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International Relations April 21, 2026 4 min read Daily brief · #8 of 11

Japan approves scrapping a ban on lethal weapons exports in a change of its postwar pacifist policy

Japan's Cabinet approved a new defence export guideline on April 21, 2026, formally scrapping the longstanding ban on the export of lethal weapons — the most...


What Happened

  • Japan's Cabinet approved a new defence export guideline on April 21, 2026, formally scrapping the longstanding ban on the export of lethal weapons — the most significant shift in the country's postwar defence posture since the Three Principles on Arms Exports were established in 1967.
  • The new policy removes the restriction that previously limited arms exports to five non-combat categories: rescue, transport, alert, surveillance, and minesweeping equipment.
  • Under the revised framework, Japan is now permitted to export combat systems such as fighter jets, missiles, destroyers, and armed drones to partner nations.
  • The move enables Japan to participate in the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP) — a next-generation fighter jet developed jointly with the United Kingdom and Italy — and to sell completed combat platforms internationally.
  • China's foreign ministry condemned the decision as "reckless militarisation," while defence partners including Australia broadly welcomed the change as contributing to regional stability.

Static Topic Bridges

Japan's Article 9 and the Postwar Constitutional Framework

Article 9 of Japan's 1947 Constitution — adopted after World War II under US occupation — formally renounces war as a sovereign right and prohibits the maintenance of "war potential." It has been the legal and moral basis for Japan's pacifist defence posture for nearly eight decades. In practice, Japan maintains Self-Defense Forces (SDF) rather than a conventional military.

  • Article 9 states that "the Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation" and that "war potential will never be maintained."
  • The Constitution came into effect on May 3, 1947; Article 9 has never been formally amended.
  • Successive governments have reinterpreted Article 9 to allow defensive capabilities, then (in 2015) collective self-defense.
  • In 2022, Japan adopted three new security documents — the National Security Strategy, the National Defense Strategy, and the Defense Buildup Program — committing to doubling defence spending to 2% of GDP by fiscal year 2027.

Connection to this news: The Cabinet's 2026 guideline represents the latest in a series of reinterpretations that have progressively eroded Article 9's operational constraints without formal constitutional amendment — a pattern central to understanding Japan's evolving security posture.

Three Principles on Arms Exports (1967) and Their Evolution

Prime Minister Satō Eisaku established the Three Principles on Arms Exports in 1967, prohibiting weapons sales to: (1) communist bloc countries, (2) countries under UN Security Council arms embargo, and (3) countries involved or likely to be involved in armed conflict. In 1976, the government extended the spirit of the ban to effectively prohibit nearly all arms exports. In 2014, under Prime Minister Abe Shinzō, the Three Principles were replaced by "Three Principles on Transfer of Defence Equipment and Technology," loosening restrictions and permitting some exports for security cooperation.

  • The original 1967 Three Principles were a policy declaration, not a constitutional provision.
  • Post-2014 rules allowed limited exports in five non-lethal categories, but barred weapons intended for combat use.
  • The April 2026 Cabinet decision marks the final removal of the lethal weapons prohibition, enabling full arms commercialisation.
  • Japan's arms industry (companies such as Mitsubishi Heavy Industries) has historically been confined to domestic procurement, limiting economies of scale.

Connection to this news: The 2026 Cabinet guideline is the culmination of a three-step relaxation (1967 → 2014 → 2026) that tracks Japan's growing security assertiveness in response to North Korean missile tests, China's military build-up, and the Russia-Ukraine war.

GCAP (Global Combat Air Programme) and Japan's Strategic Partnerships

The Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP) is a trilateral next-generation stealth fighter jet initiative involving Japan, the United Kingdom, and Italy, announced in December 2022. The aircraft is intended to replace the UK's Typhoon and Japan's F-2 fighters by the mid-2030s.

  • GCAP was announced on December 9, 2022, coinciding with Japan's new National Security Strategy.
  • The joint development will be managed by a new international organisation, GIGO (GCAP International Government Organisation), headquartered in the UK.
  • Exporting the finished GCAP aircraft required Japan to lift its lethal weapons export ban — the 2026 guideline directly enables this.
  • Japan's participation in GCAP also signals a deepening of its security alignment with NATO member states.

Connection to this news: The arms export ban was the final legal barrier to Japan commercialising GCAP aircraft internationally; its removal unlocks the industrial and alliance rationale behind Japan's defence reform agenda.

Key Facts & Data

  • Three Principles on Arms Exports first established: 1967 (Prime Minister Satō Eisaku)
  • Japan's Constitution Article 9: in effect since May 3, 1947 — formally unamended
  • Previous permissible export categories: 5 (rescue, transport, alert, surveillance, minesweeping — all non-lethal)
  • New categories now permitted: fighter jets, missiles, destroyers, combat drones
  • Japan's defence budget target: 2% of GDP by fiscal year 2027 (from ~1% historically)
  • Japan's fiscal 2026 defence spending: approximately ¥10.6 trillion (~1.9% of GDP)
  • GCAP partners: Japan, United Kingdom, Italy — announced December 2022
  • China's reaction: "firmly resist Japan's reckless new-style militarisation"
  • Partner nations broadly welcoming: Australia and other regional allies
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. Japan's Article 9 and the Postwar Constitutional Framework
  4. Three Principles on Arms Exports (1967) and Their Evolution
  5. GCAP (Global Combat Air Programme) and Japan's Strategic Partnerships
  6. Key Facts & Data
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