Ministry of Defense (Japan)

Ministry of Defense
防衛省
Bōei-shō
Agency overview
Formed9 January 2007 (2007-01-09)
Preceding agency
JurisdictionGovernment of Japan
Headquarters5-1 Ichigaya-honmuracho, Ichigaya, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Employees
  • 20,924 civilian staff[1]
  • 247,154 SDF personnel (Excluding non-capacity National Defense Academy students, SDF reserve personnel, ready reserve SDF personnel, etc.)[2]
Annual budget5.3 trillion yen[3]
Minister responsible
Deputy Minister responsible
Agency executives
Child agencies
Websitemod.go.jp

The Ministry of Defense (防衛省, Bōei-shō) is an executive department of the Government of Japan responsible for preserving the peace and independence of Japan, and maintaining the country's national security and the Japan Self-Defense Forces.[4]

The ministry is headed by the Minister of Defense, and is the largest ministry in the Japanese government. The ministry is headquartered in Ichigaya, Shinjuku, Tokyo, and is required by Article 66 of the Constitution to be completely subordinate to civilian authority. Its head has the rank of Minister of State. He is assisted by two vice ministers, one parliamentary and one administrative; and the internal bureaus. The highest figure in the command structure is the Prime Minister, who is responsible directly to the National Diet. The MOD, alongside the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, work on crafting Japanese security policy.[5]

In a national emergency, the Prime Minister is authorized to order the various components of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) into action, subject to the consent of the Diet. In times of extreme emergency, that approval might be obtained after the fact.[6]

Their activities are regulated under the Ministry of Defense Establishment Law (防衛省設置法, Bōeishōsetchihō).[7]

  1. ^ "行政機関職員定員令(昭和44年5月16日政令第121号)(最終改正、令和2年6月16日政令第189号)". Egov law.
  2. ^ "令和2年度一般会計予算]" (PDF). Ministry of Finance (財務省).
  3. ^ "Reiwa 2nd year general account budget] Ministry of Finance (令和2年度一般会計予算] 財務省)" (PDF).
  4. ^ Article 2, Paragraph 2, 3, 4 of the Japan Self-Defense Forces Law in provisions (自衛隊法)
  5. ^ Yuki Tatsumi; Andrew L. Oros, eds. (March 2007). "Japan's New Defense Establishment" (PDF). stimson.org. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  6. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20050226191408/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+jp0280)
  7. ^ "防衛省設置法 | e-Gov法令検索".

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