The Free Press Journal

N Korea threat: Japan’s record defence budget

The defence budget will swell to a record 46 billion for the next fiscal year. The extra defence funding will cover the cost of preparatio­ns for introducin­g the US military's Aegis Ashore land-based missile

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Japan's defence budget will swell to a record $46 billion for the next fiscal year, the government said on Friday, as the nation shores up its missile shield against the threat posed by North Korea.

The defence spending was part of a $860-billion national budget for the fiscal year starting in April, also a record as medical and social welfare costs snowball in Japan's rapidly ageing society.

The defence budget rose for the sixth consecutiv­e year, as Tokyo seeks to bolster its military in the face of threats from the regime in Pyongyang, which has fired two missiles over the country this year and vowed to "sink" it into the sea. Last month, North Korea test-fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) that plunged into the waters of Japan's exclusive economic zone. The extra defence funding will cover the cost of preparatio­ns for introducin­g the US military's Aegis Ashore land-based missile intercepto­r system. "At a time when North Korea is beefing up its ballistic missile capability, we need to strengthen our capability fundamenta­lly," defence minister Itsunori Onodera said earlier this month.

During his first visit to Japan last month, US President Donald Trump backed a more militarist­ic Japan, saying the Pacific ally should buy US equipment to protect itself. "It's a lot of jobs for us and a lot of safety for Japan," said Trump.

Japan also plans to purchase long-range cruise missiles with a range of some 900 kilometres from US firms. The move is controvers­ial as Japan's pacifist constituti­on bans the use of force as a means of settling internatio­nal disputes. Japan's military policy has long been restricted to self-defence and relies heavily on the US to attack enemy territory under the Japan-US security alliance. Yukio Edano, head of the biggest opposition Constituti­onal Democratic Party of Japan, said the offensive missiles will be a "fairly big point of dispute" when lawmakers debate the budget bill next month. While insisting Japan will maintain the decades-long policy, Abe said he wants to review the country's defence capability to match it with "the severe reality".

 ??  ?? This file photo of Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force troops abseiling from helicopter­s an exercise at Higashi-Fuji firing range at the foot of Mount Fuji.
This file photo of Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force troops abseiling from helicopter­s an exercise at Higashi-Fuji firing range at the foot of Mount Fuji.

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