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Viewing cable 07TOKYO1414, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 03/30/07

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO1414 2007-03-30 10:52 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO9888
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #1414/01 0891052
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 301052Z MAR 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2222
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RUALSFJ/COMUSJAPAN YOKOTA AB JA//J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/COMPATWING ONE KAMI SEYA JA
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 2942
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 0482
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 3997
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 9822
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 1427
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 6399
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 2475
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 3773
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 TOKYO 001414 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
SUBJECT:  DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 03/30/07 
 
 
INDEX: 
(1) MSDF sailor takes home top secret information on Aegis 
destroyer 
 
(2) Editorial: Documents unveil government's involvement in Yasukuni 
Shrine's decision on enshrining Class-A war criminals 
 
(3) Mood of Abe administration: Abe antagonistic toward America's 
"past occupation of Japan" 
 
(4) Atmosphere surrounding the Abe administration; Aims at a 
beautiful country in cooperation with hawks; Liberals wary of 
restoring old ways 
 
(5) Sankei-sho column 
 
(6) Scramble for uranium getting fierce: Rising demand due to 
increase in construction of nuclear plants in China and India; Japan 
plans to expand procurement from Kazakhstan to 20 percent of its 
imports through agreement to be reached next month 
 
(Corrected copy) MSDF crewman quizzed over vessel data taken out 
 
ARTICLES: 
(1) MSDF sailor takes home top secret information on Aegis 
destroyer 
 
YOMIURI (Top Play) 
Evening, March 30, 2007 
 
An officer (33) of the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF), a 
crewmember of the destroyer Shirane based at the port of Yokosuka in 
Kanagawa Prefecture, was found to have taken home a floppy disk 
containing classified data. In this case, it was also found today 
that records about Aegis vessels, probably those pertaining to their 
performance and the like, were contained in the data. The 
performance, etc., of weapons provided by the United States, based 
on the Japan-US Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement, is classified 
as the "top defense secret" (tokubetsu bouei himitsu) among the 
categories classified by the Defense Ministry regarding defense 
intelligence. Should such intelligence be leaked outside, the case 
may infringe on the Intelligence Protection Law. Given this, 
investigative authorities are cautiously probing the case by 
analyzing the data taken out. 
 
According to the investigative authorities, the Kanagawa prefectural 
police found and seized the floppy disk containing classified data 
on a destroyer radar system and a hard disk when they searched the 
home of the petty officer second class in Yokosuka City, after his 
Chinese wife was arrested this January on suspicion of violating the 
immigration law. 
 
The hard disk was found to contain intelligence on Aegis ships 
deployed in Japan. Petty officers are not supposed to have access to 
such information. The investigative authorities are probing the MSDF 
intelligence-management system and from where the officer obtained 
the data. 
 
An Aegis destroyer has the state-of-the-art air-defense capability 
and is able to intercept more than 10 incoming airplanes or missiles 
simultaneously. The US developed the Aegis system designed to pursue 
and attack targets with a computer, so data on the performance of 
Aegis ships are regarded as extremely highly confidential. 
 
TOKYO 00001414  002 OF 009 
 
 
 
(2) Editorial: Documents unveil government's involvement in Yasukuni 
Shrine's decision on enshrining Class-A war criminals 
 
MAINICHI (Page 5) (Full) 
March 30, 2007 
 
The National Diet Library released the contents of a collection of 
documents regarding Yasukuni Shrine problems. The documents revealed 
that the former Health and Welfare Ministry and Yasukuni Shrine had 
held close negotiations on the topic of enshrinement of Class-A war 
criminals. 
 
