No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Saturday, November 1, 2025
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

Japan’s Takaichi faces early test of defence ambitions with Trump visit

Japan’s Takaichi faces early test of defence ambitions with Trump visit

Japan's new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi speaks during a press conference at the prime minister's office in Tokyo, Japan, Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Eugene Hoshiko/Pool via REUTERS

Japanese leader Sanae Takaichi’s new hardline coalition partner unshackles her security ambitions and gives U.S. President Donald Trump room to press for military spending, but her fragile government may put a brake on what she can do.

Takaichi, an admirer of conservative British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, was sworn in on Tuesday as head of a government that is two votes shy of a majority in the decision-making 465-seat lower house.

“She is conservative, wants to increase defence spending, and has styled herself the Japan First candidate. If she has a vulnerability with Trump, it is her relative weakness at home,” said Professor Michael Green, head of the United States Studies Centre in Australia and a former senior U.S. National Security Council official.

Takaichi has only a few days to prepare for her first face-to-face talks with Trump since becoming Japan’s first female prime minister on Tuesday. They may cross paths at the ASEAN regional bloc summit in Malaysia on Sunday before holding formal talks in Tokyo early next week.

“She certainly will be experiencing a baptism of fire on the diplomatic front,” a senior U.S. diplomat said, asking not to be identified because he is not authorised to speak publicly.

UNSHACKLED BY MOVE TO PARTNER ISHIN

A follower of assassinated Japanese premier and Trump confidant Shinzo Abe, Takaichi ended the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s 26-year coalition with the pacifist-leaning Komeito, replacing it with the right-wing Japan Innovation Party, known as Ishin.

“Komeito always served as a brake and now you have two coalition partners that are pretty much aligned,” said Jeffrey Hornung, an expert on Japanese security policy at the RAND Corporation.

The shift frees Takaichi to push Abe-era security reforms further.

Like her, Ishin wants to revise Japan’s pacifist constitution, strengthen the military to deter China and loosen restrictions on arms exports.

Ishin has even floated a U.S.-style nuclear-sharing deal that would give Tokyo a say over any U.S. weapons deployed in Japan. That would be a radical departure from Japan’s long-held three non-nuclear principles of not developing, deploying or hosting such weapons.

Takaichi has signaled she will accelerate Japan’s largest military buildup since World War Two, doubling defence spending to 2% of GDP. She has said a “contingency” in Taiwan, which Beijing says must eventually be reunited with the mainland, would be a contingency for both Japan and the United States.

“Managing relations with China will be a major hurdle for her,” said Kenji Minemura, a senior research fellow at the Canon Institute for Global Studies. “The loss of Komeito, which maintained ties with Beijing, is another setback.”

China’s response to Takaichi, a frequent visitor to the  Yasukuni war shrine that Beijijng views a symbol of past militarism, .

The upcoming Trump meeting gives Takaichi a chance to outline her regional security goals before Trump meets Chinese leader Xi Jinping next week ahead of the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea.

RELIANCE ON OPPOSITION PARTIES FOR SUPPORT

Her political weakness, however, will limit how much she can promise Trump on defence spending, said Tokyo University professor Ryo Sahashi.

“Speeding up the buildup was always on the cards, but the real issue is the budget,” he said. “It’s doubtful a government with such a weak footing can decide to jump to 3%.”

While Takaichi won enough votes to become prime minister, her bloc will still have to shop around for opposition support to pass key bills, a challenge Abe never faced.

“If Trump pushes her for a specific number, it could cause early friction,” said Hornung. “It wouldn’t surprise me if he says, you’re an ally, you need to do 3%, even 5%.”

To win Trump’s favour, which could bolster her standing at home, Takaichi instead plans to present a package of U.S. purchases, including Ford F-150 pickup trucks, soybeans, natural gas and a list of potential U.S. investments, sources earlier said.

While Takaichi and the LDP will miss the presence of Abe, who was assassinated in 2022, his widow Akie will be there to meet Trump. Takaichi’s officials may even take the U.S. leader to the golf course he and Abe played at in 2019 during his last visit, local media reported.

(Reporting by Tim Kelly, Kentaro Okasaka and Tamiyuki Kihara)

Post Related

Nuclear curveball: Trump’s testing plan raises fears, confusion in Washington

Nuclear curveball: Trump’s testing plan raises fears, confusion in Washington

If U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Richard Correll thought he was going to have an easy confirmation hearing on Thursday to...

Pressure grows on Europe to act on Chinese import surge

Pressure grows on Europe to act on Chinese import surge

A century-old tyre retreading firm based in a small town north of Hamburg in Germany kept British occupation trucks rolling...

Fear grips Indonesian palm oil industry as military seizes plantations 

Fear grips Indonesian palm oil industry as military seizes plantations 

Indonesian soldiers in fatigues marched onto a private palm oil plantation on Borneo island in late June and posted a...

What France and others can learn from Sweden’s hard budget lessons

What France and others can learn from Sweden’s hard budget lessons

When Sweden's then-finance minister Goran Persson dashed to New York during the country's early 1990s financial crisis to plead with...

Turkey pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge

Turkey pressing for Western fighter jets to claw back regional edge

Anxious to bolster its air power, Turkey has proposed to European partners and the U.S. ways it could swiftly obtain...

Bolivia’s new president rekindles cautious hope for long-stalled lithium dreams

Bolivia’s new president rekindles cautious hope for long-stalled lithium dreams

Bolivia's election of centrist Rodrigo Paz is raising cautious hopes that a more market-friendly leader could pave the way for...

Top news

  • 2025/11/01
  • As Trump skips APEC, China’s Xi fills the void with message on trade
  • No spoils of war: Syria’s new ruler lays down the law to loyalists
  • Nuclear curveball: Trump’s testing plan raises fears, confusion in Washington
  • Trump tells Pentagon to resume testing US nuclear weapons
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.