Soldiers from both countries may be hosted reciprocally.
Rome, 11 January Britain and Japan signed a historic defense deal today. The visit of Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to London, received by the head of the British government Rishi Sunak, culminated in the signing at the Torr in London of an agreement that will allow the forces of each of the two countries to be deployed in the other country for training, exercises and disaster relief.
It is the largest deal between the two countries in a century and comes after years of negotiations between London and Tokyo.
New Agreement
The new agreement meets the impetus given by Kishida for a more active role of other countries in the Indo-Pacific scenario. For two days Kishida has been engaged in a long diplomatic journey which has already made stops in Paris and Rome and which, after London, will take him to Washington and Ottawa.
In this tour Kishida brings to the table the priorities of the G7 presidency, which began on 1 January and which will culminate on 19-21 May in the Hiroshima summit, but also raises the question of the “free and open Indo-Pacific”, placing it in a broader framework of challenges to democracies by forces intending to “unilaterally change the status quo”. The reference, in addition to Russia for the invasion of Ukraine, is also to China and its military pressure on Taiwan.
Mutual Access Agreement With Japan
Britain is the first European country to sign a Mutual Access Agreement with Japan. For London, this is the most important defense agreement since the one signed in 1902.
London and Tokyo started negotiations in September 2021 and reached a broad understanding on the Mutual Access Agreement in May and have been working on the details ever since. In the coming weeks, the Japanese Diet and the British Parliament will be called to approve the agreement.
The deal comes amid Tokyo’s strengthening of security and defense partnerships, which is also strongly increasing its military spending.
Last month Tokyo joined London and Rome in the “Global Combat Air Program” to produce a sixth-generation warplane. In addition, the UK and Japan have launched a new partnership for cybersecurity and semiconductors.
This article is originally published on askanews.it