In connection with the prime minister's annual visit to Yasukuni 
Shrine, controversy has raged at home and abroad over the propriety 
of the souls of Class-A war criminals enshrined along with the war 
dead. The government's view is that since Yasukuni Shrine, as a 
religious institution, decided to enshrine the Class-A criminals, 
the government can was its hands of the issue. The documents have 
revealed, however, that the Health and Welfare Ministry indeed was 
deeply involved in Yasukuni Shrine's decision-making on the 
enshrinement. We also have learned from the documents that the 
ministry in its negotiations with Yasukuni, cited its concern about 
negative public reactions to the enshrinement of war criminals. The 
ministry perhaps felt guilty about enshrining such criminals in 
light of the principle of separation of religion and politics. 
 
If that is the case, is it acceptable for the government to shift 
the responsibility for enshrining Class-A criminals solely to 
Yasukuni Shrine? The logical approach for the government would be to 
publicize all documents showing all the facts, including the 
released ones, and to then present its views to the public. 
 
In 1952, just after the US Occupation ended, separate resolutions 
calling for the release of war criminals were presented (and failed) 
in the House of Representatives and House of Councilors. According 
to the released documents, though, the process of enshrining war 
criminals did not track with the moves to pass such resolutions. The 
ministry and the shrine were both carefully watching the tide of 
public opinion. 
 
The released documents note that the former Health and Welfare 
Ministry proposed to Yasukuni Shrine in 1958 that consideration 
should be given to the possibility of enshrining B and C class 
criminals. It was also the ministry that called for a two-stage 
strategy to be taken to enshrine B and C class criminals without 
drawing attention to it, and then proceed to Class-A criminals 
afterward. Yasukuni Shrine included B and C class war criminals in 
the list of the war dead honored there in April and October of the 
following year. 
 
As it stands, the ministry treated the enshrinements of Class-A 
criminals and B and C class criminals as a set and took a two-stage 
strategic approach. 
 
In a general meeting of the shrine in December 1958, some 
participants suggested the possibility of enshrining Class-A war 
criminals in the future. Hearing this, Representative Shinzo 
Koizumi, former Keio University president, reportedly said with a 
sigh of relief, "You mean that a decision should be made here, don't 
you?" This episode shows that all shrine officials at that time were 
not necessarily in favor of enshrining war criminals. 
 
 
TOKYO 00001414  003 OF 009 
 
 
In the process of deciding to enshrine war criminals, the former 
Health and Welfare Ministry sent a list of names of those to be 
enshrined. In response, the shrine examines the list and makes the 
final decision. The ministry formed separate lists of Class-A 
criminals and B and C class criminals simultaneously, but it waited 
to present the list of Class-A criminals until 1966, eight years 
later. 
 
But Yasukuni Shrine did not immediately decide to enshrine the 
Class-A criminals. Three years later, the shrine at first decided 
with the ministry to consider it possible to enshrine Class-A 
criminals but not to disclose their enshrinement. In the following 
year, however, the shrine changed its mind and reserved a decision 
on the matter. This indicates that the shrine was opposed to 
enshrining Class-A war criminals. 
 
Fujimaro Tsukuba, grandson of the Meiji Emperor, was chief priest at 
that time. Giving consideration to Emperor Showa's (Hirohito) 
intention, Tsukuba reportedly was negative about enshrining Class-A 
war criminals. The newly released documents prove this fact. 
 
In October 1978, just after Chief Priest Tsukuba was replaced with 
Nagayoshi Matsudaira, Yasukuni Shrine secretly enshrined the souls 
of the 14 Class-A war criminals to join the war dead honored there. 
A memorandum recorded by then Imperial Household Agency Grand 
Steward Tomohiko Tomita, found last year, showed that Emperor Showa 
had expressed his strong displeasure when he heard of this 
development. What procedures did Matsudaira take to enshrine the war 
criminals? What negotiations were carried out between Yasukuni 
Shrine and the former Health and Welfare Ministry? The released 
documents do not refer to the process that led to deciding the 
enshrinement of the Class-A war criminals. We urge the government to 
bring the final details to light. 
 
(3) Mood of Abe administration: Abe antagonistic toward America's 
"past occupation of Japan" 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Excerpts) 
Eve., March 30, 2007 
 
Toru Hayano 
 
Yoshiaki Yoshimi (60), professor at Chuo University, has been 
frequently visited by Western journalists since the "comfort women 
resolution" was submitted to the US House of Representatives this 
January. 
 
