TOKYO
(Reuters) - The top U.S. general repeated Washington's "ironclad
commitment" to the security of its close Asian ally, Japan, on Friday amid
regional
tensions over North Korea, telling his counterpart in Tokyo that
"an attack on one is an attack on both of us".
U.S. fears
about North Korea's missile and nuclear bomb programs have grown in recent weeks.
Pyongyang has said it was considering plans to fire missiles towards the U.S.
Pacific territory of Guam, although North Korean leader Kim Jong Un appears to
have delayed the decision.
U.S. Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and their Japanese
counterparts agreed at a meeting inWashington on Thursday to work more closely
on North Korea.
"The
most important thing it (the ministers' meeting) did was reaffirm the primacy
of our bilateral relationship here in Asia-Pacific," U.S. Joint Chiefs of
Staff Chairman Joseph Dunford said at the start of a meeting with the Chief of
Staff of Japan's Self-Defence Forces, Admiral Katsutoshi Kawano.
"This
is a very important time for security in the region and of course we are mostly
focused on the threat coming out of North Korea," Dunford said. "I
think we have made it clear to North Korea and anyone else in the region that
an attack on one is an attack on both of us."
Tillerson
said in Washington the United States wanted dialogue with Pyongyang, but only
if it were meaningful.
"Our
effort is to cause them to want to engage in talks but engage in talks with an
understanding that these talks will lead to a different conclusion than talks
of the past," he said.
In 2005,
North Korea reached an agreement with six countries to suspend its nuclear
program in return for diplomatic rewards and energy assistance but the deal
later collapsed.
Tensions
have risen in recent weeks after North Korea conducted two missile tests in
July which, like its five atomic bomb tests, were carried out in defiance of
international pressure and United Nations resolutions.
U.S.
President Donald Trump has vowed not to allow North Korea to develop nuclear
missiles that could hit the mainland United States but Pyongyang sees its
nuclear arsenal as protection against the United States and its partners in
Asia.
Dunford said
on Thursday the United States would go ahead with joint military drills next
week despite pressure from North Korea and its main ally, China, to halt the
contentious exercises that Pyongyang routinely describes as preparation for
war.
North Korea
has fired missiles and taken other steps in response to the war games in the
past.
"FIRE
AND FURY"
U.S.
President Donald Trump warned North Korea last week it would face "fire
and fury" if it threatened the United States, prompting North Korea to say
it was considering plans to fire missiles toward Guam.
Both sides
have since tempered their rhetoric somewhat.
Japan
intends to expand its role in its alliance with Washington "and augment
its defense capabilities", while the United States "remains committed
to deploying its most advanced capabilities to Japan", the State
Department said in a statement.
The Japanese
defense ministry wants to introduce a land-based Aegis missile defense system,
"Aegis Ashore", to address North Korea's missile threats and has
decided to seek funding in the next fiscal year to cover the system design
costs, a Japanese defense official told Reuters.
"We
will absolutely help and what's most important for ballistic missile defense is
that we integrate our capabilities," Dunford said.
Foreign
Minister Taro Kono said in Washington Japan would strengthen its defense
posture in response to the North Korean threat and provide $500 million to help
boost maritime security in East Asia, where China has been pursuing extensive
maritime claims that have angered regional neighbors.
Japan is
likely to increase its defense spending at a faster pace in its next five-year
plan from April 2019 than the annual 0.8 percent average rise in its current
mid-term plan, the Nikkei business daily reported on Friday. Defense officials
have said such a rise was desirable but finance ministry officials are cautious
because of Tokyo's mammoth public debt.
North Korea
has repeatedly threatened to target Japan, which hosts around 54,000 U.S.
military personnel, as well as South Korea and the United States with its
missiles.
North Korean
missiles would have to fly over Japan to reach the Guam area, worrying Tokyo
that warheads or missile debris could fall on its territory.
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