefly next week, but without their children. The five are among at least 13 Japanese kidnapped by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 1980s to train spies in Japanese language and culture. They are the only ones known to be alive. The five — two men and three women now in their mid 40s — will be allowed to return next Tuesday for one or two weeks, but may not bring their children, said Shoichi Nakagawa, head of a lawmakers' group supporting families of abductees. The survivors married in North Korea and are said to have six children.
That's mighty nice of the NKors. Of course, the kiddies do present a problem...
Some survivors' families reacted angrily to the news the children would not be coming to Japan. "They should come back with the entire family. Leaving behind the kids — my grandchildren — is like leaving behind hostages," said Tamotsu Chimura, father of Yasushi Chimura, who was abducted in 1978.
That's precisely what it's like. He's got that one nailed.
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