Saturday, July 18, 2009

DTN News: Japan Keeps Eye On Chinese Buildup, N. Korea's Future

DTN News: Japan Keeps Eye On Chinese Buildup, N. Korea's Future
*Source: DTN News / AFP (NSI News Source Info) TOKYO, Japan - July 18, 2009: Japan said July 17 vigilance was needed on China's naval activities and the risk that North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il's ailing health could lead to instability in the nuclear-armed state. North Korean soldiers clap their hands as its leader Kim Jong-il (not in picture) visits the navy's 597 unit at an undisclosed location in North Korea in this undated picture released by the official KCNA news agency on July 18, 2009. KCNA did not state when the picture was taken. The Korean characters read,"Let's defend to the last with our lives the core group of the revolution headed by the great comrade Kim Jong-il!". "We need to keep watch of China's maritime activities," the defense ministry said in an annual white paper. "Given the modernization of China's navy and air force, it is expected that their capability will expand beyond China's adjacent waters," it said, noting recent cases of Chinese vessels passing close to Japanese territorial waters. The ministry also voiced concern about uncertainty over the North Korean leader's ailing health and who will succeed him. "We cannot exclude the possibility that the regime will destabilize in [a] time of a change in the power structure that may take place in the near future," the white paper said. "We need to keep a close eye on developments in North Korea, considering the ramifications of Kim Jong-Il's health problem and the succession issue," added the report, which was approved by at a Japanese cabinet meeting July 17. Japan, along with the United States, pushed hard for tough sanctions after the North's April 5 long-range rocket launch and after its second underground atomic test May 25, which was followed by a series of missile launches. The defense ministry report also renewed Japan's claim over islands disputed with South Korea. The Takeshima islets, called Dokdo in Korea, are an "integral part of Japanese territory," the white paper said. South Korea reacted angrily July 17 to the renewed assertion of sovereignty over the islets, which are controlled by South Korea but have been claimed by Tokyo since the early 20th century. "We strongly protest Japan's description of Dokdo as part of Japanese territory and demand an immediate correction by the Japanese government," the South Korean defense ministry said in a statement.

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