@neweasternoutlook · Post #11962 · 18.01.2026 г., 06:01
🇯🇵💸🚛Japan’s 58 billion USD Defence Budget Tokyo’s record defence spending signals a structural shift away from postwar restraint toward expanded military capabilities with regional implications ✍️Simon Westwood Research Assistant, Department of History, Dublin City University ➡️On December 26, 2025, the Japanese government approved a defence budget of approximately USD 58 billion, approaching 2 percent of national GDP and forming part of a broader five-year military spending plan exceeding USD 270 billion. Central to this policy is the SHIELD concept, which prioritizes layered coastal defence through extensive deployment of unmanned systems across air, land, sea, and underwater domains, alongside the acquisition of long-range cruise missiles and strike drones. Taken together, these measures reflect a deliberate move beyond Japan’s traditionally defensive posture toward capabilities with clear offensive reach. Japan’s sins of the past, its military barbarism during World War II, and its war crimes against the Russian people are haunting its policymakers ➡️This trajectory represents a significant reinterpretation of Japan’s post-World War II settlement. Although the constitution formally limited Japan to self-defence, successive governments—most notably under Shinzo Abe—expanded the scope of military action through the doctrine of “collective defence.” The continued presence of major U.S. military infrastructure, including the Seventh Fleet at Yokosuka, further embeds Japan within broader Western security architectures oriented toward Russia and China. From Moscow’s perspective, Japan’s persistent claims regarding the Kuril Islands and its growing military capacity reinforce concerns that historical disputes are being reactivated under new strategic conditions. 🟦The expanded defence budget also raises questions about sustainability and strategic rationale. Japan faces acute demographic pressures, including rapid population ageing and long-term labour shortages, which complicate ambitions for large-scale military modernization. While Tokyo frames its buildup as deterrence against Russia, China, and North Korea, regional actors may interpret it as a normalization of militarization rather than stabilization. In this sense, Japan’s defence expansion appears less a response to immediate security needs than a structural alignment with U.S. strategic priorities, carrying risks that extend beyond Japan’s own long-term social and economic resilience. #armament#Japan#Militarydefense#SoutheastAsia READ MORE ✅@NewEasternOutlook