07/11/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/11/2024 13:25
By Christopher Johnstone, Nicholas Szechenyi, and Leah Klaas | July 11, 2024
In the last few years, Japan has taken historic steps to strengthen its defense posture and in turn the U.S.-Japan alliance, which has entered a period of unprecedented integration.
This is a far cry from the time of the alliance's origins in 1951. With pacifist principles deeply embedded in its postwar constitution, Japan once prioritized economic development and resisted defense cooperation with the United States.
From this starting point, how did Japan evolve into a significant military power capable in its own right of reinforcing deterrence across the Indo-Pacific region?
The CSIS Japan Chaircompiled a short history, supplemented by a repository of official statements and interviews with experts, to document the remarkable evolution of this security partnership. This is Alliance Online, a resource tool documenting the evolution of the U.S.-Japan alliance, a security relationship critical to the history-and future-of international relations in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.
Click to explore the U.S.-Japan Alliance Database
Click to explore the U.S.-Japan Alliance Database
[ 1951-1960 ]
The foundation for the U.S.-Japan alliance
took form with three key events:
The signing of the 1951 San Francisco Peace Treatythat ended the Pacific War
The signing of the 1951 Security Treaty between Japan and the United States
A subsequent revision of the bilateral treaty in 1960 known as the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security
Based on the Security Treaty, Japan retained the right to self-defense underChapter VII, Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. However, Japan also renounced war as a sovereign right under Article IXof its new constitution, written by the United States during the postwar occupation.
Japan and the United States signed the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security, which allowed U.S. forces to retain bases in Japan after Japan regained sovereignty. However, the first version of the treaty included no obligation for the United States to defend Japan.
As pressure from the United States on Japan to strengthen defense began to increase, Prime Minister Yoshida Shigeru reluctantly establishedJapan's Self-Defense Forces in 1954.
This was based on a government interpretation of the constitution that minimal defense capabilities were permissible under Article IX.
Although some conservatives in Japan at the time pushed for a stronger military and for a broader interpretation of the constitution to allow the right of collective self-defense, Yoshida advocateda minimalist approach to allow Japan to focus on economic recovery.
The so-called Yoshida Doctrine, under which Japan would ally with the West but do the minimum necessary for defense cooperation while focusing on reviving the economy, took hold.
A military parade to commemorate the establishment of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force in July 1954. | Mainichi Newspaper via Wikimedia Commons
A military parade to commemorate the establishment of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force in July 1954. | Mainichi Newspaper via Wikimedia Commons
As Cold War tensions in Asia intensified in the aftermath of the Korean War, the two governments revisedthe bilateral security treaty in 1960.
The revised treaty enshrined the U.S. commitment to defend Japan in Article V in return for permission to retain bases in Japan "for the maintenance of international peace and security in the Far East," captured in Article VI. The United States also retained control of Okinawa until 1972. This was the broad strategic bargain that remains the foundation of the U.S.-Japan alliance to this day.
In these early days, few in either country thought that Japan would eventually emerge as a true military partner of the United States.
The massive protests that took place in Japan in response to the revised treaty-which led President Eisenhower to cancel a planned visitto Japan in June 1960-reflected concerns about the potential to become drawn into Cold War conflicts.
Nevertheless, Japan gradually focused more on defense as the regional security environment became more severe.
[ 1960-1989 ]
Despite the controversy in Japan surrounding the 1960 security treaty, strategic debates also reflected a parallel concern that a failure to develop defense capabilities could weaken U.S. support for Japan.
During the Cold War, Japan's proximity to the Soviet Union necessitated a focus on homeland defense, especially in the surrounding seas.
During the Cold War, Japan's proximity to the Soviet Union necessitated a focus on homeland defense, especially in the surrounding seas.
This created an "entrapment vs. abandonment" dilemma that animated Japanese defense policy during this period.
The expansion of Soviet military power in East Asia would eventually necessitate increased emphasis on homeland defense, especially in the surrounding seas, to deter a Soviet attack and secure imports of natural resources critical to Japan's economy.
Sea lane defense was the focus of two key documents: Japan's National Defense Program Outlineof 1976 and the Guidelines for Japan-U.S. Defense Cooperationof 1978, highlighting the alliance's increased importance in the Cold War. This set the stage for Japan's commitmentin 1981 to take on responsibility for defending sea lanes out to 1,000 nautical miles from Japan.
