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China Calls New US-Japan-South Korea “Mini NATO” Alliance Destructive to Regional Security

The three partners will be launching early warning systems to protect supply chains, including semiconductors and advanced technology security, following an upcoming meeting in Camp David.

August 17, 2023
China Calls New US-Japan-South Korea “Mini NATO” Alliance Destructive to Regional Security
									    
IMAGE SOURCE: BLOOMBERG NEWS
US President Joe Biden, Japanese PM Fumio Kishida, and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol at the G7 leaders' summit in Hiroshima, Japan, earlier this year.

Leaders of the US, Japan, and South Korea are meeting at Camp David on Friday, where they are expected to announce details of a new trilateral alliance that China fears is a “mini NATO.”

The agreement is expected to cover intelligence sharing and cybersecurity, including the need to jointly combat disinformation. In addition, the talks on Friday will cover enhanced ballistic-missile defence cooperation and joint military exercises.


The three partners will also launch early warning systems to protect supply chains, including semiconductors and advanced technology security.

White House Indo-Pacific coordinator Kurt Campbell said on Wednesday that the agreements reached at the summit would be “a substantial step forward in recognizing the common security picture that each of the countries are facing” and recognising that “it will require common actions.”

Chinese Perception

In an article published on Thursday, Chinese state mouth piece Global Times (GT) said that the three countries “eyeing deeper security cooperation in the name of concern over North Korea’s nuclear program,” are only trying to “form a ‘mini NATO’ structure that will be destructive to regional security,” and will make the situation “more complex with more conflicts.”


“This ‘mini-NATO’ mechanism indeed capitalises on concerns stemming from missile and nuclear threats on the Korean Peninsula. But the design of the mechanism is not aimed at resolving the existing security dilemma in Northeast Asia,” Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the GT.

Instead, Li noted, “it seeks to exploit the existing security challenges to establish an alliance framework that would dominate the regional security agenda, which reflects US’ destructive intentions.”