The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japan gets U.S. support over national defense

- By Yusuke Amano

WASHINGTON — Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada met with his U.S. counterpar­t Lloyd Austin in the United States on Sept. 14, where he conveyed Japan’s intention to consider possessing “counterstr­ike capabiliti­es” to destroy enemy missile-launch bases and other targets in self-defense.

Austin expressed his strong support for these e orts. e two ministers held in-person talks for the rst time since Hamada took up his current post.

Hamada and Austin agreed to strengthen Japan-U.S. cooperatio­n further, given that the security environmen­t in East Asia has become severe due to China’s increased military pressure on Taiwan and other factors.

During the meeting, Hamada said, “e will and the capability to defend one’s own country are more important than anything else.”

He conveyed Japan’s intention to reinforce its defense capabiliti­es drasticall­y and to work on a “substantia­l increase” in defense spending, as the Japanese government plans to revise three key security documents, including the National Security Strategy, at the end of this year.

Austin stressed Washington’s “unwavering commitment to the defense of Japan” and referred to U.S. military power, including its nuclear capabiliti­es, providing extended deterrence for U.S. ally Japan.

e U.S. defense secretary rea rmed that Article 5 of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty, which stipulates U.S. defense obligation­s to Japan, applies to the Senkaku Islands in Okinawa Prefecture.

e two ministers con rmed that they would deepen discussion­s at the ministeria­l level to ensure that the extended deterrence remains credible.

Hamada and Austin also strongly condemned China’s large-scale military exercises near Taiwan, including rings of ballistic missiles that fell within Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ).

“China’s coercive actions in the Taiwan Strait and in the waters surroundin­g Japan are provocativ­e, destabiliz­ing and unpreceden­ted,” Austin said.

In light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as well, the two ministers agreed that Japan and the United States will work closely together without tolerating unilateral changes to the status quo by force.

ey agreed that Tokyo and Washington will jointly analyze image and other data collected by the U.S. military’s MQ-9 drones, which are scheduled to be deployed temporaril­y at the Maritime Self-Defense Force’s Kanoya Air Base in Kagoshima Prefecture from late October. e move is aimed to strengthen the surveillan­ce of China’s growing maritime expansion in the East China Sea and the South China Sea.

Regarding technical cooperatio­n on defense equipment, the two ministers agreed to start considerin­g joint research on technologi­es and components that could lead to the developmen­t of future intercepto­r missiles in order to counter hypersonic weapons being developed by China and Russia. (Sept. 16)

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