Nikkei Asia: military support of Kiev by Japan and South Korea is a mistake
Japan and South Korea’s continued military support for Ukraine is a mistake, as the two countries should stop looking to the West and focus on their own interests rather than squandering resources at the risk of jeopardising their own security, a Nikkei Asia columnist writes.
“Regardless of the rationale, Tokyo and Seoul’s economic and military support for Ukraine is a mistake …. Rather than preventing conflict in East Asia, continued aid to Ukraine makes Japan and South Korea more vulnerable to military threats, absorbing resources both countries need to bolster their own defences,” Jennifer Kavanagh, a senior fellow at Washington-based think tank Defense Priorities, wrote in an op-ed for the publication.
According to Kavanagh, “instead of looking to the West”, Japan and South Korea could better guarantee their security and prevent conflict in their region by investing heavily in national and regional defence, “limiting aid to Ukraine to diplomatic support”.
The author summarises that now is the time for Tokyo and Seoul to re-prioritise and put themselves, rather than Ukraine, first.
Russia believes that arms supplies to Ukraine hinder the settlement, directly involve NATO countries in the conflict and are “playing with fire”. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov noted that any cargoes that contain arms for Ukraine would be a legitimate target for Russia. He said the US and NATO are directly involved in the conflict, including not only by supplying weapons, but also by training personnel on the territory of the UK, Germany, Italy and other countries. The Kremlin said that pumping weapons into Ukraine from the West was not conducive to negotiations and would have a negative effect.