On Saturday, a new defense cooperation pact was signed between Japan and Australia to recognize the deteriorating security situation in the region as a consequence of China's growing assertiveness.
Fumio Kishida, the prime minister of Japan, praised the advancement of relations between the two countries after meeting with his Australian colleague Anthony Albanese in Perth, Western Australia. The two nations are committed to conducting cooperative military games and exchanging more sensitive intelligence.
It expands upon a reciprocal access pact that Kishida signed with Scott Morrison, Australia's prime minister at the time, in January, which lifts restrictions on conducting joint military drills in either nation.
It is the first time Japan has reached such a deal with a nation other than the US. Japan's Self-Defense Forces will train and participate in operations with the Australian defense in northern Australia for the first time as per the agreement, as revealed on Saturday.
According to Albanese, "this major proclamation sends a powerful signal to the area of our strategic alignment" in relation to that deal. In an "increasingly hostile strategic environment," according to Kishida, a new structure for collaboration in operations, intelligence, information, and logistical support was devised.
Since the Australian leader's administration was elected in May, Kishida has met with Albanese four times. This visit is for an annual bilateral summit. Two days after the election, they first met in Tokyo at the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue meeting, also known as the Quad, which also included U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
It was emblematic of the close economic links between the two countries that the meeting was decided to be held in Perth, the state capital of Western Australia, which supplies much of Japan's liquid natural gas and the wheat used to make udon noodles.
According to a website maintained by the Australian government, Australia has some of the world's top five resources for vital minerals such as antimony, cobalt, lithium, manganese ore, niobium, tungsten, and vanadium.
Australia is the world's top producer of lithium, rutile, zircon, and rare earth elements, as well as the second-largest producer overall.
Since 2007, when Australia and Japan signed their first military statement, China's defense expenditure has more than doubled. Japanese jets were called into action 22 times in 2006 to stop Chinese military aircraft from entering Japanese airspace. 722 times in response to Chinese aircraft last year, Japanese warplanes had to scramble.