The Liberal Democratic Party's council on defense policy urged the government to immediately start studying ways to bolster Japan's capability to intercept missiles with a system such as the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD system, that the U.S. And Seoul have agreed to install in South Korea.
The panel cited a "new level of threat" from North Korea, which fired four missiles this month, three of them landing inside Japan-claimed exclusive economic waters.
The panel said the government should immediately start studying a possibility of introducing THAAD and the shore-based Aegis missile defense system, among other equipment, while pursuing upgrades to two existing missile defense systems ship-to-air SM-3 interceptors and the ground-based PAC-3.
Japan is bound by its postwar pacifist constitution, and the proposal does not call for a first-strike capability.
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Japan since its World War II defeat has limited its military to self-defense, while relying on the US "nuclear umbrella" and its 50,000 troops stationed in Japan under a bilateral security alliance as deterrence.
Japan's defence budget has steadily risen over the past five years under Abe, who ended a decade of defense budget cuts. The annual increase is currently just over 2 per cent, and Abe says he is ignoring a customary cap of 1 per cent of GDP.
The panel noted that North Korea's test-firing of missiles in the past year demonstrates advancing technology, with a capability to launch from a mobile facility or submarine, use solid fuel, as well as fired to a high-altitude trajectory which makes it harder to trace and respond.
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