Japan proposes record US $42 billion military budget to counter China's rise
The draft budget from April includes a 2.8 percent rise in defence spending to 4.98 trillion yen
Tokyo: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government approved a record $42 billion military budget on Wednesday, with outlays rising for a third year to counter China's rising military might.
The draft budget for the fiscal year from April includes a 2.8 percent rise in defence spending to 4.98 trillion yen, for items such as planes, naval vessels and fighting vehicles to guard waters bordering China, which has a long-running dispute with Tokyo over Japanese-held islands in the East China Sea.
"The situation around Japan is changing," Defense Minister Gen Nakatani said on Sunday. "The level of defence spending reflects the amount necessary to protect Japan's air, sea and land, and guard the lives and property of our citizens."
Abe has reversed a decade of military spending cuts as he seeks a more robust posture for the long-pacifist government, although his modest increases are dwarfed by China's double-digit rises in defence spending.
Beijing said last March it was raising annual defence spending by 12 percent to $130 billion.
Japan's new outlays will help pay for troop-carrying Boeing Co Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft, Northrop Grumman Corp Global Hawk surveillance drones, Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 stealth fighters, and Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd's P-1 submarine hunting planes and stealthy Soryu submarine.
The budget also includes spending to relocate U.S. troops away from Okinawa island, where locals have protested a heavy American presence.