Visiting London, Japanese PM seals defense deal

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, followed by his British counterpart Boris Johnson, reviews the guard of honor at Westminster, after their meeting at 10 Downing Street, London, May 5, 2022. AFP - DAN KITWOOD

Text by: RFI Follow

1 min

The Japanese Prime Minister visits the United Kingdom, this Thursday, May 5.

Fumio Kishida met his British counterpart Boris Johnson.

The two men signed a defense agreement described as unprecedented.

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With our correspondent in London,

Émeline Vin

The agreement reached on Thursday should allow the rapprochement of the Japanese and British armies.

This partnership should materialize in the form of training, joint exercises and cooperation in the field of humanitarian assistance.

It was Fumio Kishida's first visit to the UK.

It was particularly marked by a flight demonstration carried out by three Royal Air Force fighter planes.

Fantastic to host Prime Minister @kishida230 as we agree to strengthen our cooperation on:



✅ Defense


✅ Green Energy


✅ Trade and Exports



This will deliver growth and security for both our nations for years to come.

pic.twitter.com/40Qsz6gUZn

— Boris Johnson (@BorisJohnson) May 5, 2022

Alongside the Japanese Prime Minister on the steps of Downing Street, Boris Johnson stressed the importance of “ 

unity 

” between European and East Asian allies in the face of the emergence of “ 

autocratic and coercive powers

 ”.

Russia was specifically named, although Tokyo and London have been negotiating the deal since September.

Ahead of the meeting, the British government announced the appointment of a "special trade envoy" to Japan to strengthen trade.

The United Kingdom should soon lift its embargo on food products from Fukushima, Boris Johnson has also been able to taste popcorn produced in the region.

In the wake of Brexit, London hopes to join the Trans-Pacific Free Trade Agreement.

However, Japan is the decision maker for this candidacy.

Japan-British agreement: China in the background

If MM.

Johnson and Kishida are at the forefront in terms of condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the agreement reached this Thursday, May 5 in London obviously concerns above all the Indo-Pacific region.

The British Prime Minister spoke of a rapprochement “ 

between the acts of autocratic and coercive powers in Europe and what could happen in East Asia

 ”, where Japan claims the Kuril Islands under Russian control, and where China is growing its influence .

 Security in the Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific areas is indivisible

 ,” said the Downing Street spokesman, adding that “ 

democracies around the world must stand united against authoritarian regimes

 ”.

Boris Johnson does not forget Pyongyang, calling the " 

recent ballistic missile launch by North Korea

 " an " 

act of provocation

 ".

And to add that London stands " 

shoulder to shoulder

 " with Tokyo and its allies in Asia.

Japan and the United Kingdom are also among the 14 countries which will send soldiers, next August, to the annual military maneuvers organized between the Indonesian and American armies on the archipelago of Sumatra and the island of Borneo, in the southwestern reaches of the South China Sea.

This part of the world, highly strategic for commercial shipping in particular, is claimed by Beijing almost entirely.

With agencies

►Read again: War in Ukraine: the Japanese Prime Minister "persona non grata" in Russia

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  • UK

  • Japan

  • Fumio Kishida

  • Boris Johnson

  • Diplomacy

  • Defense