Embattled Japanese Minister of Defense Tomomi Inada yesterday said she was resigning after a series of gaffes, missteps and a cover-up at her ministry that have contributed to a sharp plunge in public support for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Inada, 58, an Abe protege who shares his conservative views and had been suggested as a possible future premier, had already expected to be replaced in a likely Cabinet reshuffle next week that Abe hopes would help rebuild his ratings.
Support for Abe has sunk below 30 percent in some polls due to scandals over suspected cronyism and a view among many voters that he and his aides took them for granted.
Photo: Reuters
Abe apologized “to the people from my heart,” in comments to reporters carried live on national television after Inada announced her resignation.
He said Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Fumio Kishida would add the defense portfolio to his duties to eliminate any gap at a time when Japan faces tough security challenges, such as from a volatile North Korea.
“I want to make every effort to maintain a high degree of vigilance and protect the security of the people,” Abe said.
Abe had drawn fire from both ruling and opposition party lawmakers for retaining Inada despite her perceived incompetence.
“He should have thrown Inada under the bus long ago... Doing so on the eve of a Cabinet reshuffle only looks like desperation,” Temple University Japan Asian Studies Department director Jeffrey Kingston said.
The resignation coincided with a report of an investigation into suspicions that defense ministry officials tried to hide logs showing worsening security in South Sudan, where Japanese troops joined in a US-led peacekeeping operation.
Critics said troop deployment in the dangerous environment violated conditions set for such activities in line with Japan’s pacifist constitution. No Japanese troops have died in combat since World War II and the growing chaos in South Sudan fueled concern.
The report on the cover-up concluded that laws, including one on public information disclosure, had been violated, but did not confirm a direct role for Inada in concealing the logs, a contention she has repeatedly denied.
However, the affair had hurt the credibility of the defense ministry and Self-Defense Forces (SDF), Inada said.
“As the minister in charge of the defense ministry and SDF, I feel my responsibility keenly,” she told a televised news conference.
Inada had also come under fire for a remark in a campaign speech that the military wanted voters to back a ruling party candidate in apparent violation of the SDF’s neutrality, and for ties to a school involved in a suspected cronyism scandal.
Abe, who returned to power in December 2012 promising to revive the economy and bolster defense, had been seen as likely to win a third term when his tenure ends in September next year, putting him on track to be Japan’s longest-serving prime minister.
However, the ratings plunge makes it more likely that Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) rivals could challenge him for the top party post — and the premiership.
Financial markets are taking events in stride.
“Until it gets to the point where Abe is going to resign, this is not affecting markets at all,” Ichiyoshi Asset Management chief fund manager Mitsushige Akino said.
The political turmoil has prompted some talk that Abe might call a snap general election before year end to take advantage of the opposition disarray and before popular Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike’s novice local party gathers momentum.
No lower house poll need be held until late next year.
“The aim would be to keep a majority and maintain the LDP government,” LDP veteran lawmaker Takeshi Noda told reporters this week, adding that some in the party opposed the move, fearing an election would surely cost the ruling bloc its two-thirds super majority in the lower house.
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