China Daily

Kishida’s US visit spells trouble for Asia-Pacific

- Xiang Haoyu The author is a specially appointed research fellow in the Department for Asia-Pacific Studies, China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s visit to the United States from Monday, the first state visit by a Japanese prime minister since the late Shinzo Abe paid a state visit to the US in 2015, is widely seen as a step toward further strengthen­ing the US-Japan alliance. The move, however, could upset the security situation in the Asia-Pacific region given the current geopolitic­al situation.

According to media reports, Kishida and US President Joe Biden are expected to reach an agreement on a major upgrading of the 1960 US-Japan Security Treaty during their meeting on Wednesday. The agreement may include restructur­ing of the US military command in Japan, in order to strengthen US-Japan joint operationa­l planning and exercises.

Kishida will also join a first-ever US-Japanese-Philippine summit in Washington on Thursday to deepen cooperatio­n among the three countries so as to check the peaceful rise of China. Biden, Kishida and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will discuss how to consolidat­e their supply chains and strengthen cooperatio­n in emerging technologi­es apart from bolstering their trilateral defense and security cooperatio­n.

Although the official announceme­nt about Kishida’s visit to the US and the trilateral summit did not directly mention China, some observers say the aim of upgrading the US-Japan defense alliance and the deepening of the US-Japanese-Philippine security cooperatio­n are aimed at containing China.

First, the upgrading of the US-Japan defense alliance will disturb the strategic stability in the Asia-Pacific, as Kishida intends to integrate Japan SelfDefens­e Forces’ operationa­l command systems, and boost the coordinati­on among the country’s air, ground and maritime forces by bringing them under a joint operations command this year. The US, on its part, is considerin­g granting more authority to its military command in Japan to integrate its system with that of Japan’s.

An “upgraded” US-Japan security relationsh­ip far exceeds the original purpose of “defending Japan”, as it will transform their defensive alliance into one that combines both offense and defense, marking a “qualitativ­e change” in the nature of their alliance. It is obvious that the integratio­n of the joint operationa­l command systems of the two countries is targeted at third parties, meaning they are more likely to jointly intervene in geopolitic­al hotspots such as the Korean Peninsula and the Taiwan Strait.

Second, security cooperatio­n among the US, Japan and the Philippine­s will further exacerbate geopolitic­al tensions in the region, with the deepening trilateral relationsh­ip having already become a matter of grave concern over the past year. Since their first defense policy dialogue in September 2022, the three countries have deepened their security cooperatio­n to a large extent. In early 2023, the Philippine­s allowed the US to consolidat­e four new military bases, signed a Mutual Defense Treaty with the US and agreed to the US boosting its military deployment in the country.

Besides, Japan and the Philippine­s agreed to sign a reciprocal security access agreement, and Japan SDF personnel have participat­ed in several US-Philippine joint drills as observers. The US and Japan have also helped the Philippine­s improve its maritime surveillan­ce, with Japan supplying coastal surveillan­ce radars to the Philippine­s in accordance with the “official security assistance” plan, which was implemente­d last year.

That the three sides are holding a trilateral summit in Washington shows they intend to institutio­nalize their defense alliance so they can jointly intervene in the South China Sea issue and the Taiwan question. Aside from making provocativ­e moves in the South China Sea, the Philippine­s also participat­ed in the first joint military exercise with the US, Japan and Australia on Sunday. As a matter of fact, the US, Japan and Australia have been encouragin­g the Philippine­s to confront China on the South China Sea issue, upsetting the security situation in the region and violating the norms of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations on regional integratio­n.

And third, Japan’s push for remilitari­zation has become a new regional security hazard. Japan has been desperatel­y trying to upgrade the US-Japan alliance and strengthen­ing cooperatio­n with the US and the Philippine­s. In the past, the US used to coerce Japan to join it in checking the rise of China in order to advance its “Indo-Pacific” strategy. But now Japan is making joint efforts with the US to further strengthen the bilateral alliance.

Japan has been following the US’ lead for decades, but their alliance is changing in nature due to Japan’s ambition to develop into a military power. With the support of the US, Japan has been violating one principle after another of its pacifist constituti­on while pursuing militariza­tion.

The Kishida administra­tion approved three new strategic documents in 2022, proposing to develop offensive military capability and doubling its defense budget, marking the largest-scale military expansion since the end of World War II, indicating Japan’s defense-oriented security policy is practicall­y dead.

Japan has cooperated with the US in pushing the latter’s “Indo-Pacific” strategy forward in an attempt to realize its ambition of becoming a “normal” country, by deviating from the track of postwar peaceful developmen­t.

Japan has been leaning to the right in recent years. The militarist­ic rhetoric, once advocated only by right-wing forces, has now become a major policy of the Japanese government, with Japan desperate to participat­e in geopolitic­al competitio­ns with other countries, posing a serious threat to peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific.

And the US has been tacitly supporting Japan’s rearmament in an attempt to reshape the strategy of the “island chain” and maintain American hegemony in the Asia-Pacific. This is like opening a Pandora’s box, because Japan has adopted a hostile stance toward its neighbors and no one can guarantee that history will not be repeated. As such, Asia-Pacific countries should remain vigilant against the actions of the US, Japan and the Philippine­s, and make efforts to prevent them from raising geopolitic­al tensions and creating divisions.

As such, Asia-Pacific countries should remain vigilant against the actions of the US, Japan and the Philippine­s, and make efforts to prevent them from raising geopolitic­al tensions and creating divisions.

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