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Japan
AsiaEast Asia

Japan looks beyond US alliance for help to deter China military

  • Japan’s deepening unease about the dangers in its neighbourhood has prompted a fresh push to build a bulwark of other partnerships
  • On his tour of G7 countries last week, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met with the French President, British PM and Italian premier to boost ties

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Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida shake hands after signing a defence agreement during a bilateral meeting at the Tower of London. Photo: AFP
Bloomberg

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is looking beyond his country’s alliance with the US to deter China, bolstering security ties with democracies from Australia to Europe.

On his tour of Group of Seven countries last week, which came after the biggest overhaul of Japan’s security policy since World War II, Kishida told French President Emmanuel Macron that the security of Europe and the Indo-Pacific were indivisible. He signed a deal on mutual troop access with UK premier Rishi Sunak and agreed with Italian leader Giorgia Meloni to upgrade defence ties.

Japan’s alliance with Washington – complete with its “nuclear umbrella” – remains the cornerstone of its strategy, and US President Joe Biden endorsed the country’s more robust security strategy in a meeting with Kishida at the White House on Friday. Yet Japan’s deepening unease about the dangers in its neighbourhood has prompted a fresh push to build a bulwark of other partnerships.

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Concerns linger in Japan that Biden could be succeeded by a less sympathetic US leader, said Euan Graham, a Singapore-based senior fellow for Indo-Pacific Defence and Strategy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Donald Trump, for instance, repeatedly questioned the fairness of the US-Japan alliance during his years as president.

“They can’t rely on the US entirely, both for political reasons and in simple scale terms”, Graham said. “They need extra help, and that’s where Canada and the other G-7 countries come into play”.

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