Analysis: The 2.5 seconds that sealed Shinzo Abe's fatal security lapses
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[July 19, 2022]
By Satoshi Sugiyama, Sam Nussey and Ju-min Park
NARA, Japan (Reuters) - Bodyguards could
have saved Shinzo Abe if they shielded him or removed him from the line
of fire in the 2.5 seconds between a missed first shot and a second
round of gunfire that fatally wounded him, according to eight security
experts who reviewed footage of the former Japanese leader's
assassination.
The failure to protect Abe from the second shot followed what appeared
to be a series of security lapses in the lead-up to the assassination of
Japan's longest-serving prime minister on July 8, the Japanese and
international experts said.
Abe's killing in the western city of Nara by a man using a homemade
weapon shocked a nation where gun violence is rare and politicians
campaign up close to the public with light security.
Japanese authorities – including Prime Minister Fumio Kishida - have
acknowledged security lapses, and police say they are investigating.
In addition to the security experts, Reuters spoke to six witnesses at
the scene and examined multiple videos available online, taken from
different angles, to piece together a detailed account of security
measures ahead of his shooting.
After leaving 67-year-old Abe exposed from behind as he spoke on a
traffic island on a public road, his security detail allowed the shooter
– identified by police as Tetsuya Yamagami, 41 – to come within metres
of Abe unchecked, carrying a weapon, the footage showed.
"They should have seen the attacker very deliberately walking towards
the rear of the prime minister and intervened," said Kenneth Bombace,
head of Global Threat Solutions, which provided security to Joe Biden
when he was a presidential candidate.
Yamagami came within around 7 metres (23 feet) of Abe before firing his
first shot, which missed, the Yomiuri newspaper said, citing
investigative sources. He fired the second shot, which hit, at around 5
metres away, it said.
Abe's bodyguards did not appear to have "concentric rings of security"
around him, said John Soltys, a former Navy SEAL and CIA officer now a
vice president at security firm Prosegur. "They didn't have any kind of
surveillance in the crowd."
Asked about the experts’ analysis, the Nara Prefectural Police, in
charge of security for Abe's campaign stop, told Reuters in a statement
the department was "committed to thoroughly identifying the security
problems" with Abe's protection, declining to comment further.
The video footage showed that, after the first shot, Abe turns and looks
over his left shoulder. Two bodyguards scramble to get between him and
the shooter, one hoisting a slim black bag. Two others head toward the
shooter, who moves closer through the smoke.
Although Abe's security tackled the assailant moments later and arrested
him, it was the "wrong response" for some of the security to go after
the shooter instead of moving to protect Abe, said Mitsuru Fukuda, a
Nihon University professor specialising in crisis management and
terrorism.
There was enough security, "but no sense of danger," said Yasuhiro
Sasaki, a retired police officer in Saitama prefecture near Tokyo who
handled security for VIPs. "Everyone was startled and no one went to
where Abe was."
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A mourner offers flowers next to a picture of late former Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who was shot while campaigning for a
parliamentary election, on the day to mark a week after his
assassination at the Liberal Democratic Party headquarters, in
Tokyo, Japan July 15, 2022. REUTERS/Issei Kato
The Tokyo police, in charge of VIP politicians'
bodyguards, referred questions to the Nara police.
The National Police Agency, which oversees local police forces, said
Abe’s killing was the result of the police failing to fulfil their
responsibility and said it had set up a team to review security and
protection measures and to consider concrete steps to prevent such a
serious incident from recurring.
"We recognise that there were problems not only in
the on-site response, such as the security and protection set-up,
deployment of personnel and fundamental security procedures, but
also in the way the National Police Agency was involved,” it said in
response to Reuters questions.
Reuters could not reach Yamagami, who remains in police custody, for
comment and could not determine whether he had a lawyer.
'COULD HAVE BEEN AVOIDED'
Footage shows four bodyguards inside the guardrails as Abe spoke,
according to Koichi Ito, a former sergeant at the Tokyo Metropolitan
Police Department's special assault team, now a security consultant.
Their number was corroborated by local politician Masahiro Okuni,
who was at the scene.
When the former prime minister stepped up to speak, Yamagami could
be seen in video footage in the background, clapping.
As Yamagami walked up behind Abe, security did not appear to take
action, the footage showed.
Abe should have had a dedicated close protection bodyguard to get
him away, said a member of the U.S. Diplomatic Security Service,
which protects senior diplomats and foreign dignitaries.
"We would grab him by the belt and collar, shield him with our body
and move away," the agent said.
Katsuhiko Ikeda, former superintendent general of the Tokyo police
who ran security for Japan's Group of Eight summits in 2000 and
2008, said the situation would have developed very differently if
Abe’s security detail had been close enough to reach him in a second
or two.
Ito, the former police sergeant, said security could have stopped
the first shot had they been vigilant and communicating.
"Even if they missed that, there was a more than two-second window
before the second shot, so they definitely could have prevented
that," he said. "If Abe had been protected properly, it could have
been avoided."
(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama in Nara, Sam Nussey in Tokyo and Ju-min
Park in Seoul; Additional reporting by Tim Kelly, Rocky Swift,
Kiyoshi Takenaka, Nobuhiro Kubo, David Dolan and Yukiko Toyoda;
Writing by Sam Nussey; Editing by David Dolan and William Mallard)
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