¡@
Japan, US said to plan exercises near
Diaoyutais
TAIWAN¡¦S STAKE: The islets are claimed by Tokyo, Taipei and Beijing. MOFA
said it wanted to make clear the ROC has sovereignty over the atolls
AFP AND REUTERS , TOKYO
Friday, Aug 20, 2010, Page 1
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, left, meets
Self-Defense Forces chiefs at his official residence in Tokyo yesterday.
Japanese media reports said yesterday that Japan and the US are planning a naval
exercise near the Diaoyutai later this year.
PHOTO: AFP/JIJI PRESS
Japan and the US are planning a joint naval exercise in southwestern Japanese
waters later this year near islets disputed with Taiwan and China, the Yomiuri
Shimbun reported yesterday.
The war games in December, to be joined by the US Navy¡¦s Seventh Fleet, are
based on a scenario involving Japan recapturing an unnamed remote southwestern
island from an enemy, the paper reported without citing sources.
Japan is to send fighters and patrol planes, as well as 250 paratroopers from
transport planes guarded by F-15 fighters in the drill in Oita Prefecture, near
Okinawa, the report said.
The US and Japan usually stage their naval exercises east of Japan in the
Pacific Ocean.
A Pentagon report warned this week that China¡¦s rising defense power is changing
East Asia¡¦s military balance, a view shared by Japan, which has protested over
several tense naval incidents with China this year.
INCIDENTS
Tokyo protested in April after a Chinese naval helicopter made a close fly-by of
one of its destroyers on the high seas off the uninhabited Diaoyutais (³¨³½¥x) ¡X
which are called Senkaku in Japan ¡X during exercises.
A similar incident took place near the Ryukus in the same month, when 10 Chinese
naval vessels, including two submarines, were seen sailing through international
waters between Japan¡¦s southernmost islands.
Japan¡¦s defense ministry has said it will review the basing of its ground forces
in coming years to strengthen the defense of the southwestern islands.
Meanwhile, Japanese foreign ministry press secretary Kazuo Kodama said the
Senkaku are subject to the Japan-US security treaty, stressing that the allies
would ¡§respond together¡¨ to any attack there.
¡§We have not been notified by the United States that it has changed its stance¡¨
on the handling of the islands, Kodama said.
¡§It is natural that Japan and the United States respond together¡¨ if the islands
are attacked, he said.
VIEW FROM TAIPEI
The Ministry of National Defense said it was verifying the report on the drills,
while the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) reiterated Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty
over the Diaoyutais.
Deputy foreign ministry spokesman James Chang (³¹p¥) said if the joint military
exercise is to take place near the Diaoyutais, the ministry wanted to make clear
that the atolls are the territory of the Republic of China (ROC) and there was
no doubt that the ROC government has sovereignty over the islands.
Chang urged all involved to set their differences aside and seek acceptable
solutions through rational and peaceful means.
DEFENSE REVIEW
In related news, Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan met his military chiefs
yesterday ahead of a review that could lead to the biggest changes in defense
policy in years, including easing restraints imposed by the Constitution drawn
up after World War II.
A panel of experts is likely to issue recommendations this month for a policy
review expected to be finished by year-end, with media reports saying it will
urge Japan to to beef up its ability to respond to multiple attacks and also
review a defense posture that relies heavily on the US nuclear deterrent.
¡§The role of the Self-Defense Forces is becoming increasingly important for the
peace of Japan,¡¨ Kan said. ¡§I want you to give me your candid views.
Japanese Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa told reporters after the meeting that
Kan and the four chiefs of staff discussed issues including North Korea and
China, but he did not elaborate.
¡@
|