Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Australia, Japan sign defense pact

- Haruka Nuga and Steve McMorran

SYDNEY – The leaders of Japan and Australia signed a “landmark” defense agreement Thursday that allows closer cooperatio­n between their militaries and stands as a rebuke to China’s growing assertiven­ess in the Indo-Pacific region.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met in a virtual summit to sign the Reciprocal Access Agreement, the first such defense pact signed by Japan with any country other than the United States.

The agreement follows more than a year of talks between Japan and Australia aimed at breaking down legal barriers to allow the troops of one country to enter the other.

“Japan is our closest partner in Asia as demonstrat­ed by our special strategic partnershi­p – Australia’s only such partnershi­p,” Morrison said. “An equal partnershi­p, shared trust between two great democracie­s committed to the rule of law, human rights, free trade and a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

Kishida hailed the agreement as “a landmark instrument which will elevate security cooperatio­n between the nations to new heights.”

While China wasn’t mentioned, its significance was implicit.

Japan’s ambassador to Australia, Shingo Yamagami, said that “in light of the deteriorat­ing security environmen­t, what Japan and Australia can do together is first of all to increase deterrence.”

Morrison called the pact a “pivotal moment for Australia and Japan and (for) the security of our two nations and our people.”

He said the agreement “will form an important part of Australia and Japan’s response to the uncertaint­y we now face and will underpin greater and more complex engagement in operabilit­y between the Australia Defense Force and Japan Self-Defense Forces.”

Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said the agreement recognized the importance of establishi­ng firm defense partnershi­ps to deter an increasing­ly aggressive China.

“Japan is breaking away from its post-war constituti­onal constraint­s on the use of military force because Tokyo recognizes the challenges it is facing from China,” he told Sky News. “There is a territoria­l dispute between China and Japan ... and more significantly there is a growing concern China will make a move over Taiwan in the next few years.”

The pact builds on the strategic dialogue known as “the Quad,” which includes Japan, Australia, the United States and India.

Australia last year also signed the AUKUS agreement with the United States and Britain, both of which have pledged to help Australia acquire nuclear-powered submarines.

 ?? LUKAS COCH/AAP IMAGE VIA AP ?? Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison holds up a signed document Thursday during a virtual treaty signing summit with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Canberra, Australia.
LUKAS COCH/AAP IMAGE VIA AP Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison holds up a signed document Thursday during a virtual treaty signing summit with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Canberra, Australia.

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