Even as Japan took modest but important steps to strengthen defense cooperation with the United States, it also implemented new measures that reinforced the Yoshida Doctrine.
In 1967, Japan adopted the Three Non-Nuclear Principles, barring the country from possessing, manufacturing, or introducing nuclear weapons. The same year, it imposed an effective banon defense equipment exports. And in 1976, Japan announced a policyof limiting defense spending to 1 percent of GDP.
True to Yoshida's vision, Japan focused on economic recovery while remaining allied with the West-yet gradually embraced a greater role in defense in response to the Soviet threat.
Students demonstrating against nuclear weapons in front of a train station in Tokyo collect signatures in 1963. | Claude Jacoby/Ullstein Bild via Getty Images
Students demonstrating against nuclear weapons in front of a train station in Tokyo collect signatures in 1963. | Claude Jacoby/Ullstein Bild via Getty Images
Yoshida's emphasis on economic revival also featured prominently during this period, and by the 1980s Japan's economic power became a source of friction with the United States.
The 1985 Plaza Accordwas intended to rectify trade imbalances, but it instead increased Japanese investment in the United States and generated criticism of Japan's economic prowess as the U.S. economy struggled.
This introduced a new dynamic to alliance ties that threatened to overshadow progress in defense cooperation critical to U.S. strategy in Asia.
[ 1989-2000 ]
A series of crises in the immediate aftermath of the Cold War precipitated an effort to redefine strategic objectives for the U.S.-Japan alliance.
In the post-Cold War era, the rise of security threats close to home-including North Korea's nuclear and missile programs-convinced Japan to expand its traditional concept of self-defense to focus more on regional security.
In the post-Cold War era, the rise of security threats close to home-including North Korea's nuclear and missile programs-convinced Japan to expand its traditional concept of self-defense to focus more on regional security.
During the first Gulf War in 1991, Japan considereddispatching the Self-Defense Forces to support peacekeeping operations in response to U.S. pressure but failed to do so and was criticized for "checkbook diplomacy" after contributing $13 billionto support the coalition against Iraq.
The collapse of Japan's "bubble" economy in 1992and subsequent U.S. emphasis on trade imbalances complicated the bilateral relationship even as the regional security environment deteriorated. Washington became increasingly focused on the threats posed by North Korea's nuclear weapons program and a newly rising China. But a coalition government in Japan began to emphasize multilateral diplomacy and a focus on Asia over the alliance with the United States.
Alarmed by the potential for drift in the relationship, then assistant secretary of defense Joseph Nye launched a strategic review of the alliance. He published a reportin February 1995 that emphasized the importance of U.S. forward military presence in East Asia in a post-Cold War world.
Events in and around Japan added further urgency to the reconsideration of alliance purpose.
The rape of an Okinawan schoolgirl by U.S. servicemen in 1995 precipitated a political crisis in the U.S.-Japan alliance and increased pressure to reduce the U.S. military footprint on Okinawa.
Other events drove home the continued relevance of a robust forward U.S. military presence for regional stability. The Taiwan Strait Crisis of 1995-1996-in which China conducted missile tests around Taiwan in response to Taiwan president Lee Teng-hui's visit to the United States-prompted the United States to respond with aircraft carrier deployments to the Taiwan Strait.
An aerial view of the Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Okinawa prefecture, Japan in 2006. | Hiroaki Maeshiro/Bloomberg via Getty Images
An aerial view of the Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Okinawa prefecture, Japan in 2006. | Hiroaki Maeshiro/Bloomberg via Getty Images
In the context of these events, Washington launched a dialogue with Tokyo to define the future of the U.S.-Japan alliance and rebuild the consensus in both capitals about the relationship's importance.
This effort culminated in April 1996 with a joint security declarationthat affirmed the alliance as the "cornerstone . . . for maintaining a stable and prosperous environment for the Asia-Pacific region."
In that document, the two governments agreed to revise the 1978 guidelines for defense cooperation, to include cooperation for the first time in "situations that may emerge in the areas surrounding Japan"-code for a Korean contingency-signaling Japan's willingness to loosen its traditional emphasis on primarily its own defense to focus more on regional security.
