San Diego Union-Tribune

JAPAN OKS MAJOR HIKE IN MILITARY SPENDING

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Japan’s Cabinet on Friday approved the country’s biggest increase in military spending in decades, as officials expressed growing concern about the possibilit­y of being pulled into a conflict over Taiwan.

The increase of 6.5 percent is part of the largest annual budget package in Japan’s history, totaling more than $940 billion. It includes hundreds of billions in spending meant to help the economy recover from damage inflicted by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

It also includes more than $51.5 billion for the military, reflecting a substantia­l increase in a defense budget far smaller than that of its ally the United States or of China, the regional giant. Officials have argued that the spending is needed to protect Japan in a security environmen­t that is becoming “more challengin­g at unpreceden­ted speed.”

In recent months, Japanese politician­s and policymake­rs have said that regional stability is facing growing threats because of tensions

between the United States and China, which some fear could lead to conflict over Taiwan, accidental or otherwise.

In light of those concerns, officials have increased the pace and scope of military exercises with the United States and other nations, and they have accelerate­d spending on projects seen as key to protecting Japan against a possible conflict near its shores.

The spending approved by the Cabinet is less than what Japan’s defense ministry requested this summer. While large by Japanese standards, it is far below the military budgets of the United States, at around $778 billion, and China, estimated at $252 billion. The new figure includes spending approved

last month in Japan’s largesteve­r supplement­ary defense budget.

Japan’s parliament must still approve the budget figures, but there is little doubt that it will do so.

Military spending in Japan has increased steadily since former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took office in 2012, promising to strengthen the country’s military forces and revise its pacifist constituti­on. That charter, drawn up by the American occupiers after World War II, forbids Japan to wage war except in self-defense. Conservati­ve politician­s have long sought to change that provision, arguing that the country needs more flexibilit­y to defend itself against regional threats.

 ?? KIYOSHI OTA AP ?? Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (left) rides on a tank during a review in Tokyo, Japan, in November.
KIYOSHI OTA AP Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (left) rides on a tank during a review in Tokyo, Japan, in November.

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