Bullet Train Technology Japan
To  Counter China, Japan and Philippines Will Bolster Maritime Cooperation
TOKYO — In a telling sign of how China's rise  has helped turn former wartime foes into allies, Japan and the Philippines  agreed on Thursday to cooperate more closely on maritime security.
During talks in Manila, the foreign ministers  of Japan and the Philippines proclaimed their nations to be strategic partners  that would collaborate more in resolving their separate territorial disputes  with China, news reports said. They also expressed "mutual concern" over  increasingly assertive claims by China that have embroiled both nations,  according to Kyodo News.
Japan is in a tense showdown over islands in  the East China Sea, while the Philippines has wrangled with China over control  of islands and fishing grounds in the South China Sea. The two nations agreed  to exchange information and discuss each other's strategies for responding to  China, the ministers were quoted as saying. The Philippine minister, Albert del  Rosario, said the discussion included a request by his country for 10 new  patrol ships from Japan to strengthen the Filipino coast guard.
His Japanese counterpart, Fumio Kishida, was  appointed last month by Japan's new conservative Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe.  The decision to have Mr. Kishida visit the Philippines for his first trip was  seen as a symbolic gesture by Mr. Abe, who has vowed to strengthen security  ties with other democracies in the region in an effort to offset China's growing  military and political clout.
Mr. Abe has also said he wants to work more  closely with the United States and Australia to help bolster the capacity of  less-developed nations like the Philippines to stand up to China. While  long-pacifist Japan has restricted its aid to mostly nonmilitary purposes, like  building up coast guards, its leaders have recently begun loosening some of the  self-imposed restrictions. Japan is now in talks about providing training to  submarine crews from Vietnam, and last year it gave its first limited military  aid to East Timor and Cambodia.
Japan has long supplied development aid in the  region, but it has operated carefully to avoid stirring bitter memories of its  militarism during World War II, when its forces swept across much of Southeast  Asia, including the Philippines, then emerging from its colonial relationship  with the United States. However, in recent years Japan's military has slowly  raised its profile by joining regional training exercises and holding its first  bilateral military maneuvers with Australia and India.
The building of regional military ties  represents a significant strategic departure for the country, which after World  War II relied for its defense on the United States and the roughly 50,000  military personnel it bases in Japan. For its part, China has pointed to the  moves as proof of a resurgent militarism in Japan, which it says is swinging to  the right.
News reports said Mr. del Rosario, the  Philippine minister, called China's territorial claims in the South China Sea a  threat to regional stability.
"We also need to be able to address the  possibility that the freedom of navigation would be adversely affected," he was  quoted as saying by The Associated Press.
The Japanese foreign minister agreed.
"As the strategic environment is changing, it  is necessary for us as foreign ministers to share recognition of the  situation," Mr. Kishida said after the talks, according to Kyodo News. Kyodo  said that Mr. Kishida also offered development loans to help build a light-rail  system and a new airport. (http://nyti.ms/13lTggC)
New York Times 




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