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Japan
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US envoy to Japan visits disputed East China Sea islands in show of unity against Beijing

  • Rahm Emanuel visited Ishigaki and Yonaguni, an island facing Taiwan, where he interacted with Japanese troops and the local fishing community
  • The diplomat called for increased deterrence against ‘economic coercion’ and emphasised Washington’s security commitment to Tokyo

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US envoy to Japan Rahm Emanuel (right) chats with a fisherman on Yonaguni Island in Okinawa on May 17. Photo: Kyodo
Associated Press

The US ambassador to Japan stressed on Friday the importance of increased deterrence and his country’s commitment to its key ally as he visited two southwestern Japanese islands at the forefront of Tokyo’s tension with Beijing.

Rahm Emanuel visited Yonaguni, Japan’s westernmost island just east of Taiwan. He later visited another Japanese island, Ishigaki, home to Japan coastguard patrol boats defending the disputed East China Sea islands and Japanese fishermen from armed Chinese coastguard ships that routinely enter Japanese waters.

Japan has been making a southwest shift of its defence posture, and is further accelerating its military build-up under a 2022 security strategy that focuses on counterstrike capability with long-range cruise missiles.

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Emanuel was the first US ambassador to visit Yonaguni. Escorted by Mayor Kenichi Itokazu, he looked towards Taiwan, only 110km (68 miles) away. He met with Japanese Self Defence Force servicemembers at a local base installed in 2016 and where a missile defence system is planned.

The ambassador said the main purpose of his visit was to show US support for the local fishing community. He also met with a local fisherman who was among those affected by China’s increasingly assertive actions in the regional seas.

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China fired five missiles into Japan’s exclusive economic zone in 2022 after the visit to Taiwan of then-US House speaker Nancy Pelosi. Emanuel said the fisherman told him he could not sell his fish for about a week after the Chinese action.

“If they don’t have deterrence, that’s going to be worse,” Emanuel said in Ishigaki, the second island he visited on Friday. “If you have a very robust deterrence, it ensures that there is peace, ensures that there is security, ensures economic prosperity. Without that, it’s more likely to be a green light to those that want to use economic coercion and confrontation as their only means of expression.”

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