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Seeking stability – and responsibility – Japan builds up military

President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met to hail their countries’ robust new military cooperation, as the Biden administration applauds Tokyo’s willingness to shoulder greater responsibility for its own defense.

Friday’s meeting underscored Japan’s status as the United States’ most critical ally in Asia, as well as their shared vision for strengthening order and safeguarding peace in the region.

Why We Wrote This

Maintaining peace in Asia requires cooperation. By building up its military, Japan is shouldering more security responsibility, and taking a step toward its vision of a stable region following a shared set of rules and norms.

Under bold new security initiatives announced this week, the U.S. and Japan will work together to protect Japanese satellites and fortify the country with hundreds of long-range American Tomahawk cruise missiles. The agreements come a month after Japan’s Cabinet approved an ambitious plan to shore up its military over the next five years, marking a dramatic break with the strictly restrained, pacifist posture pursued by Japan since the 1950s. 

The defense push is designed primarily to deter China’s growing military assertiveness, but Japan’s larger vision is to build a unifying consensus for Asia, experts say. 

“Japan’s ultimate objective in the Indo-Pacific is not to isolate, contain, or weaken China,” says Nicholas Szechenyi, with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “More broadly, Japan’s objective is to develop an architecture in Asia based on rules and norms that ultimately China adopts.” 

President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met Friday to hail their countries’ robust new military cooperation and Japan’s unprecedented defense buildup – essential components of their shared vision for strengthening order and safeguarding peace in the Indo-Pacific.

The meeting underscored Japan’s status as the United States’ most critical ally in Asia, as the Biden administration applauds Tokyo’s willingness to shoulder greater responsibility for its own defense, and thereby play a bigger role in regional security.

In the Oval Office meeting, Mr. Biden said Japan and the U.S. have never been closer, pledged Washington’s full support for the alliance, and praised Japan’s “historic increase” in defense spending. Working together for peace and prosperity in the region is vital, Mr. Kishida said, stressing that “Japan and the United States are currently facing the most challenging and complex security environment in recent history.”

Why We Wrote This

Maintaining peace in Asia requires cooperation. By building up its military, Japan is shouldering more security responsibility, and taking a step toward its vision of a stable region following a shared set of rules and norms.

Under bold new security initiatives announced this week, the U.S. and Japan will work together to protect Japanese satellites, bolster U.S. Marine forces in Japan, and fortify the country with hundreds of long-range American Tomahawk cruise missiles. The agreements come a month after Japan’s Cabinet approved an ambitious and transformational plan to shore up its military by doubling the share of GDP devoted to national security from 1% to 2% – spending an estimated $320 billion – over the next five years. The plan represents the most rapid expansion of Japan’s military might since World War II, marking a dramatic break with the strictly restrained, pacifist posture pursued by Japan since it established its Self-Defense Forces (SDF) in 1954.

“The main impetus [of Friday’s meeting] is to highlight the monumental nature of the step Japan has taken,” says Nicholas Szechenyi, deputy director for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). “The White House wants to give a stamp of approval … and to send a much broader signal about the strength of the U.S. alliance network.”

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