They all ask Yoshimi: "Shinzo Abe is enthusiastic about resolving 
the abduction issue, but there is a contradiction in his attitude 
between the wartime comfort women and the abduction issue, isn't 
there?" 
 
As a researcher on "wartime comfort women", Yoshimi also finds 
commonality between the two issues. 
 
Wartime comfort women were unknown in the world until Etsuro Totsuka 
(65), currently a professor at Ryukoku University, denounced the 
Japanese government for having exploited women as "sex slaves" in 
February 1992 at a session of the United Nations Commission on Human 
Rights in Geneva. He called on the Japanese government to pay 
compensation and asked the US to serve as a mediator. 
 
"Mr. Abe is persistently pursuing the abduction issue, but he gives 
 
TOKYO 00001414  004 OF 009 
 
 
the former comfort women the brush-off. This attitude is viewed as a 
double standard. Mr. Abe may love the state, but he does not pay 
much attention to human beings," Totsuka said. 
 
The difference in treatment toward the "comfort women" issue between 
Japan and the US House of Representatives, as well as American 
journalism, may come from a gap in the awareness of human rights 
between Japan and the United States. 
 
Abe and the state: Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications 
Yoshihide Suga (58) became acquainted with Abe in the Parliamentary 
League of Junior Lawmakers to Consider Japan's Future and Historical 
Education, a panel to deal with history textbooks. "Our friendship 
actually started with the time North Korea's cargo ship, Man Gyong 
Bong, was barred from calling at Japanese ports. Six lawmakers 
including Ichita Yamamoto, Taro Kono, and I moved to create a bill. 
Mr. Abe, then deputy chief cabinet secretary, backed our move," Suga 
said. 
 
Suga graduated from a senior high school in Akita Prefecture and 
came to Tokyo as part of a group employment. He worked at a 
cardboard factory, but one day, he made up his mind to go on to the 
next stage of education. While working, he went to Hosei University, 
worked as a secretary to a politician, served as a Yokohama City 
Assembly member, and then finally won a Diet seat. "I feel nostalgic 
for Ueno Station," Suga said. In the last Liberal Democratic Party 
(LDP) presidential election, Suga worked together with his fellow 
lawmaker, Yuji Yamamoto (54), currently state minister in charge of 
financial services, organized the "parliamentary group for a second 
chance" and helped Abe. Yamamoto said: "The Abe cabinet emerged as 
one of the inevitabilities of history. The Constitution and the 
Basic Education Law are likened to the body framework of a human 
being. The public sees the limits of the current Constitution and 
the current Basic Education Law. What (Mr. Abe) is trying to do is 
to restructure Japan into a normal country." 
 
I told Yamamoto regarding comfort women that it seemed unnecessary 
for Abe to stress, "There was no evidence to prove coercion." 
Yamamoto told me: "He gets so upset about such a thing." 
 
Tokyo University Prof. Takashi Mikuriya (55) is an expert on 
political history. Last year, he visited Yamaguchi Prefecture's 
Tabuse Town, the birthplace of Abe's grandfather, Nobusuke Kishi, 
and conducted research on Kishi's diaries and letters at the town's 
museum. "I have yet to sort out the many documents I had collected 
at the time. When Kishi went abroad, he sent a picture postcard 
every day to his wife." Kishi formed his "anti-US" attitude while he 
was in the Sugamo Prison (as a Class-A war criminal), but he was a 
pragmatist who was able to comply with America's wishes even while 
confronting it. 
 
The point Mikuriya feels somewhat "dangerous" about Abe is that he 
sticks to the idea of amending the Constitution on the grounds that 
the Constitution was created when Japan was under America's 
occupation. Mikuriya noted: 
 
"The LDP's liberal lawmakers think that the Occupation turned out 
all for the best. But Mr. Abe has insisted that that was bad for 
Japan. For the US, which has now lost confidence in its foreign 
policy, the occupation of Japan is one of a few success stories. 
America seems to be wondering why the grandson of Kishi, which was 
backed by the US, is saying such things." 
 
