The rhythm of history is not a metronome. It is the drumbeat of empires collapsing, the whisper of civilisations fading, the roar of new powers rising. Today, that rhythm carries a distinctly Japanese accent. Japan’s Defence Minister, Gen Nakatani, has stood before the world and declared it ‘critical’ for his nation to arm up. He deepens the UK-Japan security pact, a Global Combat Air Programme, a joint carrier deployment, and a quiet admission: the post-war pacifist experiment is over.
Let us dispense with the pieties. The 1947 Constitution, Article 9, was a magnificent ideal. It was also a luxury paid for by the American security umbrella. That umbrella is now fraying. America, under any president, is turning inward. Europe is paralysed by its own decadence. China is a revisionist power, North Korea a radioactive hermit, and the rules-based order is a museum piece. In such a world, what is a responsible government to do?
Nakatani’s warning is not mere sabre-rattling. It is the honest recognition of a civilisation facing a strategic vacuum. Japan has no nuclear deterrent. Its population is ageing. Its economy is stagnant. And yet it sits on the doorstep of the world’s most dangerous flashpoints: the Taiwan Strait, the East China Sea, the Korean Peninsula. The only rational response is to rebuild military capacity, and fast.
The UK-Japan pact is a fascinating development. Two island nations, both post-imperial, both struggling with identity, both realising that the liberal international order requires a backbone of steel. The Global Combat Air Programme, the Typhoon-Rafael successor, is a symbol of this. But symbols are not enough. The British have often been superb at making alliances that others die for; the Japanese have been superb at avoiding alliances altogether. Now they must meet in the middle.
Critics will say this is militarism reborn. They will evoke the ghosts of the 1930s, the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, the horrors of war. These critics are living in a fantasy. The Japan of 2024 is not the Japan of 1934. It is a democracy, a mature economy, a responsible global citizen. To deny it the tools of self-defence is to condemn it to irrelevance or worse. The real threat is not a resurgent Japanese militarism; it is a defenceless Japan surrounded by predators.
There is a deeper lesson here for the West. The fall of Rome was not a single event. It was a slow unwinding of confidence, a loss of will, a preference for comfort over survival. The British and the Japanese, of all people, should understand this. Both were once global powers. Both retreated. Both now face the same question: what are you willing to fight for?
The answer, for Tokyo at least, is clear. Arm up. Deepen alliances. Prepare for the worst. The age of innocence is over. The age of responsibility has begun. And if that means breaking a few post-war taboos, so be it. History does not forgive those who fail to adapt.
This is the Tokyo Doctrine. It is not aggressive. It is not belligerent. It is simply the recognition that in a world of wolves, it is better to be a bear than a sheep. The British should take note. Their own island is not as safe as they think. The Atlantic is a moat, but even moats can be crossed. The UK-Japan pact is a start, but only a start. The real work is at home: rebuilding the spirit of a nation that once ruled the waves, now content to drift with them.
Nakatani is right. The drumbeat is getting louder. Either we march to it, or we are marched over.









