
In this April 6, 2014 photo, members of a Japanese Self-Defence Forces honour guard march as they prepare to be inspected by US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel at the Defence Ministry in Tokyo.
Tokyo:
A government-appointed expert panel is submitting a report Thursday that will urge Japan to reinterpret its constitution so its troops could use force to defend other countries for the first time in the post-World War II era.
Japan maintains a military now only for its own defence, but Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is pushing for it to play a greater role in international security.
Panel members have said that a deteriorating regional security environment makes Japan's current ban on what is known as collective self-defence inadequate.
Opponents say the proposed reinterpretation would undermine the war-renouncing clause of Japan's constitution.
Abe will have to overcome doubts within the ruling coalition to win approval for collective self-defence.
Surveys show public opinion is mixed.
Japan maintains a military now only for its own defence, but Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is pushing for it to play a greater role in international security.
Panel members have said that a deteriorating regional security environment makes Japan's current ban on what is known as collective self-defence inadequate.
Opponents say the proposed reinterpretation would undermine the war-renouncing clause of Japan's constitution.
Abe will have to overcome doubts within the ruling coalition to win approval for collective self-defence.
Surveys show public opinion is mixed.
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