US military swings to Asia-Pacific region

Updated: 2012-08-06 08:00

By Zhang Yunbi (China Daily)

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Analysts say Washington's revised plan aimed at reining in Beijing

Washington revised its military cooperation over the weekend with two of its major Asian allies as part of a revamp of its Asia strategy, that analysts said are aimed at curbing China.

The United States and Japan agreed on a proposed second revision of the Guidelines for Japan-US Defense Cooperation during Japanese Defense Minister Satoshi Morimoto's trip to Washington on Friday.

Morimoto met with his US counterpart Leon Panetta on Aug 3 to exchange views on the Guidelines, a document released in 1978 and first revised in 1997. The chiefs have agreed to initiate relevant discussions.

Yet some believe the revised plan is aimed at reining in China, and preparing for unexpected incidents in the East China Sea, Japan's leading newspaper Sankei Shimbun said.

Both defense chiefs agreed that the big picture of security in the region has changed since 1997 due to China's growing maritime presence and Pyongyang's nuclear plans, Japan's Jiji Press News Agency said.

Panetta has been advocating for Tokyo to deploy Osprey military aircraft to the US base in Okinawa, Japan, despite previous air crashes. Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba said in late July that China's presence in the ocean is "obvious" and the deployment of Osprey military aircraft to Okinawa will help boost Tokyo's defense.

Japan's armed forces on Thursday also announced plans for a joint military drill with US forces in Okinawa later this month, Kyodo News Agency said.

The news agency quoted a spokesman for the six-day drill, planned to start on Aug 21, as saying that the exercise is aimed at "strengthening defense capabilities to guard islands", and is not planned to run counter to "any specific nation states".

Meanwhile, Yonhap News Agency on Sunday said Seoul and Washington are in talks to create a new joint military operation body as both sides agreed to dissolve the ROK-US Combined Forces Command, and Seoul plans to retake wartime operational control of its troops from the US in 2015.

US military swings to Asia-Pacific region

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