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Japan's vote for Abe could worsen prospects for peace with N Korea, China

Many in Japan anticipate the role of Japan's military will soon change to respond to North Korea

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Photo: AP/PTI
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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe points to a reporter during a press conference at his Liberal Democratic Party headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: AP/PTI

Nicole L Freiner | The Conversation
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe gambled by calling a snap election – and he has won big.
Voters handed Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party a sweeping victory in the Oct. 22 balloting for Japan’s House of Representatives.
The call for the election came in late September after North Korea had just fired another test missile, with its longest delivery system yet. Over the past months, North Korea has tested six missiles, with each test either falling into the Japan Sea or passing over Japan to land in the Pacific. This latest missile flew over Japan’s northernmost island

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