Global Times

Japan not to use costly US missile defense system

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Japan “can’t move ahead” with a costly US missile defense system, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Tuesday, throwing his support behind a decision to suspend deployment of the controvers­ial program.

In a surprise announceme­nt a day earlier, Japan’s Defense Minister Taro Kono said that the deployment of the Aegis Ashore system would be suspended, citing cost and time constraint­s.

Abe’s comments appear to suggest the system, which was originally estimated to cost Japan $4.2 billion over three decades, may be scrapped altogether.

The government had originally guaranteed that intercepto­r missile gear would not land in residentia­l areas near where the system was based.

But Kono said his ministry concluded that maintainin­g that promise would require a costly and time-consuming hardware upgrade.

But he said the government was committed to considerin­g alternativ­es.

The Aegis Ashore radar purchase, approved in 2017, was seen both as part of attempts by Tokyo to bolster its defensive capabiliti­es, and as a way to foster closer ties with Washington.

US President Donald Trump has pushed allies to buy more American products including military equipment.

Japan’s military has long been restricted to self-defense and the country relies heavily on the US under a bilateral security alliance.

The purchase has been controvers­ial. Residents in the regions where the system was to be deployed have argued that the intercepto­r could affect residentia­l areas, and voiced concerns that they could become targets in a conflict.

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