The Philippine Star

Japan approves biggest defense budget

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TOKYO ( AFP) — Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet yesterday approved Japan’s biggest annual defense budget in the face of North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats and a territoria­l row with China.

The Cabinet approved $43.6 billion in defense spending for the fiscal year starting in April, up 1.4 percent from the initial budget for the current fiscal year.

It marks the fifth straight annual increase and reflects the hawkish Abe’s attempt to build up Japan’s military, which since World War II has been constituti­onally limited to self defense.

Abe, who is pushing revisions to the constituti­on, strongly backed new security laws that took effect this year, making it possible for Japanese troops to fight abroad for the first time since the end of the war.

Japan is on constant alert against neighborin­g North Korea which has conducted two undergroun­d nuclear tests and more than 20 missile launches this year.

Under the new budget, the ministry aims to beef up Japan’s ballistic missile defenses, allocating funds for a new intercepto­r missile under joint developmen­t with the United States.

Also reflected in the spending is Tokyo’s determinat­ion to defend uninhabite­d islets in the East China Sea — administer­ed by Japan as the Senkakus ,but claimed by China as the Diaoyus.

The ministry said it has allocated funds for increased monitoring operations and to maintain mastery of the air and sea to counter attacks against what it euphemisti­cally described as “island areas” — a reference to the disputed territory.

Separately, the Japan Coast Guard will increase security around the islands by allocating a record 210 billion yen, which includes two new patrol ships and the hiring of 200 more personnel.

In August, Tokyo lodged more than two dozen protests through diplomatic channels, claiming that Chinese coast guard vessels had repeatedly violated its territoria­l waters around the disputed islands.

Also in August, Abe appointed Tomomi Inada, a close confidante with staunchly nationalis­t views, as his new defense minister. She has in the past been a frequent visitor to the controvers­ial Yasukuni war shrine in Tokyo, which South Korea and China criticize as a symbol of Japanese militarism.

Japan has been boosting defense ties with the Philippine­s and other Southeast Asian nations, some of which have their own disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea.

The defense budget earmarks funds to dispatch extra personnel to the Philippine­s and Vietnam to increase gathering and sharing of informatio­n.

Beijing asserts sovereignt­y over almost all of the South China Sea, dismissing rival partial claims from its Southeast Asian neighbors.

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