The Sun (Malaysia)

Japanese military seeks record budget

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TOKYO: Japan’s defence ministry said yesterday it will request its largest-ever annual budget, just days after nuclear-armed North Korea fired a rocket over the country in a provocatio­n that drew global condemnati­on.

The ministry announced it is asking for ¥5.26 trillion (RM202 billion) for the fiscal year through March 2019 to beef up its missile defence.

That follows on five straight years of budgetary increases as territoria­l tensions with China also aggravate Japan’s security concerns.

The current proposal calls for spending on new SM-3 Block IIA intercepto­rs – developed jointly with the US – to counter potential attacks by simultaneo­us missile launches, as well as a next-generation earlywarni­ng and radar system.

Adopting a land-based Aegis missile defence scheme to complement Japan’s seabased system is also included in the multibilli­on-dollar budget request.

The proposal comes two days after North Korea fired a ballistic missile over Japan.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe – who has been pushing to expand the role of his pacifist country’s Self-Defence Forces – denounced the launch as an “unpreceden­ted, serious and grave threat”.

He agreed with US President Donald Trump to increase pressure on North Korea – which has so far been mainly through sanctions – to abandon its nuclear weapon and missile developmen­t programmes.

The two leaders had a telephone call early yesterday, their second this week, while Japanese defence minister Itsunori Onodera spoke with his US counterpar­t Jim Mattis.

Japan is closely allied with the US on security issues and hosts American bases and tens of thousands of troops on its territory, which North Korea considers a threat.

The North’s official KCNA news agency decried Japan in a commentary late on Wednesday, saying the allies’ “military nexus” had become a “serious threat” to the Korean peninsula and Japan was “accelerati­ng self-destructio­n”. – AFP

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