The United States and Japan unveiled new rules for defense cooperation Monday in a historic move that will give Japanese forces a wider global role amid concerns over China’s rising sway.
Under the revised
guidelines, Japan could come
to the aid of US forces
threatened by a third country or, for example, deploy minesweeper ships to a
mission in the Middle East .
Although
officials said the new doctrine is not aimed at China ,
there has been increasing concern over moves by Beijing
to try to scoop up disputed areas of the South China and East China Seas .
But they
pointedly made mention of North
Korea as another source of tension in the
region.
Kerry stressed
the United States saw the
disputed Senkaku Islands ,
known in Chinese as the Diaoyus, as firmly under Japan ’s control.
The sovereignty
of the isles has been a source of friction between Tokyo
and Beijing for
decades.
The top US diplomat said the new guidelines would make Japan safer,
and bring greater stability to the Asia-Pacific region.
“Today we mark
the establishment of Japan ’s
capacity to defend not just its own territory, but also the United States
and other partners as needed,” Kerry told a joint press conference.
“This is a
historic meeting. It’s a historic transition in the defense relationship
between our two countries.”
The guidelines
came a day before US President Barack Obama rolls out the red carpet at the
White House for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Nakatani said
that since 1997, when the defense ties were last revised, “the security
environment in the United States
and Japan
has changed dramatically.”
The new
guidelines would “draw a picture of the Japan-US alliance for the next decade
and beyond,” Nakatani said, revealing he had also laid flowers earlier at the
9/11 memorial in tribute to those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.
In an implicit
reference to China ,
Kerry said: “We reject any suggestion that freedom of navigation, overflight
and other unlawful uses of the sea and airspace are privileges granted by big
states to small ones, subject to the whim and fancy of the big state.”
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2015/04/28/us-japan-boost-defense-ties/
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