Japan, US, South Korea missile info-sharing system in final stage
Japan, the United States and South Korea affirmed Sunday that their system to share real-time information on North Korean ballistic missiles is "in the final stage" toward launch by year-end, Japanese Defence Minister Minoru Kihara said.
Kihara told reporters in Tokyo after holding a virtual meeting with his US and South Korean counterparts, Lloyd Austin and Shin Won Sik, that the three countries will further accelerate their work on the mechanism, saying "smooth progress" has been seen in their arrangements, Kyodo reports.
Currently, the United States has a system that is separately linked to Japan and South Korea for detecting and tracking Pyongyang's missiles, but its key Asian security allies lack a mechanism for immediately sharing such information.
Amid increasing trilateral cooperation on issues including repeated missile test-firings by Pyongyang, the three countries' leaders agreed in August to the goal of operationalizing the real-time sharing of missile warning data "by the end of 2023."
The planned system is expected to enable the three nations to detect and track projectiles fired by North Korea more swiftly and accurately.
The three defence chiefs also agreed during their talks on November 12 to enhance their cooperation through annual three-way drills "in multiple realms," Kihara added.