(Bloomberg) --- The Japanese government
said it would consider conducting air and sea patrols in the China as its neighbour steps up its
military presence in the region.
South China Sea, a
move that would risk fresh tensions with
“The
interdependence of nations is increasing and deepening, and the situation in
the South China Sea affects our national security,” Defense Minister Gen
Nakatani told reporters Tuesday in Tokyo .
“The way our nation handles this will be an issue going forward,” he said,
adding that Japan
has no specific plans at the moment to start patrols.
Nakatani was
responding to a question about comments made last week by Vice-Admiral Robert
Thomas, commander of the Navy Seventh Fleet, who said the U.S. would welcome an extension of air patrols
into the South China Sea to counter the
growing number of Chinese vessels pushing the country’s territorial claims.
Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying last week warned against outside interference
in the South China Sea, without specifically referring to Japan .
“We are willing to
and able to jointly uphold peace and stability in the South China Sea,” Hua
told reporters in Beijing
in response to a question about Thomas’s comments. “Countries outside the
region should respect the endeavor of countries in the region to safeguard
peace and stability, and refrain from sowing discord among other countries and
creating tensions.”
Japanese Maritime Defense Force |
Maritime Power
Chinese President
Xi Jinping has sought to extend China ’s
reach since coming to power in November 2012. The Communist Party leadership
has stated that making China
a maritime power is a national goal. China is also developing a more combat-ready military and long-range capacity to
bolster its claims to a large part of the South China Sea .
Tensions have risen
in recent years between China
and other claimant countries, especially the Philippines
and Vietnam .
The Philippines
has submitted its territorial case to international arbitration.
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