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World Brief: Japan goes big on defense
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World Brief: Japan goes big on defense
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SEPTEMBER 1, 2023 | VIEW IN BROWSER | SUBSCRIBE
By Alexandra Sharp

Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at Japan’s record-high defense budget request, a mass hostage crisis in Ecuador, and Ukraine’s new long-range weapon.

Have tips or feedback? Hit reply with your thoughts.

Big Spender

A Japanese army uniform is seen.
A Japanese army uniform is seen during an urban assault in Townsville, Australia, on June 30.Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images

On Thursday, Japan’s Defense Ministry requested nearly $53 billion for its next defense budget. The 13 percent increase is the largest request in the agency’s history and the 12th consecutive raise. According to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, the spending boost is part of a five-year, nearly $295 billion plan to strengthen the country’s defense capabilities amid increasingly aggressive Indo-Pacific threats.

Japan hopes to make defense spending 2 percent of its GDP despite decades of a self-imposed 1 percent cap. In this year’s request, more than $5 billion will be allocated toward building a fleet of standoff missiles, nearly $9 billion will go toward enhancing the country’s air and missile defense systems, and around $500 million will be invested in next-generation fighter jets as part of a larger deal with the United Kingdom and Italy.

“This is fairly heady stuff for a nation of military euphemisms where the army is dubbed a self-defense force and aircraft carriers are modestly called ‘multi-purpose operation destroyers,’” journalist William Sposato argued in Foreign Policy.

In December 2022, Tokyo published a new national security strategy that effectively overturned 60 years of military pacifism, though Kishida said the country would remain committed to its self-defense stance. In the report, Japan’s Defense Ministry called China its “greatest strategic challenge.” Kishida has since said that obtaining a “counterstrike capability will be essential to deter an attack” from China.

Tokyo’s pivot toward a more aggressive defense strategy in the Indo-Pacific comes as Chinese and North Korean threats have escalated to dangerous levels. Over the last year, Beijing has increasingly threatened Taiwan’s sovereignty, boosted its number of overseas naval bases, and expanded its Belt and Road Initiative. Pyongyang appears to be following in Beijing’s footsteps. On Wednesday, North Korea simulated a scorched-earth nuclear strike on South Korea and launched two short-range ballistic missiles into waters off its east coast, spurring Kishida to call Pyongyang’s actions a threat to “peace and stability” in Japan, the Indo-Pacific, and the world at large.


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What We’re Following

Hostages in Ecuador. More than 50 prison guards and police officers were taken hostage across six prisons in Ecuador on Thursday, underscoring the rampant violence that has engulfed the South American nation. The kidnappings coincided with two car bombings in Quito, Ecuador’s capital, targeting the country’s prison authority. At least six people have been arrested in connection with the spike in violence, and no injuries were reported.

The reason for the slew of criminal activity is unclear; however, local authorities believe one of the bombings could have been in retaliation for a weapons search at one of the country’s largest prisons. In recent years, hundreds of inmates have been killed by drug trafficking gangs due to overcrowded, under-resourced prisons. Cartels rule large stretches of the nation’s capital, and assassinations have become commonplace.

Ukraine’s new weapon. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced on Thursday that his country has developed a new, advanced long-range weapon that can strike a target 435 miles away. The reveal comes just days after Ukrainian drones hit a Russian airport near the Estonian and Latvian borders, damaging four military transport planes in the process. The airport is roughly 400 miles from the Ukrainian border.

This week’s drone assault was Ukraine’s largest on Russian territory since the war began 18 months ago. The development of this new longer-range weaponry could enable Ukrainian forces to launch even more devastating strikes inside Russia. The last major success Kyiv claimed in its counteroffensive campaign was the capture of Robotyne, a key settlement in Zaporizhzhia, on Monday.

Special privileges. Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra secured a surprise legal win on Friday, when Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn commuted the long-exiled leader’s prison sentence. Instead of eight years behind bars, Thaksin now faces only one year in prison. The news comes one day after Thaksin submitted a royal pardon request.

Thaksin returned to Bangkok last week following the Thai parliament confirming Pheu Thai Party candidate Srettha Thavisin as the country’s next head of government. Upon his arrival, Thaksin was immediately escorted to the nation’s Supreme Court to face charges for abusing power while in office. The timing of his return suggested that Thaksin may have made a deal with the ruling military regime and political elite to shorten his sentence—although Thaksin and the Pheu Thai Party have denied these allegations.

