US, Japan modernizing military alliance — Austin

U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Christopher Hill, left, and Lance Cpl. Clayton Fordham, right, both intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems engineers with 3rd Intelligence Battalion, III Marine Expeditionary Force Information Group, program a High Bandwidth Special Intelligence-Palletized Terminal satellite in preparation for exercise Azure Dragon on Camp Courtney, Okinawa, Japan, Jan. 10, 2023.
(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Abigail Godinez)

TOKYO, Japan — The United States and Japan are working to modernize their military alliance in the face of threats from China, North Korea and Russia, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Thursday.

Austin is in Tokyo on a brief trip for bilateral talks before heading to the Shangri-La Dialogue defense summit in Singapore.

Speaking before talks with his Japanese counterpart, Austin said the alliance faced "common challenges from the PRC's (China's) coercive behavior, North Korea's dangerous provocations and Russia's cruel war of choice in Ukraine."

"But we are united by our shared interests and shared values. And we are taking important steps to modernize our alliances and strengthen our deterrence," he added.

Austin cited trilateral cooperation with Australia and South Korea as well as the expanded "pace, scope and scale" of exercises and training.

US and Japanese forces are becoming "more versatile, resilient, and mobile," he added, praising Japan's decision to obtain counterstrike capacity and improve information-sharing with Washington.

Austin arrived in Japan on Wednesday, hours after North Korea made a failed attempt to launch a spy satellite using technology banned under UN resolutions.

Pyongyang has stepped up missile launches in the past year, and Tokyo is also contending with growing pressure from Chinese vessels around islands contested with Beijing.

Last year, Tokyo unveiled a major defence overhaul, pledging to boost security spending to two percent of GDP by 2027 and calling China the "greatest strategic challenge ever" for Japan.

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