In 1996, the governments also produced a blueprint for reducing the impact of the U.S. presence on Okinawa, including plans to relocate Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, which is located in a heavily populated area and thus is a symbol of local frustration with the U.S. military presence on the island.
[ 2000-2012 ]
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, marked the beginning of a new chapter in alliance cooperation.
In contrast to the Gulf War period, Japan under Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro moved quickly to support the United States after the attacks and passed special legislationto dispatch Maritime Self-Defense Force vessels to the Indian Ocean in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
A similar billwas passed after the onset of the Iraq War to allow the Self-Defense Forces to support reconstruction efforts under Operation Iraqi Freedom. Some 600 Ground Self-Defense Force personnel were deployed to Iraq to provide non-combat support to the war effort.
Both "special measures" laws were historic and facilitated a role for Japan in international security beyond its immediate region. Initially unpopular, both measures earned public support over time as Japan's contributions were recognized internationally.
The expanding role for Japan under Koizumi prompted the U.S. and Japanese governments to initiate a review of alliance roles, missions, and capabilities in a regional and global context.
The U.S.-Japan Security Consultative Committee or "2+2" process-meetings between the U.S. secretaries of state and defense and their Japanese counterparts-became the driver of progress in the alliance.
Joint statements in Februaryand October2005 outlined common strategic objectives for the alliance and added efforts to improve the international security environment as a third pillar for alliance roles and missions (in addition to the defense of Japan and situations surrounding Japan).
In May 2006, the two governments announced a new realignment planfor U.S. forces, including a plan to move approximately half of the 18,000 U.S. Marines stationed on Okinawa to Guam.
The effort to realign U.S. force posture stemmed from a desire to better position the United States to address international terrorism and other new global security challenges while reducing the impact on the Japanese people.
But Japanese concerns about the latter would test the alliance a few years later during a period of political transition in Japan.
In 2009, the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) wrested political power from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which had ruled for much of the postwar era.
Prime Minister Hatoyama Yukio was chosen by the DPJ as its first prime minister. He introduced the concept of an "East Asian Community" as the centerpiece of his foreign policy, placing greater emphasis on multilateral diplomacy to promote economic and security cooperation.
Hatoyama also sought to revise the 2006 realignment plan for U.S. forces and suggestedthat the entire U.S. Marine Corps presence on Okinawa be relocated off the island. Although neither proposal was realized, the process of revisiting alliance agreements was challenging for alliance managers.
Delegates from the United States and Japan give a post-meeting statement on May 1, 2006, following the finalization of the realignment plan of U.S. forces in Japan. | Alex Wong/Getty Images
Delegates from the United States and Japan give a post-meeting statement on May 1, 2006, following the finalization of the realignment plan of U.S. forces in Japan. | Alex Wong/Getty Images
Frictions over the alliance continued until the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011. That natural disaster cast the U.S.-Japan alliance in a new light as the U.S. and Japanese militaries coordinated large-scale humanitarian assistance and disaster relief effortsto support Japan's recovery.
By early 2012, the alliance was again on firm footing, and under Prime Minister Noda Yoshihiko the two governments successfully negotiated adjustmentsto the 2006 force posture plan, preserving plans to reduce the Marine Corps presence on Okinawa while changing the composition of units moving to Guam.
The need for Japan to strengthen deterrence in response to China's military ambitions and tensions in the South China Sea and East China Sea subsequently shaped defense policy debates, ultimately yielding new strategies released after the LDP returned to power in late 2012.
This coincided with a strategic decision on the part of the United States to focus more cohesively on regional affairs under President Obama's "rebalance to Asia," reviving a process of strategic alignment with profound implications for U.S.-Japan alliance cooperation.
[ 2012-2024 ]
Under Prime Minister Abe Shinzo, Japan unveiled its first National Security Strategyin 2013.
China's growing assertiveness in the South and East China Seas, combined with increasing frictions over Taiwan, prompted a shift in Japan's focus to the south and west.
China's growing assertiveness in the South and East China Seas, combined with increasing frictions over Taiwan, prompted a shift in Japan's focus to the south and west.
This strategy defined Japan's national interest in strengthening its own defense capabilities, the U.S.-Japan alliance, and partnerships with other like-minded partners in Asia to manage a rising China and shape the regional order.
The Abe government pushed through a reinterpretation of Article IX of the constitution to allow Japan to exercise the right of collective self-defense under limited circumstances.