Odds and Ends

Following last weekend’s World Bog Snorkeling Championships, Britain hosted another unique competition: the World Gravy Wrestling Championships. Every year, wrestlers don elaborate outfits and spend two minutes vying for a slippery win in a pool of gravy. Points are awarded based on entertainment value as well as wrestling skill. “Once you get in there, it’s a totally different beast,” said competitor Tommy Jupiter. “My opponent’s eyes and ears were full of gravy and he was completely disorientated, but we got through it.”

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The Diplomat
Japan’s Major Turning Point on Defense Policy – The Diplomat
Web 17 de dic. de 2022 · The DBP document will see Japan increase defense spending to 43 trillion yen ($314 billion) from fiscal year 2023 to 2027. This is a 56.5 percent increase …

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Japan Boosts Defense Budget to Record High - Foreign Policy
Web Hace 6 horas · Big Spender. On Thursday, Japan ... Japan’s Defense Ministry requested nearly $53 billion for its next defense budget. The 13 percent increase is the largest …

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Japan Set to Become One of World’s Biggest Defense Spenders
Web 26 de ago. de 2022 · Japan is set to approve what could be its biggest increase in defense outlays since the end of the war, putting it on a path to become one of the world’s top …

Preguntas relacionadas

How much does Japan spend on defense?
The spending approved by the cabinet is less than what Japan’s defense ministry requested this summer. While large by Japanese standards, it is far below the military budgets of the United States, at around $778 billion, and China, estimated at $252 billion.
Japan Approves Major Hike in Military Spending, With Taiwan

www.nytimes.com/2021/12/23/business/japan-defense-s…

Why has Japan changed its defense policy?
It's the biggest shift in Japan's defense policy since its cabinet reinterpreted the constitution in 2014 to allow the military to fight in support of an ally under attack. Japan's ruling party has long wanted to amend the constitution to remove restrictions on its military, but it has been unable to muster enough public support.
Japan lifts a longtime restriction to allow a major defense buildup : NPR

www.npr.org/2022/12/16/1143017026/japan-defense-spe…

How much will Japan's Defense budget increase in 2027?
This is a 56.5 percent increase from the 27.47 trillion yen in the current five-year plan, which covers fiscal year 2019 to 2023. This will increase Japan’s defense spending to the NATO standard of 2 percent of the national GDP in 2027 − following Kishida’s instructions to his defense and finance ministers to do so in late November.
Japan’s Major Turning Point on Defense Policy – The Diplomat

thediplomat.com/2022/12/japans-major-turning-point-on-…

How big is Japan's military budget?
While large by Japanese standards, it is far below the military budgets of the United States, at around $778 billion, and China, estimated at $252 billion. The new figure includes spending approved last month in Japan’s largest-ever supplementary defense budget.
Japan Approves Major Hike in Military Spending, With Taiwan

www.nytimes.com/2021/12/23/business/japan-defense-s…
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Web 31 de ago. de 2018 · WASHINGTON: Japan’s Ministry of Defense wants to increase its defense budget for the seventh year in a row, hitting a record …

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Web Hace 1 día · Japan’s Defense Ministry Requests Largest Ever Budget for Fiscal Year 2024 – The Diplomat Asia Defense | Security | East Asia Japan’s Defense Ministry Requests …





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NPR
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Japan lifts a longtime restriction to allow a major …
Web 16 de dic. de 2022 · It's the biggest shift in Japan's defense policy since its cabinet reinterpreted the constitution in 2014 to allow the military to fight in support of an ally under attack.

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Reuters
Japan makes record defence spending request amid tension with …
Web Hace 2 días · By 村上さくら August 30, 20239:47 PM PDTUpdated 5 min ago TOKYO, Aug 31 (Reuters) - Japan's defence ministry made a record spending request on Thursday of …

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Web Hace 2 días · Aug 31, 2023. The Defense Ministry said Thursday that it is seeking its largest ever budget — more than ¥7.7 trillion — as Japan looks to revamp the Self-Defense Forces …

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centerforsecuritypolicy.org
Japan goes on the ‘offensive-defensive’ - Center for Security Policy
Web 21 de abr. de 2022 · Japan goes on the ‘offensive-defensive’. Grant Newsham April 21, 2022. Originally published by the Epoch Times. A Chinese acquaintance asks me about Japan …

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