Minister of Defense (Japan)
The Minister of Defense, or Bōei-shō, is the Cabinet of Japan member in charge of the Ministry of Defense. The current Minister of Defense is Tarō Kōno.
History
On 26 December 2007, the Government of Japan made the decision to upgrade its Defense Agency to the Ministry of Defense in the expectation to have a far-reaching effect on Japan's future military development. The defense policy that has been pursued by Japan is based on the "Basic Policy for National Defense", which was adopted by the Cabinet in May 1957.https://www.mod.go.jp/e/d_act/d_policy/pdf/english.pdf Japan's main goal of national defense is the prevention of indirect as well as direct aggression from outside enemies.The Japanese government made the upgrade from the Defense Agency to the Ministry of Defense with a ceremony that was attended by then Prime Minister Shinzō Abe and the then-new Minister of Defense Fumio Kyuma. The creation of the Ministry of Defense was in conjunction with Prime Minister Shinzō Abe's continued efforts to ensure a stronger image of the Japan Self-Defense Forces. The bill in which to upgrade the Defense Agency to the Ministry of Defense was approved by the House of Representatives in November 2007, and the House of Councillors in mid-December 2007. Minister Kyuma personally attended a session in the House of Councillors and gave a speech after the bill was approved.
In light of the Defense Agency being transformed into the Ministry of Defense, the JSDF was given the responsibilities of international operations, disaster relief and peacekeeping within the overseas locations.
On 11 September 2019, Taro Kono became the first high profile 'prime minister-ready' politician to head the Ministry of Defense. He has the strongest LDP factional backing of any defense minister thus far. His social media following is second only to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. He's a leading candidate for post-Abe premiership. Kono previously held the prominent role of foreign minister.
Chain of command
- 1. Prime Minister
- 2. Minister of Defense
- 3. Chief of Staff, Joint Staff
Structure
The Minister of Defense is advised on every concern related to the duties of the Japan Self-Defense Forces by the Chief of Staff, Joint Staff.
Ministers of Defense
Allied occupation of Japan
Following the end of World War II, the Armed Forces of the Empire of Japan were disbanded and US forces took control. From 1950 to 1952, the National Police Reserve led by Minister of State Takeo Ōhashi was formed. It was renamed as the National Safety Force in 1952. In 1952, the Coastal Safety Force, the waterborne counterpart of the National Police Reserve, was founded and led by the Commissioner of the Coastal Safety Force Tokutarō Kimura.Director general of the Defense Agency
These are the director generals of the Defense Agency. It is the predecessor of the Ministry of Defense which was established on 9 January 2007.- Tokutarō Kimura 1954
- Seiichi Ōmura 1954-1955
- Arata Sugihara 1955
- Shigemasa Sunada 1955
- Funada Naka 1955-1956
- Tanzan Ishibashi 1956-1957
- Nobusuke Kishi 1957
- Akira Kodaki 1957
- Juichi Tsushima 1957-1958
- Gisen Satō 1958-1959
- Shigejirō Inō 1959
- Munenori Akagi 1959-1960
- Masumi Esaki 1960
- Naomi Nishimura 1960
- Sensuke Fujieda 1961-1962
- Kenjirō Shiga 1962-1963
- Fukuda Tokuyasu 1963-1964
- Jun'ya Koizumi 1964-1965
- Raizo Matsuno 1965-1966
- Eikichi Kanbayashiyama 1966
- Kaneshichi Masuda 1966-1968
- Kiichi Arita 1968-1970
- Yasuhiro Nakasone 1970-1971
- Keiichi Masuhara 1971
- Naomi Nishimura 1971
- Ezaki Masumi 1971-1972
- Keiichi Masuhara 1972-1973
- Yamanaka Yasunori 1973-1974
- Sōsuke Uno 1974
- Michita Sakata 1974-1976
- Asao Mihara 1976-1977
- Shin Kanemaru 1977-1978
- Ganri Yamashita 1978-1979
- Enji Kubota 1979-1980
- Yoshizo Hosoda 1980
- Koji Omura 1980-1981
- Soichiro Ito 1981-1982
- Kazuho Tanigawa 1982-1983
- Kurihara Yoshiyuki 1983-1984
- Koichi Kato 1984-1986
- Kurihara Yoshiyuki 1986-1987
- Riki Kawara 1987-1988
- Kichirō Tazawa 1988-1989
- Taku Yamasaki 1989
- Jūrō Matsumoto 1989-1990
- Yozo Ishikawa 1990
- Yukihiko Ikeda 1990-1991
- Sohei Miyashita 1991-1992
- Toshio Nakayama 1992-1993
- Nakanishi Keisuke 1993
- Kazuo Aichi 1993-1994
- Atsushi Kanda 1994
- Tokuichiro Tamazawa 1994-1995
- Seishirō Etō 1995-1996
- Hideo Usui 1996
- Fumio Kyūma 1996-1998
- Fukushiro Nukaga 1998
- Hosei Norota 1998-1999
- Riki Kawara 1999-2000
- Kazuo Torashima 2000
- Toshitsugu Saito 2000-2001
- Gen Nakatani 2001-2002
- Shigeru Ishiba 2002-2004
- Yoshinori Ohno 2004-2005
- Fukushiro Nukaga 2005-2006
- Fumio Kyūma 2006-2007
Ministers with military experience
- Raizo Matsuno - served in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II and rose to rank of Lieutenant commander
- Yasuhiro Nakasone - served in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II and rose to rank of Lieutenant commander and worked as Paymaster
- Sōsuke Uno - served in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II and rose to rank of Second Lieutenant
- Soichiro Ito - served in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II and rose to rank of Second Lieutenant
- Shin Kanemaru - served briefly in the Kwantung Army as Sergeant in 1937-1938 and was discharged due to illness
- Satoshi Morimoto - served in Japan Air Self-Defense Force and rose to rank as Major
- Gen Nakatani - served in Japan Ground Self-Defense Force as platoon leader and instructor with rank of Lieutenant