The upper house of Japan's parliament has not yet made a decision on Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's controversial security bills on Wednesday. Once written into law, the controversial "war bills" could open a Pandora's box and push the island country away from its pacifist Constitution and toward a militaristic path.
Abe railroaded the bills through the lower house in July. And the approval from the upper house will give Abe the opportunity to fulfill the goal he set when he took office in December 2012, that is, to "lift the ban on collective self-defense, revise Japan-US defense cooperation guidelines and expand Japan's Self-Defense Forces' role overseas".
The security bills, if they become laws, will allow Japan's SDF to engage in conflicts overseas for the first time since World War II, as well as go into combat "under certain conditions" even if Japan itself is not attacked. This would be an obvious retrogression from the defensive defense policy which Japan has adhered to since World War II.
To make his case stronger, Abe has been playing up the "threats" faced by Japan. He and his cabinet ministers have echoed one another to raise a din over the "China threat" cliché, citing China's disputes with Japan over Diaoyu Islands while deliberately ignoring the fact that it was Japan that triggered the dispute.
At a joint news conference with visiting Communist Party of Vietnam leader Nguyen Phu Trongen on Monday, Abe issued a thinly veiled criticism of China over the disputes in the South China Sea and China's lawful reclamation project in its waters.
Despite his groundless accusations, Abe has not been able to fool even the Japanese people because ever since the controversial security bills were introduced they have been staging massive protests opposing his moves.
A poll published in Asahi Shimbun on Monday shows more than half of the respondents are against the security bills and the Abe government's approval rating has declined to 36 percent, the lowest since he took office.
Abe is hell-bent on setting up more obstacles on the road to reconciliation between Japan and its Asian neighbors, especially China and the Republic of Korea.
Abe is known for lending a deaf ear to what Japan's neighbors have to say about his unrepentant attitude toward history, but his rising unpopularity and Japanese people's vehement opposition to the security bills should be enough of a warning for him to not slip further in the wrong direction.