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Japan’s PM Ishiba vows to push strong defense under Japan-US alliance

publish time

02/10/2024

publish time

02/10/2024

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Japan's newly elected Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba speaks during a press conference at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on Oct 1. (AP)

TOKYO, Oct 2, (AP): Japan's new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba pledged to stick to the vital Japan-U.S. alliance while calling for it to be more equitable after he took office Tuesday vowing to tackle a slow economy and regain public trust before an upcoming election. Shigeru Ishiba replaced Fumio Kishida, who stepped down to pave the way for a fresh leader after scandals dogged his government.

In a show of Japan's respect to its most important ally, the United States, Ishiba spoke by telephone with President Joe Biden early Wednesday and told reporters he reassured Biden of his plan to further strengthen the Japan-US alliance that Biden and Kishida have significantly elevated. His new Cabinet emphasizes defense and a majority of its members, including Ishiba himself, are unaffiliated with factions led and controlled by Liberal Democratic Party heavyweights, and none is from the late Shinzo Abe’s faction that has been linked to damaging misconduct.

Speaking to reporters at the prime minister’s office for the first time following a palace ceremony, Ishiba called for stronger military cooperation with like-minded partners. He has been vocal about his wish to form a NATO-like alliance in the region. He said that one of his policy's main goals was to protect Japan as "the security environment surrounding us is the toughest since the end of World War II.”

Ishiba renewed his proposal of a more equal Japan-US security alliance, including joint management of US bases in Japan and having Japanese bases in the United States, which would require changes to a bilateral forces agreement. He called the current alliance "asymmetrical.” "The measure would contribute to further strengthen the Japan-US alliance,” Ishiba said. "I've advocated the idea for more than 20 years and obviously it's not going to happen suddenly just because I became prime minister."

He also said he hadn't assigned the matter to his Cabinet as an urgent task. "But I will not give up and will steadily work on it." He said Wednesday that he did not raise the issue on his call with Biden but would find the chance to do so later. Ishiba said he told Biden that he will strengthen Kishida's defense and diplomatic policies while bolstering networks that include South Korea and other like-minded countries. Japan's national security strategy adopted by Kishida's government in 2022 calls for accelerating a Japanese military buildup.