Japan's UN peacekeepers to train for rescue missions

A soldier with the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force at a simulated assault in Hawaii last month.
A soldier with the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force at a simulated assault in Hawaii last month. PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO • Japan will begin training soldiers to conduct rescue and military escort missions during United Nations (UN) peacekeeping operations, the government said, potentially embroiling its troops in overseas military actions for the first time since World War Two.

The training will begin this month for Self Defence Force units due to be deployed as peacekeepers in South Sudan in November, Defence Minister Tomomi Inada said yesterday.

"We want the Self Defence Force to contribute what it can within the constraints of the Constitution, so it is important that they train thoroughly," Ms Inada said outside Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's residence following a regular ministerial meeting.

Any decision to order Japanese troops on rescue missions would be left to the Cabinet.

The widening of Japan's military role in UN missions comes after Mr Abe's government implemented controversial security legislation in March that is seen as a step back from the post-war pacifist Constitution by allowing it to come to the aid of allies under attack and giving it a broader role overseas.

The decision to train troops to go on rescue missions and to take a more active role in base security during peacekeeping operations is one of the first substantive operational changes since the new laws came into force.

Japanese troops have been part of a UN mission in South Sudan since 2012. Around 350 military engineers in the capital Juba are rebuilding roads and other infrastructure in South Sudan.

Renewed fighting in July killed around 300 people, prompting Japan to evacuate some government aid workers and civilians.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on August 25, 2016, with the headline Japan's UN peacekeepers to train for rescue missions. Subscribe