Japan and the United States signed an agreement Friday to expand their
cooperation on a joint ballistic missile defense shield, moving to protect
themselves amid signs North Korea could test a ballistic missile.
In a photo provided by the U.S. Navy, a
Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) is launched from the Aegis cruiser USS Shiloh
(CG 67), during a joint Missile Defense Agency, U.S. Navy ballistic
missile flight test, Thursday, June 22, 2006, off the coast of Kauai,
Hawaii. [AP] |
The pact, signed by Foreign Minister Taro Aso and U.S. Ambassador Thomas
Schieffer, commits them to joint production of missiles to intercept incoming
missiles, the Japanese Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
The agreement had been previously negotiated and was not triggered by
emerging fears that North Korea is preparing to test a long-range missile,
officials said. There has been speculation that the United States could try to
intercept the missile if it is fired.
But the timing of the agreement -- part of a program in the works for years
-- symbolized the determined cooperation between the United States and its top
Asian ally to protect themselves against the threat posed by Pyongyang's missile
program.
The announcement of the signing came only hours after Japanese officials said
a high-resolution radar that can detect incoming missiles had been deployed at a
base in northern Japan.
The so-called X-Band radar was transferred to Japanese Air Self-Defense
Force's Shariki base in Tsugaru in northern Japan from the U.S. military's
Misawa Air Base in Misawa, the Defense Agency said. Tsugaru is 360 miles
northeast of Tokyo.
The radar is expected to begin monitoring airspace this summer for ballistic
missiles, the official said on condition of anonymity, citing policy. The radar
is solely to monitor missiles and not fitted with a missile inteceptor, she
said.
The deepening of the defense shield cooperation -- originally prompted by
North Korea's last long-range missile test in 1998 -- has been in the works for
months. Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe announced the expansion in December
2005.
The new pact allows the transfer of ballistic missile defense technology from
Japan to the United States -- a touchy issue in Japan, which has long adhered to
a self-imposed ban on arms exports in line with the spirit of its pacifist
constitution.
The new agreement updates a November 1983 pact on arms transfers and a
December 2004 missile defense cooperation arrangement.
Saori Nagahara, an official with Japan's Foreign Ministry, said that the two
governments have not decided when they will begin production of interceptor
missiles, but that the development phase is expected to take about nine years.
Japan, well within range of North Korean missiles, has been deeply disturbed
by Pyongyang's missile test preparations, and has urged the regime there to
reconsider the test and return to talks on dismantling its nuclear weapons
program.
Japan and the United States say there are signs North Korea is preparing to
fire a Taepodong-2 missile with a believed range of up to 9,300 miles,
potentially capable of reaching the mainland United States.