Ministry of Defense (Japan)

Ministry of Defense
Japan

Ministry of Defense Headquarters
Agency overview
Formed January 9, 2007
Preceding Agency Japanese Defense Agency
Jurisdiction Government of Japan
Headquarters 5-1 Ichigaya-honmuracho, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo
Employees 22,721 civilian staff (2010)
Annual budget 4.7 trillion yen
Ministers responsible Gen Nakatani, Minister of Defense
Akira Sato, Senior Vice-Minister
Kenji Harada, Parliamentary Secretary of Defense
Hirotaka Ishikawa, Parliamentary Secretary of Defense
Masanori Nishi, Administrative Vice-Minister
Child agency Japan Self Defense Forces
Website http://www.mod.go.jp/e/index.html

The Ministry of Defense (防衛省 Bōei-shō) is a cabinet-level ministry of the Government of Japan. It is headquartered in Shinjuku, Tokyo, and is the largest organ of the Japanese government: in 2009, fixed personnel numbered 271,094, including 248,303 military personnel. The Ministry of Defense, as cabinet-level ministry, is required by Article 66 of the constitution to be completely subordinate to civilian authority. Its head is the Minister of Defense. Before its transition to a cabinet-level ministry, it was the Japanese Defense Agency (防衛庁 Bōei-chō), an agency of the Cabinet Office.

History

The Imperial Japanese Army Academy in Ichigaya, Tokyo(市ヶ谷陸軍士官学校), built by the second French Military Mission to Japan, on the ground of today's Ministry of Defense (1874 photograph).

The Ministry of Defense is headquartered in Ichigaya, Shinjuku, Tokyo, on a site which housed the Imperial Japanese Army Academy (陸軍士官学校), built in 1874, the GHQ of the Imperial Japanese Army before and during World War II, and of the Ground Self-Defense Force following the war. The Japanese Defense Agency was established on July 1, 1954. Until May 2000, it was based in Akasaka: this land is now occupied by the Tokyo Midtown.

The Ministry of Defense Agency is required by Article 66 of the constitution to be completely subordinate to civilian authority. Its head has the rank of minister of state. He is assisted by two vice ministers, one parliamentary and one administrative; the Defense Facilities Bureau; and the internal bureaus. The highest figure in the command structure is the prime minister, who is responsible directly to the Diet. In a national emergency, the prime minister is authorized to order the various components of the SDF into action, subject to the consent of the Diet. In times of extreme emergency, that approval might be obtained after the fact.[1]

In July 1986, the Security Council was established. The council is presided over by the prime minister and includes the ministers of state specified in advance in Article 9 of the Cabinet Law; the foreign minister, the finance minister, the chief cabinet secretary, the chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, the director general of the Defense Agency, and the director general of the Economic Planning Agency. The chairman of the Security Council also can invite the chairman of the Joint Staff Council and any other relevant state minister or official to attend. Replacing the National Defense Council, which had acted as an advisory group on defense-related matters since 1956, the Security Council addresses a wider range of military and nonmilitary security issues, including basic national defense policy, the National Defense Program Outline, the outline on coordinating industrial production and other matters related to the National Defense Program Outline, and decisions on diplomatic initiatives and defense operations.[1]

The internal bureaus, especially the Bureau of Defense Policy, Bureau of Finance, and the Bureau of Equipment, are often headed by officials from other ministries and are the main centers of power and instruments of civilian control in the Defense Agency. The Bureau of Defense Policy is responsible for drafting defense policy and programs, for determining day-to-day operational activities, and for information gathering and analysis in the SDF. The Bureau of Finance is instrumental in developing the Defense Agency budget and in establishing spending priorities for the Defense Agency and the SDF. The Bureau of Equipment, organized into subunits for each of the military services, focuses on equipment procurement. Before any major purchase is recommended to the Diet by the Defense Agency, it has to be reviewed by each of these bureaus.[1]

Below these civilian groups are the uniformed Self Defense Forces (SDF). Its senior officer is the chairman of the Joint Staff Council, a body that included the chiefs of staff of the ground, maritime, and air arms of the Self-Defense Forces. Its principal functions are to advise the director general and to plan and execute joint exercises. The three branches maintain staff offices to manage operations in their branches. Although rank establishes echelons of command within the SDF, all three branches are immediately responsible to the director general and are coequal bodies with the Joint Staff Council and the three staff offices.[1]

