Prime Minister Fumio Kishida pledged Sunday to beef up Japan’s naval and military capacity, warning that nations must prepare to face aggressors.
Kishida also condemned Russia’s war in Ukraine and denounced North Korea’s recent blitz of missile tests, one of which flew over Japan for the first time since 2017 and prompted a rare evacuation warning.
For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app.
“We must prepare ourselves for an era when actors emerge to disobey rules and use force or threats to destroy the peace and safety of other nations,” Kishida said as he addressed Japan’s international fleet review.
The leader’s remarks come as Tokyo is drafting security plans that may call for doubling the nation’s defense spending within five years. That would represent a sea change in Japan, where the pacifist constitution limits its military capacity.
“We will accelerate realistic discussions on what's needed to defend our people by keeping all options on the table,” Kishida said.
“The enhancement (of Japan’s naval capacity) cannot wait, including construction of new naval ships, bolstering our missile defense capacity and improvement of the work conditions and compensations for our (military) personnel,” he said.
He did not name China but said that “the national security environment surrounding our nation is growing more severe including the East China Sea and South China Sea,” where Beijing has taken assertive positions in territorial disputes with countries including Japan.
Kishida added that Japan will ensure transparency of its military spending.
“Japan will maintain our way as a pacifist country as we have done so since the end of (World War II),” he said.
The fleet review gathered ships from Japan and 12 other countries -- including Australia, India and the United States -- at Sagami Bay, south of Tokyo.
South Korea also took part for the first time in seven years, as Tokyo and Seoul attempt to mend strained relations.
Read more:
N.Korea missile lands off S.Korean coast; South responds with own launches
North Korea ICBM may have failed in flight, Japan residents told to shelter
Americans who helped Nissan’s ex-chairman Carlos Ghosn escape are sent back to US
-
North Korea ICBM may have failed in flight, Japan residents told to shelter
North Korea fired multiple ballistic missiles on Thursday, including a possible failed intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) that triggered an ... World News -
3D-printed weapons: Interpol and defense experts warn of ‘serious’ evolving threat
The evolution of 3D-printed weapons poses a “serious threat” if policymaking does not catch up with how fast the technology is evolving, global ... Features -
Totoro time: Japan’s Ghibli theme park opens to visitors
A huge grinning Totoro and other whimsical exhibits welcomed visitors to Japan’s new Ghibli theme park as three of its five sections opened to the ... Travel and Tourism