San Francisco Chronicle

North Korean threat remains, Tokyo says

- By Mari Yamaguchi Mari Yamaguchi is an Associated Press writer.

TOKYO — Japan needs to bolster its missile defenses and its alliance with the United States, its government stressed Tuesday in an annual defense review that judged North Korea to still be a serious threat that has not taken concrete steps to denucleari­ze.

The defense paper, approved Tuesday by the Cabinet, said Japan must add to its missile defense capabiliti­es to be fully prepared while watching if North Korea keeps its promise.

President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un signed a vague joint statement at their summit in June that included agreements to denucleari­ze the Korean Peninsula. Last week, Trump directed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to postpone a planned trip to the North, citing insufficie­nt progress.

North Korea tested interconti­nental ballistic missiles last year, including launching some over Japan, and it deploys several hundred shorterran­ge Rodong missiles capable of hitting Japan. The defense paper also says Pyongyang likely has made miniaturiz­ed nuclear warheads it can place atop ballistic missiles, an advancemen­t of its nuclear capability that North Korea has claimed to have achieved.

North Korea has increased the range, accuracy and versatilit­y of its missiles and diversifie­d its launch sites and methods over the past few years. In addition to the three nuclear tests the North has conducted since 2016, it also has carried out more than 40 missile tests in that time, according to the paper.

“Its military actions have become an unpreceden­tedly serious and imminent threat to Japan’s national security,” the paper said. “There is no change in our basic recognitio­n about the threat of North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missiles.”

It was “significan­t” that Kim promised to pursue denucleari­zation of the peninsula but it is necessary to watch what North Korea does to scrap its nuclear weapons and missiles, the report said.

While the United States is primarily concerned about the ICBMs that can reach its mainland, Japan is within range of North Korea’s smaller missiles. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pushed to raise Japan’s military participat­ion and its missile defenses. Joint exercises with the U.S. and other defense partners including Britain and Australia have significan­tly increased, and Japan is buying costly U.S. equipment as Trump tries to sell more weapons and reduce the U.S. trade deficit.

Japan is currently updating its national defense guidelines and the medium-term defense program to reflect North Korea’s threat, and to have “necessary and sufficient defense capabiliti­es qualitativ­ely and quantitati­vely,” the paper said.

It has also stepped up surveillan­ce and patrolling in regional seas to crack down on offshore ship-to-ship oil transfers to North Korean vessels in violation to U.N. sanctions.

Tuesday’s report comes days before Japan’s Defense Ministry is set to approve its fiscal 2019 budget plan that would include an initial acquisitio­n cost for a land-to-air missile defense system, Aegis Ashore.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? Japan says Pyongyang poses a serious threat despite its denucleari­zation pledge with the U.S.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press Japan says Pyongyang poses a serious threat despite its denucleari­zation pledge with the U.S.

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