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TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan will export used navy destroyers to the Philippines to strengthen its deterrence against China's ...
US ally mounts most ambitious push in decades to revitalise sector dominated by Chinese and South Korean groups ...
Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng plans to visit Japan for a World Exposition event in Osaka on Friday, with Japanese lawmakers ...
Japan is set to export six Abukuma-class destroyer escorts to the Philippines in a landmark move aimed at countering China’s ...
The Philippine Navy confirms the possible transfer of the naval assets, saying it’s sending a delegation to ‘conduct an ...
China has reopened its market to seafood from Japan after a nearly two-year ban over the discharge of slightly radioactive ...
Japan has test-fired a missile on Japanese territory for the first time as the country accelerates its military buildup to ...
Japan and China can contribute to peace and stability in Northeast Asia by finding common ground on security matters and enhancing cooperation. From this perspective, ...
A themed exhibition kicked off in Beijing on Monday to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Chinese ...
Tens of thousands of US and Japanese troops will begin a massive island-landing exercise in the Pacific this week as part of joint military operations seen as a warning to China that Washington ...
While China is engaged in a tense border standoff with India high in the Himalayas, a small group of islands thousands of miles away could be another military tinderbox waiting to explode.
But China has seemed to be faltering lately, and some have been asking whether China’s future path might resemble that of Japan. My answer is that it probably won’t — that China will do worse.