Japan鈥檚 assertive foreign policy can start in Southeast Asia

鈥淯KRAINE today may be East Asia tomorrow,鈥 Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told an in Singapore, a catchphrase that speaks to the harsh lessons learnt over the past few months. Better deterrence and response capabilities, he told a room packed with defense officials and diplomats, will be 鈥渁bsolutely essential if Japan is to learn to survive in the new era and keep speaking out as a standard-bearer of peace.鈥 Cranking up rhetoric, though, is the easy part.
Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine has into making bigger promises on spending, security, and a foreign policy that relies on more than economics 鈥 welcome news for allies eager to have a muscular Japan discouraging provocations from its nuclear-armed neighbors. Tokyo now needs to overcome what remains of domestic resistance, free up funds, and strengthen alliances, and fast. But this 鈥渃ourteous power鈥 can already use diplomatic tools to do more for the 鈥渞ules-based free and open international order鈥 that Kishida talked up at the Shangri-La Dialogue on Friday. He could do worse than to start in Southeast Asia. It鈥檚 a region that, like much of the emerging world, has largely distanced itself from allies鈥 response to President Vladimir Putin鈥檚 aggression, and where Japan has more credibility than most.
Ukraine has made even Tokyo鈥檚 most ardent pacifists realize that a totally unprovoked war is not a distant prospect. It鈥檚 a tough neighborhood: North Korean missiles, Russian saber-rattling around islets it says are part of its Kuril chain and Japan calls its Northern Territories, and tensions in the East China Sea 鈥 never mind the dramatic consequences of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. by Russia and China have done little to ease nerves. Little wonder that even if an overhaul of Japan鈥檚 forbidding 鈥渓and, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential,鈥 remains unlikely, public opinion , and limits are becoming more flexible, with counterstrike capabilities now up for discussion. Even Kishida, whose family hails from Hiroshima and is less hawkish than others in his party, is pledging a substantial increase in defense spending, a step further from the pacifist mindset of recent decades.
Even so, it will be challenging to move quickly at home. Kishida gave no specifics, but an increase in the defense budget to 2% of gross domestic product, or NATO levels, as his party 鈥 roughly doubling the current share 鈥 may be a tough sell in practice, given post-pandemic demands and already stretched public finances. Kishida can still add manpower to the Self-Defense Forces, as Japan鈥檚 military is known, bolster missile defense and cybersecurity (a major concern), while working on strengthening the alliance with America 鈥 though Kishida has, for now, pushed aside nuclear sharing, or the possibility of hosting US nuclear weapons on Japanese soil.
But Japan, which has already broken with precedent by accepting refugees and sending bulletproof vests to Ukraine, can take other steps to protect not just itself but the rules-based order it depends on, with more forceful diplomatic efforts to help widen the alliance of nations condemning Russia鈥檚 aggression and pushing to isolate its economy. Southeast Asia is a good place to begin.
With the exception of Singapore, which has imposed unilateral sanctions for the first time in more than four decades, the region has largely sought to remain neutral in the conflict. That鈥檚 due in equal parts to the power of Russian weapons exports, deep-seated anti-Western sentiment, Soviet-era ties, disinformation 鈥 and of course diplomatic disengagement on the part of the wealthy world, not to mention sheer distance. Just a day after Kishida addressed the Singapore gathering, Indonesian Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, whose country has refused Ukraine鈥檚 request for weapons, defended what he called strategic neutrality, former South African leader Nelson Mandela鈥檚 comment when asked in a US interview about Cuba鈥檚 Fidel Castro: 鈥淵our enemy is not necessarily my enemy.鈥 It鈥檚 a position Russia is exploiting as the food crisis worsens, which will be used to weaken support for Ukraine as the war grinds on. And it鈥檚 an issue the West is not doing enough to tackle.
Southeast Asia is important, not just as a grouping of important emerging economies but because this year, it has the global spotlight: Indonesia chairs the G20, which will meet in Bali in November, and Thailand will host the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation鈥檚 economic leaders summit. So it matters when Cambodia, the current chair of ASEAN, joins with Indonesia and Thailand to issue a statement on their respective meetings that , in favor of working 鈥渨ith all partners and stakeholders.鈥
Japan is already engaged with the region and in his first months, Kishida has visited Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore, and welcomed Malaysia鈥檚 prime minister in Tokyo. It鈥檚 also the region鈥檚 , not to mention a . But as with its investment, diplomatic efforts have been patient and understated, and far more is needed. There is an uncomfortable colonial past and officials will be dealing with reluctant and distracted governments 鈥 Indonesia, for one, is already beginning to look ahead to a 2024 election. It will also have to steer away from values conversations around political systems. Singapore鈥檚 defense minister is right 鈥渇ew takers for a battle royale on that basis.鈥
But stronger economic ties will help, as will military supplies to reduce dependence on Russia, not to mention coordinating food aid and support where needed as the conflict in Ukraine fuels a surge in prices and hunger. Persistent diplomacy too. Avoiding another aggressor trampling over smaller neighbors demands it.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