 
TOKYO 00001414  005 OF 009 
 
 
In addition to the current gap in perceptions about "wartime comfort 
women," if still another gap emerges regarding Japan's historical 
perception of the American occupation of Japan, the Abe 
administration may find itself forced to follow the path to 
isolation. 
 
(4) Atmosphere surrounding the Abe administration; Aims at a 
beautiful country in cooperation with hawks; Liberals wary of 
restoring old ways 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Full) 
Evening, March 29, 2007 
 
By Aihiko Morikawa 
 
Whenever he meets foreigners, New Komeito Representative Akihiro 
Ota, 61, hurls these questions at them: "Is Japan a beautiful 
country?" and "What is beautiful?" Behind these questions lies Ota's 
desire to fully understand Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's vision of 
creating a beautiful country. 
 
Ota's answer to his own question includes the lifelong employment 
system, the national health insurance program, and the spirit to 
save the poor. 
 
Ota won a Diet seat for the first time in 1993 along with Abe after 
serving as a Komei Shimbun reporter and a Soka Gakkai Youth Division 
chief. As a peace-loving political party, the New Komeito has been 
giving special attention to low-income earners." Ota said: "Japanese 
people are losing such spiritual values as helping each other and 
caring for others. I would like to see the prime minister spell out 
specific ways to restore those values." 
 
Abe explained a beautiful country this way at the Diet: 
 
"Many foreigners praised Japan from the Meiji through Taisho eras. 
Albert Einstein underlined the need to maintain humbleness and pure 
and calm minds. I would like to create a country filled with people 
who behave in a simple and beautiful manner." 
 
The feudalistic way of thinking was very much alive in the Meiji 
(1868 - 1912) and Taisho (1912 - 1926) eras. Abe, who idealizes 
those periods, seems to equate a beautiful country with restoring 
the old ways. 
 
The New Komeito, which has endorsed revising the Fundamental Law of 
Education and upgrading the Defense Ministry to ministry status has 
arguably some liberal overtones. Ota's unique interpretation of a 
beautiful country also seems to reflect the party's desire to remain 
in the ruling camp. 
 
LDP General Council Chairman Yuya Niwa, 62, comes from a liberal 
faction named Kochikai that produced such prime ministers as Hayato 
Ikeda and Masayoshi Ohira. Niwa led his faction to back Abe in last 
year's LDP presidential race, knowing that he is a hawk. He had to 
acknowledge Abe's popularity. 
 
In late February, Niwa visited China where he had a heated debate 
with Vice Foreign Minister Dai Bingguo that went as follows: 
 
Dai: "Japan must not fall behind the United States in normalizing 
relations with North Korea." 
 
 
TOKYO 00001414  006 OF 009 
 
 
Niwa: "About 90 percent of the Japanese people want a settlement of 
the abduction issue. A democracy adopts a policy that reflects 
national opinion." 
 
Making a concession on the abduction issue would be suicidal for the 
Abe administration, Niwa thought. He also muttered: "If Prime 
Minister Abe had visited Yasukuni Shrine soon after assuming office, 
I wouldn't have been this eager to support him." 
 
He added: "People criticize the Abe administration as a rightist 
government. But in view of improved relations with China and South 
Korea and the administration's response to the social disparity 
issue, such criticism is irrelevant." He seems to be trying to 
generate the impression that the liberal forces have been 
instrumental in preventing the Abe administration from tilting 
toward the right. 
 