This structure precludes the concentration of power of the pre-1945 Imperial General Staff (and the Supreme War Council) general staffs, but it impedes interservice coordination, and there are few formal exchanges among commanders from various branches. Moreover, some dissatisfaction has been reported by highranking officers who feel they have little power compared with younger civilian officials in the bureaus, who most often have no military experience. To rectify this situation and to increase input by the SDF in policy matters, in the early 1980s the Joint Staff Council was enlarged to establish better lines of communication between the internal bureaus and the three staff offices. A computerized central command and communications system and various tactical command and communications systems were established, linking service and field headquarters with general headquarters at the Defense Agency and with one another.[1]

In the 1980s, efforts were also under way to facilitate a clear and efficient command policy in the event of a crisis. The government stood by the principle that military action was permitted only under civilian control, but in recognition that delay for consultation might prove dangerous, ships of the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) began to be armed with live torpedoes, and fighter-interceptors were allowed to carry missiles at all times. Although aircraft had long been allowed to force down intruders without waiting for permission from the prime minister, ships were still required to receive specific orders before interdicting invading vessels. The Defense Agency had recommended drawing up more complete guidelines to clarify what action SDF combat units could take in emergencies.

Cooperation between the SDF and other civilian agencies in contingency planning is limited. No plans exist to ensure the support of civilian aircraft and merchant fleets in times of crisis, even though the SDF transportation capabilities are generally judged inadequate. In 1990 legislation was being studied to provide the SDF with the ability to respond in emergency situations not specifically covered by Article 76 of the Self-Defense Forces Law.

SDF training includes instilling a sense of mission. Personnel are provided with the scientific and technical education to operate and maintain modern equipment and with the physical training necessary to accomplish their missions.

Modern equipment is gradually replacing obsolescent matériel in the SDF. In 1987, the Defense Agency replaced its communications system (which formerly had relied on telephone lines of the Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation) with a microwave network incorporating a three-dimensional transmission system using a communications satellite. Despite efforts to increase stocks, however, supplies of ammunition and maintenance and repair parts in 1990 remained at less than satisfactory levels.

The Diet had passed into law the change of status of the Defense Agency to a Cabinet-level Defense Ministry.[2] The Diet's upper house had voted by a majority, including the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, to amend the change.[3] Bills on transition to the Ministry of Defense became laws on December 15, 2006. Only the Japanese Communist Party and the Social Democratic Party opposed the change, claiming that it can lead Japan into a future war.[3] The MOD was formally established on January 9, 2007, taking its present name and status as a ministry.[4] Subsequently, its Defense Facilities Administrative Agency was dissolved and integrated into the MOD.[5]

In July 2007, the MOD building was attacked by a 21-year-old right-wing activist, who threw a Molotov cocktail in the direction of the building, after forcing his way through the main gate.[6]

Ministers

The Ministers in the Ministry of Defense are as follows:

Senior Officials

Special Advisors

The Special Advisor to the Minister of Defense is the senior policy advisor to the Minister of Defense.

Vice Minister and other officials

The Vice Minister of Defense is the senior civil servant at the Ministry of Defense. Vice Minister role is to coordinate the affairs of the ministry, and supervise the affairs of the bureaus and organs of the Ministry.

Chiefs of Staff

The Chief of Staff of the Joint Staff is the highest-ranking military officer of the Japan Self-Defense Forces, and the senior military advisor to the Minister of Defense and the Government. He is supported by the Vice Chief of Staff of the Joint Staff and by the chiefs of staff of the three services of Self Defense Forces. He is appointed by the Minister of Defense, approval by the Cabinet of Japan.

Organization

The Ministry of Defense includes a number of organizations:

Internal Bureaus(内部部局)
Councils, etc.(審議会等)
Facilities, etc.(施設等機関)
Extraordinary Organs(特別の機関)
Common Institutions(共同の機関)
Common Units(共同の部隊)
Local Branch Bureaus(地方支分部局)
Examples: Okinawa Defense Bureau (沖縄防衛局)
Naha Regional Defense Facilities Administration Bureau (那覇地方防衛施設局)
Incorporated Administrative Agencies(独立行政法人)

See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ministry of Defense (Japan).

Coordinates: 35°41′35″N 139°43′41″E / 35.693°N 139.728°E