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Japan has been fighting a shadow enemy for a long time. And in this fight, Japan’s defense spending increases every year. The Japanese government approved the defense budget for fiscal year 2021, which begins in April, on Monday. It has a total allocation of 534 trillion yen, in dollars, which is 5,160 million dollars. This is 0.5 percent more than fiscal year 2020. This is the seventh year in a row that Japan’s defense budget has increased to record levels.
In the past, there has been a bit of cover-up of the enemy, but in recent years, the enemy’s name has been made public. This enemy of Japan is China. At a press conference after the cabinet approved the defense budget bill, Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said Japan needed to respond to China’s growing maritime activity on the issue of ownership of several islands in the Southwest. from the country. As a result, a large part of the budget will be spent on the acquisition of new war equipment.
Around the Senkaku Islands, relations between Japan and China have begun to take increasingly complex forms. The uninhabited islands in the East China Sea are under Japanese control, and Japan refers to them as part of the country’s sovereignty. Japan says there is no opportunity to discuss the issue with anyone else. China, on the other hand, is reluctant to accept that argument and Beijing claims that the islands are part of China. As a result, war games are played on uninhabited islands. Japan is not far behind when China sends its ships there. And through this process, an uninterrupted arms race is taking place across East Asia, which is putting pressure on funds from different countries in the region.