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米軍部とCIAが、日本政府に、自衛隊を米国の意のままに対外派兵できる恒久法を制定するよう圧力をかけている
下記は、米国のファシズム体制を批判しつつ、この対日圧力を嘆いている
或るアメリカ人のコメントである。
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Gates backs idea of permanent law for SDF dispatch abroad
I find this sadly ironic
The US CIA urging Japan to enter the world of foreign military action and
involvement - -looking favorably on a proposal to make it un-necessary to get
legislative approval for any action outside of Japan.
Would seem to me that the US in fact needs to return to its Constitution and
follow the tighter Japanese approach - not encourage its change. And using
the coy euphemistic term "international cooperative efforts"... is so typically
disingenuous and diversionary..
We should demand that our ironically imperial presidents - that have fought
undeclared wars, bombed countries, embargoed or stopped ships, spied on,
assassinated, fought so called insurgencies and everything from commies to
islamo-fascist boogie-men; without a shred of legal approval from the legislative
branch could use a little Japanese style restraint, debate, and forethought.
Next we will be encouraging the Japanese to develop nuclear weapons ....
We are definitely not exporting the best of American ideals and character.
Peace, Hugs, and Purrs,
Carolyn Rose Goyda
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
下記がこの動きを伝える記事
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http://www.japantoday.com/jp/news/421321
Gates backs idea of permanent law for SDF dispatch abroad
Saturday, November 10, 2007 at 07:30 EST
TOKYO — U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates expressed his support Friday for Japan enacting a permanent law that would enable the Self-Defense Forces to be deployed overseas as needed. Gates called on Tokyo to maintain its payments for hosting U.S. military bases in Japan, resume the country's refueling activities in the Indian Ocean as quickly as possible and increase its defense budget.
On the envisaged permanent law, which Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda has expressed his willingness to legislate, Gates said he heard with interest what his Japanese counterpart Shigeru Ishiba explained to him, and found that such a law would make it easier for Japan to play an international role. "I was intrigued by the defense minister's proposal...about seeking a general law so that every time a decision needed to be made on Japanese participation in some kind of international cooperative efforts, it did not require any individual piece of legislation," he said.
© 2007 Kyodo News.
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