Viet Nam News

Japan alters laws to sell fighter jets

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Japan yesterday eased its strict defence equipment transfer rules to allow the worldwide export of next-generation fighter jets set to be jointly developed with Britain and Italy, removing a hurdle for the trilateral project.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's Cabinet approved the updated guidelines of the "three principles on transfer of defence equipment and technology" after his ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner, the Komeito party, agreed on the revised export rules on March 15.

The revised rules stipulate that Japan can export the fighter jets, which the three government­s aim to deploy by 2035, to a third nation, while the warplanes will never be transferre­d to a nation where combat is taking place.

Japan needs to "have an exporting scheme" to ensure that Japan can develop a "fighter jet with capabiliti­es that meet our nation's security needs," and that Japan can participat­e in the three-way project with Britain and Italy as an "equal partner", the Cabinet said.

The new regulation­s also said that the destinatio­n of exported fighter jets would be limited to nations that have signed pacts with Japan on defence equipment and technology transfers, whose number is currently 15 including its close security ally the United States.

Each future individual case will need separate Cabinet approval before sales are made, according to the government.

Limitation­s on fighter jet exports were implemente­d as the conservati­ve Kishida-led LDP tried to reassure Komeito, traditiona­lly a pacifist party with a dovish stance on security issues that fears Japan might sell the arms without due process and foment conflicts.

Kishida has said that allowing Japan to ship the fighter jets to third countries is "necessary" to ensure efficient spending on the warplane's developmen­t and to maintain Tokyo's credibilit­y as a partner in other future internatio­nal defence projects.

Under its war-renouncing Constituti­on, Japan had maintained the ban on the export of internatio­nally co-developed weapons to third countries.

Defence Minister Minoru Kihara told reporters after the Cabinet approval that Japan will remain committed to the "basic philosophy of a pacifist nation" by going through "strict decision processes" for exports.

The fighter jet developmen­t work is currently in the design phase, and the three countries aim to draft specificat­ions and performanc­e "in the next five years or so," Kihara added.

The fighter jet programme with the two NATO members marks Japan's first joint defence equipment developmen­t deal with nations other than the United States.

Tokyo has been opening up arms exports under certain conditions after removing its arms embargo policy in 2014, in a bid to ramp up security ties with like-minded countries and foster related domestic industries through weapons and ammunition exports.

In December, Japan revised the weapon export rules to allow domestical­ly made weapons under a foreign licence to be shipped to the country where the licenser is based.

 ?? KYODO/VNA Photo ?? Tokyo will forge ahead with a next-generation fighter aircraft it is jointly developing with Rome and London following an agreement recently between the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner, Komeito, to revise Japan’s strict defence export guidelines.
KYODO/VNA Photo Tokyo will forge ahead with a next-generation fighter aircraft it is jointly developing with Rome and London following an agreement recently between the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner, Komeito, to revise Japan’s strict defence export guidelines.

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