01-28-2026 Making Sense of Japan’s Defense Policy with KIRIDORI Ryo

 

Wednesday, January 28, 2026
5 PM – 6:30PM
Room 220, 595 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston MA

 

Please register here.

 

In collaboration with the Consulate-General of Japan in Boston

Over the past decade, Japan has significantly updated its defense policy. In 2015, the government partially lifted restrictions on the exercise of collective self-defense. Since 2022, the defense budget has grown rapidly, and the Self-Defense Force has expanded its ability to project power far beyond Japans immediate territory. These represent significant shifts that would have been unimaginable only a few decades ago. How should we understand these developments? To what extent has Japans defense policy shifted from its previous course? What do these reforms mean for the U.S.Japan Alliance and for peace and stability in the Western Pacific? What objectives is Japan seeking to achieve through these defense policy.

 

KIRIDORI Ryo is a research fellow at the National Institute for Defense Studies (NIDS), which he joined in 2016. From 2018 to 2019, he was cross appointed to the Defense Ministry’s Defense Policy Bureau, where he was engaged in drafting Japan’s mid-to-long-term defense strategy called National Defense Program Guidelines (now called National Defense Strategy) as well as in various policy-level strategic dialogues, including the Japan-US Extended Deterrence Dialogue. His research interests cover security studies and foreign policy analysis. He has recently written a chapter in a book about lessons from Ukraine to Taiwan, published in 2025. He is currently working on multiple research projects, including one about security implications of the spread of precision strike capabilities in the Indo-Pacific and a research that reassesses the role of the bureaucracy in Japan’s defense policy evolution. He holds a BA in political science from the University of New Brunswick in Canada and an MSc in International Relations from London School of Economics and Political Science. He is currently a PhD candidate in political science at the University of Toronto.