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イラク派兵自衛隊から死者が出ることを何よりも心待ちにしている
露骨な政治利用主義者どものお話です……。
「反米ナショナリズム」を煽っておいて米国の日本叩きのネタを作って、
結果的に日本の対米従属をますます増進させようという珍太郎や売国政治屋
どもが、阿呆な思惑を対外宣伝して、実質的な“自虐回路”を準備中でござ〜い。
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http://news.www.infoseek.co.jp/politics/story.html?q=03kyodo2004030301001464&cat=38
自衛隊員死傷なら改憲進展 石原知事
(共同通信)[ 2004年3月3日13時24分 ]
【ロンドン3日共同】3日付の英紙フィナンシャル・タイムズによると、石原慎太郎東京都知事は、イラクに派遣されている自衛隊員が死傷すれば、国民は政府の下に結集し、憲法改正の動きが進展するとの考えを示した。
最近のインタビューで語ったとしているが、どのメディアかには触れていない。
石原知事は「日本の兵士が死亡するのを見れば国民は怒り、結束し、政府を支持するだろう」と言明。また、平和憲法見直しの動きについて「私はこれを支持する。われわれは米国の言いなりにならなくていいように憲法を変える」と語った。
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ASIA-PACIFIC: Death of Japanese troops in Iraq 'would spur reform'
By David Pilling in Tokyo
Financial Times; Mar 03, 2004
If Japanese ground troops dispatched to Iraq are killed or injured, public opinion will rally round the govern ment and shift in favour of constitutional reform, Shintaro Ishihara, governor of Tokyo, said.
The public has been wary of sending Self Defence Forces, the equivalent of an army under Japan's pacifist constitution, to Iraq in what is the country's biggest and most dangerous troop deployment since the second world war.
But with dozens of ground forces in place in southern Iraq and several hundred more likely to be dispatched during the next few months, opposition to the deployment has begun to soften.
A recent poll in the Asahi newspaper, which opposes Japanese involvement in Iraq, found that 44 per cent said they supported sending troops, up from 34 per cent two months ago. When polls were first conducted last year, up to 80 per cent were opposed.
"If we see Japanese soldiers killed, the public will be angry and unite, and support the government," said Mr Ishihara in a recent interview.
Mr Ishihara, considered an ardent nationalist, said he was in favour of troop deployment in Iraq and of recent decisions to adopt missile defence and to revise the pacifist constitution imposed on Japan by the US.
"I do support this. We are changing the constitution so that we are no longer at the beck and call of the US."
Mr Ishihara, often a sharp critic of Junichiro Koizumi, prime minister, thought Mr Koizumi would reap political dividends from the dispatch.
Until recently, the consensus was that casualties in Iraq would stiffen public resolve against the dispatch, potentially damaging the prospects of Mr Koizumi's Liberal Democratic party in this summer's upper house elections.
A senior government official close to Mr Koizumi agreed with Mr Ishihara's forecast. But he worried that Mr Koizumi may have exhausted his political reserves by galvanising a political consensus for the dispatch.
Mr Ishihara thought Iraq would be more damaging to the opposition Democratic party of Japan, which closed the gap on the LDP in last November's elections.
Naoto Kan, president of the DPJ, who opposes sending SDF forces to Iraq, said: "If Japan is attacked we can retaliate. But this is not a force that should be sent to foreign countries."
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