South China Morning Post

U.S. REVAMPS DEFENCE LINKS IN FACE OF ‘MORE ASSERTIVE CHINA’

Ambassador to Tokyo says modernisat­ion of command structure built around Indo-Pacific security

- Kyodo

The United States was seeking to modernise the command structure of its decades-old security alliance with Japan to deal with a “much more assertive China”, including towards Taiwan, US ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel said, as the two nations look to discuss the issue at a summit in Washington.

Speaking ahead of Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s visit to the US this week as a state guest, where a series of agreements are expected to showcase the robust ties of the close allies, the ambassador told reporters: “We are literally in the first chapter writing a new era.”

Without going into the details of how the military command framework would be modified, Emanuel said: “The change is to deal with a series of challenges – ones we know and ones we don’t know, and you have a much more assertive China, not just in the Taiwan Strait.”

The envisioned change was not meant “for just one contingenc­y”. “It’s built around the security in the Indo-Pacific”, he said, also touching on China’s repeated incursions into Japanese waters around the Diaoyus, a group of East China Sea islets controlled by Tokyo but claimed by Beijing, and clashes between Chinese and Philippine vessels in the disputed South China Sea.

Concerns have also grown over a possible invasion of Taiwan by Beijing, which sees the island as part of China to be reunited by force if necessary. While many nations, including the US, do not officially acknowledg­e Taiwan as an independen­t state, they oppose any use of force to alter the existing status quo.

“We believe whatever we do working with Japan in this new fashion will better enhance the way we do a plan,” Emanuel said.

According to sources close to the matter, the modificati­on to the alliance would involve strengthen­ing the authority of the US Forces Japan, which has so far lacked operationa­l control of military units in the Asian nation with its role largely focused on administer­ing the status of forces agreement governing US personnel stationed there.

Currently, the US Indo-Pacific Command, based in Hawaii, has authority over forces assigned to its vast area of responsibi­lity that includes Japan, and the different time zone and physical distance has been seen as not efficient for interactio­n with the Japanese Self-Defence Forces.

The revamp is expected to come in conjunctio­n with Japan’s planned set-up of a joint headquarte­rs by March next year to unify the command of its ground, maritime and air forces.

Apart from defence issues, cooperatio­n in areas including technology, space and clean energy is expected to be on the agenda when US President Joe Biden hosts Kishida for talks and a state dinner on Wednesday. It will be the first visit to the US by a Japanese prime minister as a state guest since 2015.

Emanuel also said the US and Japan planned to set up a “central depot” of resources to respond to natural disasters and climate events in the region, recalling the powerful earthquake that rocked central Japan on January 1 and one that hit Taiwan last week.

“We haven’t done this with any other country. We don’t know where it will go, etc,” he said, but noted the idea was to put medical resources, tents, water and other items in a warehouse so they can be “deployed immediatel­y” and “anywhere in the region” that is affected by a disaster.

 ?? ?? Ambassador Rahm Emanuel has touched on maritime incursions.
Ambassador Rahm Emanuel has touched on maritime incursions.

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