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Japan PM Shinzo Abe and Vietnam PM Nguyen Tan Dung share ‘serious concerns’ about China

VALKRYIE

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ASSOCIATED PRESS IN TOKYO
PUBLISHED : Sunday, 05 July, 2015, 11:27am

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Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguen Tan Dung (L) shakes hands with his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe. Photo: AFP

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Saturday he has shared deep concern with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung over land reclamation work in the South China Sea, taking aim at China’s attempts to change the status quo.

Abe said at a joint press conference with Dung after their talks that they “shared serious concerns over unilateral attempts to change the status quo,” without singling out China but apparently bearing in mind China’s growing maritime assertiveness.

“Our countries will further cooperate in building order at sea, land and air,” he said as they met after a summit of Japan and five Southeast Asian countries along the Mekong River, including Vietnam as well as Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand.

Tensions in the South China Sea have been exacerbated in recent months due to the massive and fast-paced reclamation work which includes military installations. Other Asian countries and the United States have voiced their concerns over Beijing’s moves.

Dung said at the same news conference that he and Abe agreed on the importance of upholding the freedom of navigation.

China claims sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, which is a vital shipping lane and believed to have rich fishing grounds. Rival claimants in the dispute are Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan, with Vietnam being vocal in opposing China’s push for overlapping territorial claims.

Dung also asked Japan for new patrol boats to protect his country’s seas, and Abe responded by saying Japan will discuss the matter to make it happen at an early date, Japan’s Foreign Ministry said.

Dung said he agreed as well with Abe to boost measures to counter terrorism.

Beyond their cooperation on maritime security and other global issues, Abe and Dung agreed to work together to pursue Vietnam’s infrastructure development.

On the occasion of their talks, Japan and Vietnam signed several agreements including providing yen loans totaling US$538.1 million for projects aimed at improving the Southeast Asian country’s power and water systems, and grant aid of around US$29.8 million.

Pushing for better infrastructure in Vietnam, which together with Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar is considered one of the less-developed members of Asean, is in line with Abe’s investment initiative announced in May to provide US$110 billion to promote “quality infrastructure” in Asia over the next five years.

Japanese government data show that as of 2013, per capita gross domestic product was US$2,073 in Vietnam, US$1,628 in Laos, US$1,103 in Myanmar and US$1,018 in Cambodia, compared with US$5,390 in Thailand, one of the leading countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

The average for Asean countries – also comprising Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore – is about US$3,839.

Japan PM Shinzo Abe and Vietnam PM Nguyen Tan Dung share ‘serious concerns’ about Chinese reclamation | South China Morning Post
 
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Freedom is coming (minus the democracy) :usflag:

Dung said at the same news conference that he and Abe agreed on the importance of upholding the freedom of navigation.

Dung also asked Japan for new patrol boats to protect his country’s seas
BS a bit and you might get new patrol boats for free, deal of the century :bunny:
 
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Together we are strong. :tup:


Indeed we are, my dear friend. Policy continues to show that Turkey and Japan are collaborating in all sectors: nuclear energy, naval patrols in the Gulf of Aden and in the Straits of Hormuz, defense cooperation and communicating building through collaboration in the UN, peace keeping efforts in the Middle East and provision of necessary aid for refugees displaced by war, joint research and scientific cooperation, cultural bond through enhanced nation-to-nation student exchanges. It is an exciting time, truly, for Japanese and Turks. Look forward to the new movie coming out based on the shared bond between the Ottoman and Imperial Navies ;) ;)

turkey-and-japan-film-on-ottoman-ship-starts-production_5367_720_400.jpg
 
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Indeed we are, my dear friend. Policy continues to show that Turkey and Japan are collaborating in all sectors: nuclear energy, naval patrols in the Gulf of Aden and in the Straits of Hormuz, defense cooperation and communicating building through collaboration in the UN, peace keeping efforts in the Middle East and provision of necessary aid for refugees displaced by war, joint research and scientific cooperation, cultural bond through enhanced nation-to-nation student exchanges. It is an exciting time, truly, for Japanese and Turks. Look forward to the new movie coming out based on the shared bond between the Ottoman and Imperial Navies ;) ;)

turkey-and-japan-film-on-ottoman-ship-starts-production_5367_720_400.jpg
I heard about that movie. It is a joint Turkish-Japanese production about our common history. Is the trailer already out?
 
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I heard about that movie. It is a joint Turkish-Japanese production about our common history. Is the trailer already out?


Its a joint Turkish-Japanese collaboration. No not out yet, bro. Later this year and i can't wait to see it. :)
 
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The more forcefully you throw the ball to the wall, the more fiercely it impact back. It means we become stronger.
 
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Together we are strong. :tup:

Who are you? :D What sort of attempt is this to feign relevance?

Turkey May Have Found Syrian Horse To Back In Ahrar al Sham, But US Disagrees
"ISTANBUL -- On the battlefield in northern Syria, moderate rebel groups who used to dominate the struggle against President Bashar Assad are falling one after the other. Some of them, previously backed by the U.S., are now dissolved into radical Islamist factions. But one, a more extremist rebel group, has gained power with the help of Turkey, say rebel leaders in Aleppo, Syria. Turkey is forging its own path to try and topple Assad by actively supporting Ahrar al Sham, a group with ties to al Qaeda that the U.S. has for years kept at arm’s length -- and that strategy is pitting Turkey against Washington, its biggest ally."

Your friends are right across your long border with Syria.
 
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