Rightist journalism is visibly unhappy with Abe, who has won 
liberals over to his side. A move is widespread in the LDP calling 
for a review of the Kono Statement on the so-called wartime comfort 
women. A non-mainstream member, Koichi Kato, 67, is particularly 
alarmed by the moves of Nippon Kaigi (Japan Conference). The Japan 
Conference was established in 1997 on the slogan of constitutional 
revision, adoration of the Imperial Family, a negative view on the 
International Military Tribunal for the Far East and the like. 
Former Chief Justice Toru Miyoshi, 79, chairs the conference. The 
organization comprising rightist business leaders, including Ryuzo 
Sejima, 95, and shrine-connected individuals has growing influence 
over Diet members and local lawmakers. The group enthusiastically 
pushed for a revision of the Fundamental Law of Education. 
 
There is a group of Diet members sympathizing with the Japan 
Conference. Takeo Hiranuma, 67, who is close to Abe, chairs the 
group. Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Hakubun Shimomura once served 
as the group's secretary general. 
 
Kato said, "I should make moves once the Abe administration crosses 
the limit line." The new YKK trio composed of Taku Yamasaki, 70, 
Makoto Koga, 66, and Koichi Kato has repeatedly met recently. 
 
What is Kato's limit line? 
 
"Local communities are the starting point for the conservative LDP 
group.  If the Abe administration tries to ignore local communities 
by, for instance, bringing competition to public schools, we will 
have to rise up against it." 
 
Japan Research Institute Chairman Jitsuro Terashima, 59, published 
last month a book titled Why Do the Business Leaders Have to Be 
Sensitive to Peace? (Toyo Keizai Shimpo-sha). Terashima, who spent 
many years in the United States as a Mitsui & Co. executive, is a 
global-minded liberal opinion leader. 
 
"If the Abe administration is trying to break away from the postwar 
regime to return to the prewar authoritarian system, it is a grave 
misconception. It has to give thought to the parts to look back on 
with pride as well as to the elements leading to the coming age." 
 
Is the Abe administration going to follow the policy course 
encompassing liberal forces, or leaned toward the authoritarian 
system? Abe is wavering between the two. The Japanese public holds 
the key. 
 
 
TOKYO 00001414  007 OF 009 
 
 
(5) Sankei-sho column 
 
SANKEI (Page 1) (Abridged) 
March 26, 2007 
 
Japan-US relations have somehow become strange. The United States, 
which must be fully aware of the importance of the abduction issue 
to Japan, has made a series of concessions to North Korea, reversing 
its hard-line stance. Reportedly, the contents of a "comfort women" 
resolution presented to the US Congress are identical to the claims 
asserted by anti-Japanese Chinese organizations. 
 
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President George W. Bush must wipe 
away the ill-will between the two countries during Abe's visit to 
the US in late April. 
 
When then Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone visited the United States 
in January 1983, the situation was similar. Washington was extremely 
unhappy with Tokyo over certain trade and defense issues. 
 
Motoo Shiina, who had the mission of doing the spadework, tried to 
convey Nakasone's true intention to a presidential assistant he 
knew. A summit was realized in the form of the US president 
unilaterally listening to Nakasone's soliloquy, according to 
Shiina's memoir. Shiina in later years often found himself busy 
repairing Japan-US relations whenever they grew strained. To some 
extent, the current situation is ascribable to the departures from 
the Bush administration of such Japan experts as former National 
Security Council Asian Affairs Director Michael Green, who once 
served as Shiina's private secretary, and former Deputy Secretary of 
State Richard Armitage. 
 
Shiina passed away on March 16, 2007, after serving both in the 
Lower and Upper Houses for a total of 22 years, during which time he 
never assumed a major post, such as cabinet minister or 
parliamentary vice minister. Newspapers carried small obituaries on 
Shiina a week after his death as if to reflect his unassuming 
personality. 
 
