Support from 'indispensable' US vital for Ukraine's survival, Japan PM
tells Congress
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[April 12, 2024]
By Patricia Zengerle and John Geddie
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Ukraine risks collapsing under Russia's onslaught
without U.S. support, a disaster that could embolden China and spark a
new crisis in East Asia, Japan's prime minister told U.S. lawmakers on
Thursday, urging them to overcome "self-doubt" about the country's role
on the world stage.
In the first speech to a joint meeting of Congress by a Japanese leader
in nine years, Fumio Kishida urged Americans not to doubt the country's
"indispensable" role in world affairs, and said Tokyo was undertaking
historic military upgrades to support its ally.
He spoke amid deep divisions in U.S. politics over the country's role on
the world stage in a presidential election year, including in the House
of Representatives chamber where he gave his address.
President Joe Biden's request for $60 billion in aid for Ukraine, which
passed the Democratic-led Senate with 70% support in February, has been
stalled in the Republican-controlled House as Speaker Mike Johnson has
refused to allow a vote.
"I want to address those Americans who feel the loneliness and
exhaustion of being the country that has upheld the international
order," Kishida said.
"The leadership of the United States is indispensable. Without U.S.
support, how long before the hopes of Ukraine would collapse under the
onslaught from Moscow? Without the presence of the United States, how
long before the Indo-Pacific would face even harsher realities?"
Addresses to joint meetings of the Senate and House are an honor
generally reserved for the closest U.S. allies, typically no more than
once or twice a year. The last was by Israeli President Isaac Herzog on
July 19, 2023.
Kishida is only the second Japanese prime minister ever to address a
joint meeting, after Shinzo Abe on April 29, 2015.
His remarks were greeted several times by standing ovations, especially
as he recounted the years of his childhood spent in New York and close
Japanese-U.S. ties.
Kishida said the world was at a "historic turning point," with freedom
and democracy under threat, emerging countries holding more economic
power and climate change and rapid advances in artificial intelligence
disrupting peoples' lives.
CHINA 'UNPRECEDENTED' CHALLENGE
He also warned about North Korea's nuclear program and exports of
missiles supporting Russia's war in Ukraine. But the biggest challenge
the world faces comes from China, he said.
"China's current external stance and military actions present an
unprecedented and the greatest strategic challenge, not only to the
peace and security of Japan but to the peace and stability of the
international community at large," Kishida said. "Ukraine of today may
be East Asia of tomorrow."
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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida addresses a joint meeting of
Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., April 11, 2024.
REUTERS/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades
Japan has consistently raised concerns about Chinese military
activity close to its islands and neighboring Taiwan.
Taiwan, claimed by China as its own territory, has raised its alert
level since Russia invaded Ukraine, wary of the possibility Beijing
might make a similar move on the island, though it has reported no
signs this is about to happen.
To stress the importance of Taiwan, Republican Representative
Michael McCaul, chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee, brought Taiwan's Representative to the United
States, Alexander Yui, as his guest for Kishida's speech.
Asked about the speech at a press briefing on Friday, China's
foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said Japan was "playing up"
security threats and "discrediting" its neighbours and that Beijing
had lodged "solemn representations" with Tokyo.
Despite deep-rooted reservations in Japan about its militaristic
past, Kishida said the country was embarking on a major shift in its
defense posture to support U.S. efforts to ward off current threats.
"Japan has changed over the years. We have transformed ourselves
from a reticent ally, recovering from the devastation of World War
II, to a strong, committed ally, looking outward to the world," he
said.
Japan's pacifist constitution, adopted after its defeat in World War
Two, prohibits it waging war or maintaining the means to do so. But
successive administrations have chipped away at that restraint, and
plans unveiled at the end of 2022 to significantly beef up the
military may soon see Japan become the world's third biggest
military spender.
Kishida and Biden on Wednesday unveiled plans for military
cooperation and projects ranging from missiles to moon landings,
strengthening their alliance with an eye on countering China and
Russia.
"On the spaceship called 'Freedom and Democracy,' Japan is proud to
be your shipmate. We are on deck, we are on task. And we are ready
to do what is necessary," Kishida said.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, David Brunnstrom and Ismail Shakil
in Washington, John Geddie in Tokyo and Liz Lee in Beijing; Editing
by Don Durfee, Chizu Nomiyama and Josie Kao)
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