Singapore keen on deeper defence ties with Japan to promote regional peace and stability: PM Lee

    • Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (left) with   PM Lee at the  the opening session of the Asean-Japan Commemorative Summit Meeting at the  Okura Tokyo hotel on Dec 17.
    • Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (left) with PM Lee at the the opening session of the Asean-Japan Commemorative Summit Meeting at the Okura Tokyo hotel on Dec 17. PHOTO: REUTERS

    Leong Sau Ming

    Published Sun, Dec 17, 2023 · 06:48 PM

    JAPAN has much to contribute to regional security, and Singapore is happy to deepen cooperation with Tokyo to promote peace and stability, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Sunday (Dec 17).

    This includes welcoming Japan Self-Defence Forces aircraft and vessels to stop over and make port calls in Singapore, he added.

    PM Lee was speaking at a commemorative summit held in Tokyo to mark 50 years of Japan-Asean relations, during a session that took stock of a half-century of ties and discussed the current state of regional affairs.

    The meeting at The Okura Tokyo hotel was attended by Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and leaders of South-east Asian countries except Myanmar, which was not invited due to the military coup d’etat.

    At their bilateral meeting on Dec 16, PM Lee and PM Kishida had also discussed deeper defence cooperation and exchanges, according to read-outs by Singapore’s and Japan’s foreign ministries that provided no further details.

    There are regular exchanges between the Singapore navy and its Japanese counterpart. For instance, in April 2023, they held a passage exercise in international waters in the lower reaches of the South China Sea.

    Addressing leaders at the Dec 17 summit, PM Lee said that Japan and Asean should work together to promote a “stable, open and inclusive regional and international order, based on the rule of law”.

    Singapore, which takes over as the Asean-Japan dialogue relations coordinator from Thailand in July 2024, will do its part to “take forward Japan’s engagement of the region”, he added.

    Japan’s contributions have “become more urgent, given the threats to peace and stability”, PM Lee noted. “Major power tensions raise the risk of mishaps and escalations in regional flashpoints such as in the South China Sea, Taiwan Strait and East China Sea.”

    Other threats include Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which violates the principles enshrined in the United Nations Charter, as well as North Korea’s nuclear programme.

    On North Korea, Singapore has consistently condemned its ballistic missile launches.

    Singapore also supports Japan’s and the international community’s efforts to completely denuclearise the Korean Peninsula, including by co-sponsoring an annual International Atomic Energy Agency general conference resolution to implement safeguards on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty with North Korea, PM Lee said.

    He added that Singapore supports Japan’s efforts to resolve the abduction issue, with Tokyo demanding full accountability from Pyongyang over the kidnapping of Japanese citizens by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 1980s.

    Japan, he said, has been an important partner on multilateral platforms such as the Asean Regional Forum, East Asia Summit, and the Asean Defence Ministers’ Meeting-Plus (ADMM-Plus).

    Among the many areas of Japan-Asean cooperation are maritime security, cyber and information security, as well as chemical, biological and radiological defence, PM Lee pointed out.

    Japan has supported the region in tackling maritime privacy and will also co-chair with the Philippines an experts’ working group on maritime security under the ADMM-Plus framework from 2024 onwards.

    Despite the close ties between Japan and Asean today, ties were fraught 50 years ago. Distrust was rife amid the Cold War while antipathy towards Japan was strong, with World War II in recent memory.

    In 1973, trade tensions were high, as Japan’s synthetic rubber exports had threatened to cannibalise Asean’s natural rubber industry. This paved the way for the establishment of formal dialogue channels, including a Synthetic Rubber Forum in 1973 to help soothe trade tensions.

    Four years later, Japan committed to peace, friendship and equal partnership with Asean under the Fukuda Doctrine, which was named after then leader Takeo Fukuda.

    PM Lee said it “launched Japan’s instrumental role in the growth of the region”. He recounted: “Since then, Japan has stood by Asean’s side through difficult periods, such as the Asian financial crisis and the more recent Covid-19 pandemic.”

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