(6) Scramble for uranium getting fierce: Rising demand due to 
increase in construction of nuclear plants in China and India; Japan 
plans to expand procurement from Kazakhstan to 20 percent of its 
imports through agreement to be reached next month 
 
NIHON KEIZAI (Page 3) 
March 30, 2007 
 
A scramble for uranium, fuel used for nuclear power generation, is 
spreading throughout the world. Amid newly emerging countries, such 
as China and India pressing ahead construction of nuclear plants, 
many countries are moving to secure uranium early, alarmed about the 
prospect that it will become difficult to procure the material in 
the future. Japan intends to increase imports from Kazakhstan, a 
major uranium-producing country. Other major countries have also 
begun making efforts to secure uranium interests in the former USSR 
and African nations. 
 
It has become clear that Japan and Kazakhstan have entered final 
coordination of views in order to make a new uranium 
supply-procurement plan. In order to counter an intensifying contest 
to obtain uranium, the plan aims at raising the ratio of Japan's 
uranium import from that nation from the current 1 percent or so to 
around 20 percent. The governments of the two countries are expected 
 
TOKYO 00001414  008 OF 009 
 
 
to reach agreement shortly. 
 
Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Akira Amari will visit 
Kazakhstan with executives of 20 nuclear plant-related companies in 
late April. The two countries will issue a joint statement noting a 
reciprocal relationship under which Japan transferring uranium 
process technology to Kazakhstan in return for Kazakhstan signing a 
contract with Japanese companies to supply uranium to them. 
 
Japan also aims at obtaining the right to develop uranium mines 
there as well as to directly purchase the product. A stable 
supply-procurement plan is advantageous to both sides. Japan will 
likely become able to purchase about 20 percent of uranium it uses 
over the medium term. 
 
Kazakhstan's uranium reserve ranks second in the world. One-fifth of 
the uranium reserves in the world is said to be located in 
Kazakhstan. Japan's uranium consumption accounts for about 10 
percent of the global consumption. If the plan realizes, Kazakhstan 
will become the third largest uranium supplier to Japan, following 
Australia and Canada. 
 
Uranium prices are skyrocketing due to the increased demand on the 
global market. Japan has the pressing need for diversifying 
suppliers because of concern over short supply of the product in the 
future. Visits to Kazakhstan by the METI minister and 
businesspersons will be the first government-private sector 
diplomacy intended to obtain uranium. Members of the delegation will 
include utility companies, such as TEPCO, Mitsubishi Nuclear Fuel 
Co., a leading nuclear fuel company, Toshiba Corp., which undertakes 
nuclear plant facilities, and the Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National 
Corporation. Most companies are expected to send CEOs. 
 
Among Japanese companies, Sumitomo Corporation and Kansai Electric 
Power Co. have already decided to begin test production in 
Kazakhstan starting at year's end. Itochu Corp. has also signed a 
uranium procurement contract with National Atomic Company 
Kazatomprom. The agreement between the governments of the two 
countries this time will in a way give approval to the 
ever-expanding uranium transactions between the two countries. The 
Japanese government will also provide assistance through trade 
insurance. 
 
(Corrected copy) MSDF crewman quizzed over vessel data taken out 
 
YOMIURI (Page 39) (Full) 
March 30, 2007 
 
A Maritime Self-Defense Force petty officer second class, who is a 
crewman of the Shirane, a destroyer under the command of MSDF Escort 
Flotilla 1, headquartered in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture, has 
taken home a floppy disk that recorded information including data 
about a destroyer's radar systems, sources revealed yesterday. The 
floppy disk is believed to contain information classified by the 
Defense Ministry. Classified information is prohibited from being 
taken out. 
 
According to investigative authorities and other sources, Kanagawa 
prefectural police discovered the floppy disk at the petty officer's 
home when the police searched his home early this year to charge his 
Chinese wife with a violation of the Immigrant Control and Refugee 
Recognition Law. 
 
 
TOKYO 00001414  009 OF 009 
 
 
The disk contained data about radar systems and radio frequencies. 
The petty officer is now under investigation. 
 
The Defense Ministry's classified information is categorized into 
three stages-"top secret (kimitsu)," "secret (gokuhi)," and 
"confidential (hi)" Leaking classified information conflicts with 
the Self-Defense Forces Law. 
 
SCHIEFFER