US, Japan, Philippines strike deals on defence, investment at leaders' summit
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, US President Joe Biden and Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. unveiled a wide range of agreements to enhance security and economic ties during meetings held at the White House this week.
The meeting came as Chinese and Philippines coast guard vessels in the disputed South China Sea regularly become involved in skirmishes, with China increasingly asserting its territorial claims in the region, DW reports.
Kishida, for his part, addressed Congress on April 11 as part of a Washington visit, becoming the second Japanese premier to do so since Shinzo Abe in 2015.
His address, which comes after a Wednesday summit with Biden, focused on the importance of a strong US-Japanese partnership amid growing skepticism in Congress, particularly on the part of Republicans,
Biden affirms 'ironclad' commitment to Japan, Philippines defense
At the start of three-way talks with Kishida and Marcos, Biden said Washington's commitment to the defense of Japan and the Philippines was "ironclad."
"The United States defense commitments to Japan and to the Philippines are ironclad. They're ironclad," Biden said.
"As I said before, any attack on Philippine aircraft, vessels or armed forces in the South China Sea would invoke our mutual defense treaty," Biden added.
This first leaders' summit was seen as a chance to look toward the future, Marcos said.
"Today's summit is an opportunity to define the future that we want and how we intend to achieve it together," Marcos said.
Kishida calls for US to overcome 'self-doubt'
Kishida urged US lawmakers to overcome "self-doubt" over the country's global leadership role and said Japan was determined to do more to share responsibility with the United States.
"As we meet here today, I detect an undercurrent of self-doubt among some Americans about what your role in the world should be," he told lawmakers. "The international order that the US worked for generations to build is facing new challenges, challenges from those with values and principles very different from ours."
He said that while he understood "the exhaustion of being the country that has upheld the international order almost single-handedly," he believed that US leadership in the world was "indispensable."
Kishida's address came amid a deadlock in Congress on providing Ukraine with military aid.
"Without US support, how long before the hopes of Ukraine would collapse under the onslaught from Moscow?" he asked.
"Without the presence of the United States, how long before the Indo-Pacific would face even harsher realities?" he added.
Kishida said China's actions in the South China Sea "present an unprecedented, and the greatest, security challenge." He said this posed challenges "not only to the peace and security of Japan but to the peace and stability of the international community at large."