Viet Nam News

France and Japan to start discussion­s on reciprocal troops pact

- REUTERS

France and Japan have agreed to start formal talks on a reciprocal troop access deal, strengthen­ing military cooperatio­n in amid rising maritime tensions in the Indo-pacific region and the Russia-ukraine's conflict.

The G7 allies have held numerous joint military exercises in recent years, bilaterall­y and as part of a wider group.

Paris has been pushing for more than a year to begin talks on a reciprocal access agreement (RAA).

RAAS create frameworks to facilitate military cooperatio­n, such as making the entry of foreign personnel and equipment easier for the visiting force.

"They agreed to start negotiatio­ns," a Japanese government official said, as Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and President Emmanuel Macron met in Paris.

"Given the accumulati­on of cooperatio­n and (military) exercises, we consider this important."

A Japanese government statement confirmed that the agreement to move forward with talks. The French presidency said in a statement that concluding the RAA would promote interopera­bility between the two militaries.

In December 2023, Japan announced its biggest military build-up since World War Two in a step away from its post-war pacifism.

It has already signed RAAS with Australia and the United Kingdom and is negotiatin­g a third with the Philippine­s.

Tokyo, which spent about two years negotiatin­g the agreement with Australia and one year negotiatin­g the one with Britain, hosts the biggest concentrat­ion of U.S. forces abroad.

The official said a deal with France could take about a year to conclude. A French diplomatic source said Paris hoped it could be done "very quickly."

"We see what's happening in Europe and the Indo-pacific as inseparabl­e," the government official said.

France has territorie­s in the Indo-pacific and stations armed forces in the region, where it has sought to develop its presence.

It wants to underscore how it can play a bigger role in Japan's defence industry, as it has in the civilian nuclear power sector, as Kishida adopts a more muscular military policy in the region.

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