The new U.S.-Japan defense
guidelines open the door to a more aggressive take on regional security.
The United States and Japan on Monday took one significant
step further towards closer security cooperation in the increasingly contested
Asia-Pacific, issuing new defense guidelines that lay the foundations for a
more expansive approach to regional threats.
The 24-page document published
by the Pentagon revised previous defense guidelines the two governments adopted
in 1997, adding new criteria that allow for coordinated military actions.
The
announcement, which came while Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is on a state
visit to the U.S., aimed to strengthen Tokyo’s economic and military ties with
Washington. It has also quickly angered China, which has been aggressive in
modernizing its military and taking up territorial disputes in the past few years.
Responding in Beijing Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hong Lei said
the U.S. and Japan are responsible for ensuring their alliance does not harm
the interests of a third country, like China, or regional peace and stability.
The new
guidelines appeared to take a more liberal interpretation of when the two
governments should activate a series of readiness measures to deter a potential
attack. Previously, the measures were to be enforced only when an attack
against Japan is “imminent.” In the latest guidelines, they will be applied as
long as an attack is “anticipated.”
In the
case of an actual attack, the guidelines clarified scenarios for the U.S. and
Japanese militaries to jointly respond to ground, air, maritime, ballistic
missile and cross-domain offensives.
Although
not specified, the guidelines provided a basis for many cases where U.S. and
Japan could confront China – the regional power most capable of carrying out
attacks – over disputed islands in the East China Sea.
“If the
need arises, the Self-Defense Forces will conduct operations to retake an
island,” the guidelines said. Backed by forward-deployed U.S forces, they can
take necessary actions including “operations to prevent and repel airborne and
seaborne invasions, amphibious operations, and rapid deployment.”
This
wording will certainly displease China, since it applies directly to the
Senkaku/Diaoyu island dispute between Tokyo and Beijing.
The
guidelines would allow the U.S. to back Japan’s actions to defend its airspace,
some of which overlaps a newly established air defense identification zone
that China created in 2013.
These
highly targeted scenarios are inevitably seen as a means to counter China’s
heavy investment in developing its anti-access/area denial strategy
– an investment that has entailed sophisticated ballistic missiles, anti-ship
submarines, and new fighter jets – even though both U.S. and Japan would deny
any connection.
Also
included in the new guidelines was cooperation on cyber security. Beijing’s
rapid advances in cyber technology
have prompted regular accusations from the U.S. and its allies of intrusions
and espionage.
The
guidelines would also permit Japan to respond to scenarios where attacks
occurred against a third country, potentially enabling it to take part in South
China Sea issues, where other U.S. allies are confronting Beijing over
territorial issues. This came as Abe’s administration approved a
resolution last July that opened the door for Japan to send troops overseas and
abandon its postwar pacifist policy.
The new
guidelines came after U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter recently said
that America’s “newest” and “best” things are being deployed to the
region, in a seemingly desperate move to assure allies of commitments to
regional security.
Both U.S.
and Japan insisted the guidelines were merely serving defense purposes that fit
an ever-challenging environment rather than provoke any party. “We don’t think
that a strong U.S.-Japan alliance should be seen as a
provocation,” Obama told a joint White
House press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, when asked how
Beijing should view their relationship. “As I’ve said before, we welcome
China’s peaceful rise.”
China’s
Foreign Ministry noted that the U.S. and Japan did notify Beijing before
publishing the guidelines. Now that they have been published, the two allies
could soon expect pushback from Chinese military and foreign
policy hawks who have long suspected any U.S. alliance with its Asian
allies of being designed to contain China’s rise. Of course, that pushback will
be contained by the growing areas of U.S.-China cooperation, recently extended
to China’s ongoing anti-corruption campaign.
Kevin
Wang is a researcher for CNN’s editorial oversight team in Atlanta.
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