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The Japanese Iraq Reconstruction and Support Group〔(Fresh troops for southern Iraq. ) Retrieved on December 5, 2008.〕〔(Australia Deploys More Troops to Iraq. ) Retrieved on December 4, 2008.〕 or also known as the refers to a battalion-sized, largely humanitarian contingent of the Japan Self-Defense Forces that was sent to Samawah, Southern Iraq in early January 2004 and withdrawn by late July 2006. However, the last JASDF forces left Kuwait on December 18, 2008. Their duties had included tasks such as water purification, reconstruction and reestablishment of public facilities for the Iraqi people.〔(Prime Minister Koizumi Encourages Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) to be Dispatched to Iraq. ) Retrieved on January 27, 2008.〕 ==Background== The Koizumi administration originally ordered the controversial formation and deployment of the JIRSG at the request of the United States. This marks a significant turning point in Japan's history, as it represents the first foreign deployment of Japanese troops since the end of World War II, excluding those deployments conducted under United Nations auspices. Public opinion regarding the deployment was sharply divided, especially given that Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan prohibits the use of military forces unless for self-defence purposes (operating in Iraq seemed, at best, tenuously connected to that mission). In order to legalize the deployment of Japanese forces in Samawah, the Koizumi administration legislated the Humanitarian Relief and Iraqi Reconstruction Special Measures Law on December 9, 2003 in the Diet, even though the opposition firmly opposed it. Two Japanese diplomats were shot and killed near Tikrit, Iraq on November 29, 2003 while preparations for the deployment were in their final stages.〔(USATODAY.com – Two Japanese diplomats killed in Iraq )〕 In early April 2004, three Japanese- a journalist and two aid workers- were kidnapped, but they were released several days later on April 15.〔(Japanese hostage trio freed in Iraq | The Japan Times Online )〕 The following day, another two Japanese- an aid worker and a journalist- were kidnapped and released within 24 hours.〔(USATODAY.com – Two remaining Japanese hostages freed in Iraq )〕 The kidnappers of the original three had threatened to burn the hostages alive if Japanese troops were not removed from Iraq within three days. A spokeswoman for the Islamic Clerics Committee, which negotiated their release, said that growing public calls in Japan for the SDF troops to be withdrawn from Iraq led to the release of three Japanese. In a statement released on July 20, 2004, Al Zarqawi warned Japan, Poland and Bulgaria to withdraw their troops, demanding that the Japanese government: '...do what the Philippines has done...', and threatening that: 'Lines of cars laden with explosives are awaiting you...' if the demands were not met.〔(USATODAY.com – Al-Zarqawi's group warns Japan to withdraw troops )〕 The body of a Japanese backpacker, Shosei Koda, was found in Baghdad on October 30, 2004, several days after he had been kidnapped. His captors had promised to execute him unless Japanese troops were withdrawn. According to Channel NewsAsia, the killing renewed domestic pressure on Prime Minister Koizumi to bring the contingent home.〔(Shosei Koda was the first Japanese killed in Iraq – Pravda.Ru )〕 One Japanese private security guard, Akihiko Saito, was killed in an ambush on his convoy on May 25, 2005.〔(Iraq Coalition Casualties: Contractor Fatalities )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Japanese Iraq Reconstruction and Support Group」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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