SUNDAY TIMES WEB DESK:The defence spending was part of a $912-billion national budget for the fiscal year starting in April 2019, approved by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe´s cabinet.
The government decided to set aside 5.26 trillion yen ($47 billion) for defence, the fifth record year in a row, defence ministry officials said.
The defence funding will cover the cost of introducing the US military´s Aegis Ashore land-based missile interceptor system, the officials said.
The FY 2019 allocation covers six F-35A stealth jets, and part of it will be spent on Japan´s first aircraft carriers since World War II.
The budget is the initial allocation of Japan´s new five-year defence plan, announced on Tuesday as the latest in a series of steps under Abe to boost the nation´s military.
Under the multi-year programme through March 2024, Japan will upgrade two existing helicopter carriers so that they can launch fighters.
Abe´s government argues the efforts are necessary given growing defence challenges in the region, including tensions with North Korea, and particularly “strong concerns” about the expansion of China´s military footprint.
But the move is controversial, with critics arguing it shifts Tokyo further away from its commitment to strictly defensive capabilities under Japan´s post-WWII pacifist constitution.
Beijing immediately expressed its “strong dissatisfaction and opposition” to the programme unveiled on Tuesday, urging Tokyo “to adhere to a purely defensive policy”.
Last year, China unveiled its first domestically built aircraft carrier as it continues to assert claims in the South China Sea. Beijing´s first carrier, the Liaoning, is a second-hand Soviet ship built nearly 30 years ago and commissioned in 2012.
Japan´s new programme comes after pledges to buy more US military equipment, under pressure from President Donald Trump.
The US leader has repeatedly complained about Washington´s huge trade deficit with Tokyo and also urged Abe to expand the country´s defensive capacity.
For his part, Abe has campaigned for years to amend Japan´s pacifist constitution, arguing that it ties the hands of the country´s Self-Defense Forces (SDF) even in protecting the country´s allies from attack.
“Japan´s growing defence budget is directly aimed to counter China´s military threat,” said Akira Kato, professor of international politics and regional security at Tokyo´s JF Oberlin University.