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RAF fighters 'bound for Japan for first time in decades' as UK builds military ties
Sending Typhoons jets to the country would be the first time British fighters have gone to Japan since the Cold War
An RAF Typhoon taking off from RAF Coningsby Photo: Eddie Mulholland/The Telegraph
By Ben Farmer, Defence Correspondent
12:01AM GMT 08 Jan 2016
Britain is considering sending fighter jets to Japan for the first time in decades for joint combat exercises in the country, amid heightened tension in the region over China’s territorial claims.
The announcement of closer military ties with Tokyo came as the Foreign Secretary said that any attempt to restrict air or sea travel in the disputed South China Sea would be viewed as a "red flag".
Philip Hammond said freedom of navigation and overflight in the region, where tensions are high over territorial disputes between China and its neighbours are “non-negotiable” for Britain.
A RAF Typhoon
"Possibilities for the exercise include a deployment of RAF Typhoon to the region"
Ministry of Defence
Britain will hold at least one joint military exercise with Japan this year by either sending Typhoon fighter jets to the country, or inviting Japanese troops to large scale Nato exercises in Europe, the Ministry of Defence said.
The two countries will also build ties with staff exchanges, designing a new air-to-air missile together and granting each other access to bases.
Defence sources said a deployment of Typhoons would not be not meant as a message to China, or to North Korea, but to strengthen ties with what is now Britain’s closest security ally in Asia.
Britain's Defence Secretary Michael Fallon looks around the National War Memorial after laying a wreath in Otawa November 21, 2015.
Sending Typhoons to the country would be the first time British fighters have gone to Japan since the Cold War.
Michael Fallon, the defence secretary, will begin a visit to Tokyo on Friday by telling his Japanese counterpart he wants to “significantly deepen defence cooperation between our two nations”.
Japan has begun significantly bolstering its military in the face of what it sees as Chinese belligerence over the disputed Senkaku islands in the East China Sea.
Last year the country approved its largest-ever defence budget and also voted in changes to its pacifist constitution that could allow its troops to fight overseas for the first time since 1945.
The East China and South China seas have both become increasingly militarised in recent years as longstanding territorial disputes between China and Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam have flared.
A Chinese island building programme in the South China Sea has led to fears Beijing is preparing to impose a no-fly zone over them.
IN NUMBERS
Britain's 2015 defence review
F-35 fighter jet (Photo: Reuters)
The government's 2015 defence plan includes:
£178bn
to be spent on equipment in next decade
£7bn
efficiency savings expected from defence chiefs
2
new RAF Typhoon squadrons
2
new rapid reaction strike brigades of 5,000 troops by 2025
9
new Boeing P-8 maritime patrol planes
£2bn
more on special forces
1,900
more spies for MI5, MI6 and GCHQ
450
new sailors for the Royal Navy
42
F-35 stealth fighters bought by 2023
Japan, UK Announce Increased Defense And Security Cooperation
@Nihonjin1051
Sending Typhoons jets to the country would be the first time British fighters have gone to Japan since the Cold War
An RAF Typhoon taking off from RAF Coningsby Photo: Eddie Mulholland/The Telegraph
By Ben Farmer, Defence Correspondent
12:01AM GMT 08 Jan 2016
Britain is considering sending fighter jets to Japan for the first time in decades for joint combat exercises in the country, amid heightened tension in the region over China’s territorial claims.
The announcement of closer military ties with Tokyo came as the Foreign Secretary said that any attempt to restrict air or sea travel in the disputed South China Sea would be viewed as a "red flag".
Philip Hammond said freedom of navigation and overflight in the region, where tensions are high over territorial disputes between China and its neighbours are “non-negotiable” for Britain.
A RAF Typhoon
"Possibilities for the exercise include a deployment of RAF Typhoon to the region"
Ministry of Defence
Britain will hold at least one joint military exercise with Japan this year by either sending Typhoon fighter jets to the country, or inviting Japanese troops to large scale Nato exercises in Europe, the Ministry of Defence said.
The two countries will also build ties with staff exchanges, designing a new air-to-air missile together and granting each other access to bases.
Defence sources said a deployment of Typhoons would not be not meant as a message to China, or to North Korea, but to strengthen ties with what is now Britain’s closest security ally in Asia.
Britain's Defence Secretary Michael Fallon looks around the National War Memorial after laying a wreath in Otawa November 21, 2015.
Sending Typhoons to the country would be the first time British fighters have gone to Japan since the Cold War.
Michael Fallon, the defence secretary, will begin a visit to Tokyo on Friday by telling his Japanese counterpart he wants to “significantly deepen defence cooperation between our two nations”.
Japan has begun significantly bolstering its military in the face of what it sees as Chinese belligerence over the disputed Senkaku islands in the East China Sea.
Last year the country approved its largest-ever defence budget and also voted in changes to its pacifist constitution that could allow its troops to fight overseas for the first time since 1945.
The East China and South China seas have both become increasingly militarised in recent years as longstanding territorial disputes between China and Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam have flared.
A Chinese island building programme in the South China Sea has led to fears Beijing is preparing to impose a no-fly zone over them.
IN NUMBERS
Britain's 2015 defence review
F-35 fighter jet (Photo: Reuters)
The government's 2015 defence plan includes:
£178bn
to be spent on equipment in next decade
£7bn
efficiency savings expected from defence chiefs
2
new RAF Typhoon squadrons
2
new rapid reaction strike brigades of 5,000 troops by 2025
9
new Boeing P-8 maritime patrol planes
£2bn
more on special forces
1,900
more spies for MI5, MI6 and GCHQ
450
new sailors for the Royal Navy
42
F-35 stealth fighters bought by 2023
Japan, UK Announce Increased Defense And Security Cooperation
@Nihonjin1051
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