This
weekend, the world will be treated to an unusual sight: Japanese prime
minister Shinzo Abe inspecting a military parade which will be
showcasing, among other things, nuclear-capable ballistic missiles. This
scene will not be taking place in Japan, which has rejected nuclear
weapons and whose constitution famously renounces war as a sovereign
right, but rather in India's foggy capital, New Delhi, near an iconic
British memorial commemorating the Indians killed in World War I and the
Third Anglo-Afghan War. The Indian government’s intention in inviting
Abe to be chief guest at its Republic Day parade is nothing if not
calculated. In fact, it is about as clear a signal that India seeks to
facilitate Japan’s emergence as a ‘normal’ military power.
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