Japan’s defence transformation is no longer just about capabilities. It is also about communication. Did Shinjiro Koizumi’s unusually direct remarks at Shangri-La signal a new phase in Japan’s defence diplomacy?
At a time when Japan is steadily strengthening its defence capabilities, how the country explains its actions is becoming almost as important as what it does. Shinjiro Koizumi’s appointment as Defence Minister last October didn’t really stir public expectation at the time, but that is beginning to change. His presentation at the Shangri-La Dialogue in May 2026 suggested that Japan’s defence authorities will no longer remain quiet about unwarranted insults and intimidation by China. The defence diplomacy that Koizumi demonstrated is largely expressive of his own personality, yet it must have also demonstrated to his own defence officials the power of narrative in national security discourse. This is not a trivial change. For a country that has long kept presenting its security policy in restrained, factual, and legalistic terms, the evolution of narrative carries both opportunity and risk.