TOKYO // Japan approved its largest-ever defence budget for the next fiscal year on Wednesday, as it looks to strengthen surveillance of territorial waters in the face of a continuing spat with China.
For the year to March 2016, Tokyo will spend 4.98 trillion yen (Dh154.16 billion), the government said, indicating a budget rise for the third straight year.
“This is the largest budget ever,” said a defence ministry official, adding the highest allocation previously was 4.96 trillion yen earmarked in 2002.
The trend reflects Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s wish to build a more active military, a push supporters say is in response to the raising of tensions with China, with which Tokyo is at odds over the ownership of islands in the East China Sea.
Japan is increasingly wary of Beijing, which is seen in the region as becoming more aggressive over several sovereignty claims.
But detractors point to Mr Abe’s desire to bolster the military more generally, and to shrug off the shackles of pacifism.
China responded cautiously to the announcement, urging Tokyo to pay heed to the past.
“We hope that the Japanese side will regard history as a mirror and follow the path of a peaceful development and play a constructive role to promote regional peace and stability,” said foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei.
The Abe cabinet decided in late 2013 to set aside roughly 24.7 trillion yen between 2014 and 2019 to spend on kit including drones, submarines, fighter jets and amphibious vehicles, in a strategic shift towards the south and west.
Among items on the defence ministry's shopping list are 20 P-1 maritime patrol aircraft.
It will also buy five V-22 Osprey – crossover aircraft, which have the manoeuverability of helicopters and the range of aeroplanes – along with six high-tech F-35A stealth fighters.
The ministry is also buying 30 units of amphibious vehicles and one E-2D airborne early-warning aircraft to be assigned to protect fringe areas, including the Nansei Shoto islands which lie between the East China Sea and the Pacific Ocean.
Japan and China have routinely butted heads over the ownership of the Tokyo-controlled Senkaku Islands, which Beijing claims as the Diaoyus, with official Chinese ships and aircraft regularly testing Japanese forces.
Separately, Chinese naval ships and military jets are seen increasing their activities around Japan, while an unpredictable North Korea continues its missile and nuclear programmes.
Mr Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in last November, the first face-to-face encounter since each came to power, and agreed to work towards easing tensions over the sovereignty of the islands.
On Monday, defence officials from the both sides resumed talks on building a hotline – their first meeting since June 2012 – in an effort to avert unexpected clashes in the East China Sea, the government said.
Mr Abe has also travelled abroad frequently to reinforce ties with foreign leaders, particularly those in South East Asia, in a bid to counter China’s efforts to expand its sphere of influence.
He has also worked to strengthen Japan’s military alliance with the United States.
The defence expenditure makes up more than five per cent of Japan’s general budget for the next fiscal year.
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Tree of Hell
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Weather warnings show that Storm Eunice is soon to make landfall. The videographer and I are scrambling to return to the other side of the Channel before it does. As we race to the port of Calais, I see miles of wire fencing topped with barbed wire all around it, a silent ‘Keep Out’ sign for those who, unlike us, aren’t lucky enough to have the right to move freely and safely across borders.
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