On Suga's overseas debut, Japan, Vietnam agree broadly on defence
transfer
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[October 19, 2020]
By Khanh Vu and Kiyoshi Takenaka
HANOI (Reuters) - Japan hailed an agreement
in principle to supply Vietnam with military gear and technology, as the
two governments pledged on Monday to strengthen security and economic
ties amid mounting concerns about China's assertiveness in the region.
"It is a big step in the field of security for both countries," Japanese
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga told reporters after meeting his
Vietnamese counterpart, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, in Hanoi.
The two leaders also agreed on the importance of maintaining peace,
security, freedom of navigation and overflight in the South China Sea,
and the peaceful settlement of disputes, Phuc said in a joint media
appearance.
Suga, who took office last month after Shinzo Abe quit because of poor
health, is making his overseas diplomatic debut this week, visiting
Vietnam, the current chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN), and Indonesia, the group's largest nation.
"Vietnam welcomes Japan, a global power, to continue to actively
contribute to regional and global peace, stability and prosperity," Phuc
said.
In a speech later Monday, Suga said Japan opposed any steps to heighten
tensions in the South China Sea, where Vietnam and other ASEAN members
have territorial disputes with China.
"Regarding the South China Sea issue, it is important for all countries
concerned not to rely on force or threat but to work toward peaceful
resolution based on international law," Suga said, avoiding harsh
anti-China rhetoric.
Back in Tokyo, Japanese Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi told reporters that
Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force will conduct a joint drill with U.S.
and Australian navies around the South China Sea on Monday, Kyodo news
agency reported.
Kishi also agreed with visiting Australian Defence Minister Linda
Reynolds to start talks to make it possible for Japan's Self Defence
Forces to protect Australian military assets such as warships and
aircraft, Kyodo said. Japan already has similar arrangements with the
United States.
SUPPLY CHAIN DIVERSITY
Japan must balance its deep economic ties to China with security
concerns, including Beijing's claims over disputed isles in the East
China Sea.
ASEAN members remain wary of losing access to China's economy, and are
reluctant to become entrapped in an intense confrontation between
Washington and Beijing.
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Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga (C) speaks with Vietnam's
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc during their meeting at the
Government Office in Hanoi on October 19, 2020. Nhac Nguyen/Pool via
REUTERS
Japan, which ended a decades-old ban on overseas arms sales in 2014
to help strengthen the nation's military and lower the cost of
home-built military equipment, has been in talks with Vietnam,
Indonesia and Thailand on deals to allow such exports.
"We have to make sure the equipment and technologies transferred to
Vietnam (are) to be used in a peaceful manner and contribute to
regional peace," Japanese foreign ministry spokesman Tomoyuki
Yoshida told a separate news briefing.
Suga's visit also coincides with Japan's efforts to diversify its
supply chains and reduce reliance on China by bringing production
home or moving it to Southeast Asia.
Vietnam is a popular choice for Japanese companies. Half of the 30
Japanese firms that used a 23.5 billion yen government programme to
diversify supply chains in Southeast Asia targeted Vietnam, which
has aggressively courted such investment.
Suga and Phuc witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understanding
for Japan's Marubeni Corp to invest $1.3 billion in a power plant in
Vietnam's Can Tho province and another for Tokyo Gas Co Ltd and
PetroVietnam Power Corp to jointly develop a $1.9 billion gas-fired
plant in Vietnam.
Suga said the two countries would bolster cooperation to mitigate
the impact of the pandemic, and announced a resumption of air travel
links.
"We agreed on restarting 'business track' travel as well as
passenger flights between the two countries today," Suga told the
joint media event.
(Reporting by Khanh Vu in Hanoi, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Antoni
Slodkowski in Tokyo; additional reporting by Phuong Nguyen; Writing
by Linda Sieg in Tokyo. Editing by Gerry Doyle & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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