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Japan’s faith in US falters as ‘erratic’ Trump raises doubts on security commitments: poll

Japanese scepticism is growing as more than three-quarters of citizens doubt US military support under Trump, despite security assurances

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The US and Japan flags fly outside the White House. A poll reveals 77 per cent of Japanese citizens doubt US commitment to defending them in a crisis. Photo: Reuters
Julian Ryall
Seventy-seven per cent of Japanese citizens do not believe the United States would come to their aid in a military crisis – a stark indication of how the turmoil of President Donald Trump’s first 100 days has eroded public confidence in the security pact between the two nations.

An Asahi newspaper poll conducted in the weeks following Trump’s inauguration found that only 15 per cent of 3,000 Japanese people surveyed were confident that the US “will protect” the nation in the event of a crisis.

The paper reported on Monday that previous surveys indicated more than 40 per cent of respondents had confidence the US would uphold the 1960 Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security.

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“It is clear that there is more pessimism about the US under Trump in general,” said Stephen Nagy, a professor of international relations at Tokyo’s International Christian University. “But this is an extremely high number, and the Japanese government should be concerned by how many people here have such little faith in the alliance.”

The results were not surprising, as the “Trump administration continues to be erratic,” Nagy told This Week in Asia.

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“Japanese people can see what Trump has done with Ukraine and how the on-off tariffs and negotiations have not progressed well, so it was obvious there was going to be some concern,” he said.
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