The Pak Banker

Japan hosts arms show looking for an edge in tech

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TOKYO: Japan's first ever fully fledged arms show opened, creating a forum that Japan's government hopes will help it tap technology it needs to counter threats posed by China and North Korean.

Some 200 protesters gathered near the entrance of the convention centre near Tokyo, calling for the government­backed exhibition to be shut down as they regarded it as an affront to the nation's pacifist constituti­on.

Worried by increased Chinese military activity in the East China Sea and North Korea's ballistic missile advances, Japan has increased defence spending over the past seven years to around $50 billion annually, purchasing advanced U.S. stealth fighters, missile defence intercepto­rs and radar systems.

"Technology is advancing quickly and our equipment can't cope against things such as hypersonic warheads and drones," Gen Nakatani, a former defense minister and senior ruling Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker told Reuters at the arms show.

"Innovation is happening around the world and through an exchange of that Japan will be able to keep up," he added.

China spends more than three times as much as Japan on defence, while recent North Korean advances threaten to make Japan's new missile defences obsolete before they are deployed. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government in 2014 abolished a decades-long ban on foreign military exports in a bid to cut procuremen­t costs by allowing Japanese companies such as Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to widen their production base.

Yet in the more than five years since that ban ended Japan has largely failed to make inroads overseas, hobbled both by a lack of experience and concern that the reputation­al risk of selling arms could hurt other more profitable businesses. There is still abiding foreign interest in tapping Japanese technology for military use, with companies such as Lockheed Martin Corp , Raytheon Co and BAE Systems PLC all looking for new partnershi­ps in Japan.

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