Fiji Sun

China’s Ukraine war effect

Ukraine war has made it easier for US to isolate China in the Pacific.

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Seoul, South Korea: A year after Russia invaded Ukraine, Xi Jinping’s backing of Vladimir Putin has opened the door for the United States and partners in the Pacific to shore up sometimes frayed relationsh­ips to the detriment of Beijing. In the past few months alone, Japan has pledged to double defense spending and acquire long-range weapons from the US; South Korea has acknowledg­ed that stability in the Taiwan Strait is essential to its security; the Philippine­s has announced new US base access rights and is talking about joint patrols of the South China Sea with Australia, Japan and the United States.

Those might be the biggest initiative­s, but they are far from the only events that have left China increasing­ly isolated in its own backyard as it refuses to condemn the invasion of a sovereign country by its partner in Moscow while keeping military pressure on the self-ruled island of Taiwan.

Analysts say all these things would have likely happened without the war in Ukraine, but the war, and China’s backing of Russia, has helped grease the skids to get these projects done.

Take the situation of Japan, a country limited in its post-World War II constituti­on to “self-defense” forces. Now it’s going to buy longrange Tomahawk cruise missiles from the U.S., weapons that could strike well inside China.

“I myself have a strong sense of urgency that Ukraine today may be East Asia tomorrow,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told a major defense conference in Singapore last summer.

In December, Kishida followed that up with a plan to double Tokyo’s defense spending while acquiring weapons with ranges well outside Japanese territory.

 ?? ?? Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.
Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

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