Japan PM Ishiba stresses US role in Asia-Pacific security

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Mr Shigeru Ishiba's comments underscored jitters over China’s military build-up in the Asia-Pacific and Mr Trump’s “America First” policies.

Mr Shigeru Ishiba's comments underscored jitters over China’s military build-up in the Asia-Pacific and Mr Trump’s “America First” policies.

PHOTO: AFP

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TOKYO - Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba stressed on Jan 24 the importance of close ties with the United States for regional stability, as he seeks to arrange a meeting with President Donald Trump.

“As the balance of power in the region undergoes a historic change, we must deepen Japan-US cooperation further, in a concrete manner,” Mr Ishiba told Parliament.

Tokyo must also “continue to secure the US commitment to the region, to avoid a power vacuum leading to regional instability”, he added in a policy speech.

His comments underscored jitters over China’s military build-up in the Asia-Pacific and Mr Trump’s “America First” policies, which may include demanding that allies such as Japan shoulder a larger proportion of defence costs.

“Japan-US leadership is essential to strengthen the free and open Indo-Pacific by establishing multi-layered security networks including Japan-US-Australia-India, Japan-US-South Korea, and Japan-US-Philippines,” Mr Ishiba added.

“At a forthcoming Japan-US summit, I want to share understanding with President Trump on these security and economic issues,” he said.

Japanese media said a meeting between Mr Ishiba and Mr Trump could take place as early as next month, likely in the US.

Mr Ishiba held a brief telephone call in November with then-president-elect Trump, and reportedly sought to meet with him in January before his inauguration, but this did not happen.

However, Mr Trump

hosted Mrs Akie Abe

, the widow of Japan’s assassinated former prime minister Shinzo Abe, for a private dinner with his wife Melania Trump at their Florida residence in December.

That same month, Mr Masayoshi Son, head of Japanese tech investment behemoth SoftBank, stood beside Mr Trump to announce a US$100 billion (S$135 billion) investment in the US.

Mr Son attended Mr Trump’s inauguration this week, followed by an announcement that SoftBank would lead a US$500 billion project to build AI infrastructure in the US along with cloud giant Oracle and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. AFP

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