
Japan must ‘resolutely reject' Trump's US military cost demand: ex-minister
Japan needs to firmly refuse US President Donald Trump's calls for Tokyo to increase what it pays to keep American military bases in the country, a former Japanese foreign minister said, a day before the second round of talks over tariffs between the allies.
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'Japan has already been paying more than enough for defence,' Seiji Maehara, now co-leader of the opposition Ishin party, said in an interview in Washington on Wednesday. 'We should resolutely reject the US request to increase the cost of supporting American bases,' he said.
The expense of US military bases has been brought up by
Trump amid negotiations over tariffs imposed on Japan as part of the president's global trade offensive, and may be raised again going into new talks set for Thursday.
Ahead of the first round on April 16, Trump posted on social media: 'Japan is coming in today to negotiate Tariffs, the cost of military support, and 'TRADE FAIRNESS.''
The largest permanent US overseas military presence is in Japan, where roughly 53,000 active duty service members are stationed at bases around the country. Under the current 'host nation support' agreement running through early 2027, Japan pays the US an average of ¥211 billion (US$1.4 billion) each year in costs for the bases.
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Trump demanded Japan raise its contribution to US$8 billion a year during his first term, according to a book by John Bolton, who was a US national security adviser.

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