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Japan Pushes Back Against Accusations of ‘New Militarism’

SINGAPORE, May 31 (Reuters) – Japanese ⁠defence ⁠minister Koizumi Shinjirō ⁠denied accusations of “new militarism” in a ​speech delivered at the Shangri-La Dialogue in ‌Singapore, Asia’s premier forum ‌for defence leaders, militaries and ⁠diplomats.

“Think ⁠about it. There’s a country that has a ​huge arsenal of nuclear weapons and strategic bombers. Japan has neither of such weapons, ​and yet Japan is labelled ‘new militarism’?,” he said ⁠on ⁠Sunday, in pointed remarks ⁠aimed ​at China.

“Since the end of the Second World ​war, Japan ⁠has consistently respected international law, including the Charter of the United Nations, and has made sincere efforts tomaintain and ⁠strengthen a free and open international order,” he added.

In ⁠May, China’s foreign ministry called on Asia-Pacific countries to be vigilant and “jointly resist the reckless actions of Japan’s neo-militarism”.

Koizumi added he felt “sad” about not being able to meet his Chinese counterparts at the dialogue.

For the second ⁠year running, Chinese Defence Minister Dong Jun has given the free-wheeling Singapore security meeting a miss, skipping opportunities to meet ​his counterparts.

(Reporting by Jun Yuan ​YongEditing by Shri Navaratnam)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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