TOKYO, Oct. 12, 2006

North Korea's Nukes Worry Japan

Barry Petersen Discusses The Effect Of North Korea's Nuclear Ambitions On Japan's Future

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(CBS)  This Letter From Asia was written by CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen in Tokyo.


With North Korean now claiming to be a nuclear power, the Japanese are worried. Japan is well within range of North Korean missiles. If North Korea continues its nuclear weapons program, the Japanese know there are some tough decisions ahead — decisions that go to the very nature of what Japan is and how it must change.

First, a touch of World War II history: After Japan lost, the United States imposed a pacifist constitution that made Japan renounce the use of force. Its military — today totaling a quarter-million — is allowed for self-defense only.

Yukio Okamoto, who once advised Japan's top policymakers, tells me that North Korea’s nuclear ambitions are changing Japanese minds.

"Japanese will support strongly to beef up our defense capability," says Okamoto. "But I don’t think we will go as far as pursuing offensive weapons like missiles capable of crossing the Sea of Japan."

This was also a bit of a mind-changer; In 1998 North Korea staged a test that lobbed a missile over Japan. The Japanese know they are in the cross-hairs of a possible nuclear North.

"Because of the nuclear test, we have a greater fear of nuclear attack," one man told me. "I am scared."

All this plays into the hands of Japan's new prime minister, Shinzo Abe, who says it's time to end Japan's era of pacifism, time to beef up the military — and time to think of the day when Japan may need to launch a pre-emptive attack against North Korea to protect itself.

But Abe assured parliament that Japan would not, itself, go nuclear. For that level of defense, Japan will continue to trust in its strongest ally, the United States.

Okamoto explains that what is needed is "more strengthening of Japan's security ties with the United States, because, after all, U.S. nuclear capability is the only practical deterrence we have against North Korea."

The Japanese have a rare perspective on the world's nuclear history. Their army was notorious in World War II for its massacres and rapes. The war ended when Japan became the only country ever to become the target of an atomic bomb.

To the Japanese, nuclear war is something real, something that can scar a country forever, which is why at Hiroshima's ground zero, they say a prayer: "Never again."



By Barry Petersen ©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by sidneysand October 13, 2006 12:10 AM EDT
I watched all three networks on Monday evening (easy to do in a market that has NBC at 5:30, ABC at 6;00 and CBS at 6:30) In a sea of sameness, Mr. Petersen's profile of Kim Jong was refreshing and informing. Tuesday and Wednesday I hoped CBS would continue to be a step ahead of the others. I am sorry to realize that CBS Evening News returned to being a carbon copy of it%u2019s competition and rather superficial. Thankfully CBS is posting pieces from your veteran reporters on the WEB. Mr. Petersen can bring us from the silly to the serious. When you truly want background, he is a wealth of knowledge. It is too bad this piece only ran in the middle of the night on UTTM and the web.
Reply to this comment
by doctordonut-2009 October 12, 2006 4:32 PM EDT
Worry is a vast understatement.....Kim Jong is not exactly a shining beacon of sanity

http://www.theweeklydonut.org/index.php/category/nuclear-newbee/
Reply to this comment
by mjv2944 October 12, 2006 4:25 PM EDT
I would be worried to, NK is lead by a bunch of kooks.
Reply to this comment

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