It then prevailed in a contentious policy debate that resulted in a package of defense policy reforms in 2015to codify the reinterpretations and authorize expanded roles for the Self-Defense Forces in a contingency.
As a member of the United Nations, Japan already enjoyed the right of collective self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter, but since Yoshida, successive governments had chosen not to exercise that right.
Abe considered this step essential to enhancing Japan's role as an alliance partner, and though limited in scope, the 2015 reforms allowed Japan to provide direct support for U.S. military operations if an attack against the United States threatened Japan's survival.
The range of Japan's new contributions featured in revised guidelinesfor U.S.-Japan defense cooperation released that same year. The new guidelines enabled the two militaries to plan for a wider range of contingencies and strengthen interoperability between them.
The Birth of FOIP
Abe also established Japan as a regional leader. His government released a broad diplomatic strategy in 2016 known as the Free and Open Indo-Pacific (FOIP) strategy.
FOIP was designed to foster bilateral and multilateral interactions on political, security, and economic affairs while promoting regional institutions to support regional stability and prosperity.
Japan's blueprint for what it called "multilayered security cooperation" informed the regional strategies of the United States and several other nations, which all introduced their own FOIP visions to underwrite a free and open rules-based order.
Throughout the postwar era, Japan enhanced its defense capabilities and roles in the U.S.-Japan alliance incrementally in response to changes in the security environment.
But in many ways, the postwar constraints on Japanese defense policy remained in place even through the Abe era.
Delegates from Japan and the United States meet in Tokyo in October 2020, prior to Japan-U.S.-Australia-India Foreign Ministers Meeting, to affirm their commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific region. | David Mareuil/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Delegates from Japan and the United States meet in Tokyo in October 2020, prior to Japan-U.S.-Australia-India Foreign Ministers Meeting, to affirm their commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific region. | David Mareuil/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
The Russian invasion of Ukraine-and Beijing's support for Moscow-had a galvanizing effect on Japanese public opinion. In 2022, the government led by Prime Minister Kishida Fumio unveiled the second National Security Strategy, a new National Defense Strategy, and a buildup planto dramatically strengthen Japan's defense posture and enhance defense cooperation with the United States and other like-minded partners.
This ambitious agenda includes plans to nearly double the defense budget by 2027, invest for the first time in long-range counterstrike missiles and other capabilities to strengthen deterrence, and bolster Japan's defense industrial base.
The April 2024 Kishida-Biden summit in Washington clearly demonstrated a commitment to strengthen defense cooperationwith the United States. Kishida also has worked to deepen Japan's ties with other like-minded partners, including South Korea, Australia, the Philippines, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization(NATO).
These changes represent a fundamental departure from Japan's strategy at the onset of the Cold War, when pacifist principles, concerns about entrapment in military conflict, and a focus on economic power were the dominant features of Japanese strategic culture.
Japan and the United States are building an alliance that is more integrated bilaterally and with other partners to maintain stability and order in the Indo-Pacific.
Despite important constraints, including Article IX of its constitution, Japan will likely continue to move away from the Yoshida Doctrine and invest even more in defense to ensure the security of the nation and the region as a whole.
If the postwar history of the U.S.-Japan alliance is any guide, this process will continue to evolve in response to new challenges that could undermine that order in the future.
Click to explore the U.S.-Japan Alliance Database
Click to explore the U.S.-Japan Alliance Database
Made possible by support from the
government of Japan. The views expressed are those of the authors.
Christopher B. Johnstone, Senior Adviser and Japan Chair
Nicholas Szechenyi,Senior Fellow, Japan Chair, and Deputy Director for Asia
Leah Klaas,Research Assistant, Japan Chair
Michael J. Green, Sasae Kenichiro, Kitaoka Shinichi, Joseph S. Nye Jr., Sheila A. Smith, Mary Black, Nagatomi Ayumi, Shioyama Momo, Noah Van Horne
Design, management & production: Gina Kim
Design assistance: Sarah B. Grace &Gab K. De Jesus
Development: José Romero&Gab K. De Jesus
Cover & photo collages by: Gina Kim
Videos by: Cameron Glass& Mark Donaldson
Copyediting support by: Katherine Stark
Editorial & project oversight: Sarah B. Grace
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