By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Tokyo-China-Washington
In November, soon
after taking office, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi
told parliament that a Chinese assault on Taiwan
could constitute an existential threat to Japan and could warrant a military
response. To China, which sees any commitment to supporting Taiwan as a
provocation, these were fighting words. In response, Beijing
stepped up military exercises near Japan, halted the imports of Japanese
seafood, banned exports of dual-use goods - products that can be used for
civilian and military purposes - to Japan, and advised its
citizens not to travel there.
Takaichi’s comments are all the more worrying for China because
Japan is undergoing a profound shift. Over the past four years, Tokyo has
prepared itself to counter China’s coercive behavior by splurging on its armed
forces, protecting its supply chains, and becoming more assertive in its
neighborhood.
Washington has
welcomed these moves, but its support of Tokyo in light of Beijing’s recent
pressure campaign has been tepid to nonexistent. That is a mistake. The United
States should capitalize on Japan’s newfound muscularity by building its
Indo-Pacific strategy around a revitalized U.S.–Japanese alliance. The two
countries should harmonize their defenses and, along with regional partners
Australia and India, coordinate industrial policy in sensitive sectors. If the
United States fails to take advantage of this moment or sees Japan’s strength
as a reason to pull away from the region, Washington will be in a much worse
position to deter China from taking Taiwan or
otherwise wreaking havoc in the Indo-Pacific.

Abe also revitalized the Quad - a diplomatic partnership among
Australia, India, Japan, and the United States - to coordinate security,
technology, and economic policy. Abe did more than any other leader to
encourage the United States and other like-minded countries to take a more
assertive stance against an aggrandizing China. He also made clear that
Taiwan’s security is Japan’s security.
Russia’s full-scale
invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 accelerated Japan’s transformation into a
modern military power. Then Prime Minister Fumio Kishida warned that “Ukraine
today may be East Asia tomorrow,” summing up the fear that China might take a
page from Russia’s playbook and invade its neighbors. That year, Japan
committed to doubling its defense spending to two percent of GDP by 2027 and
explicitly and unequivocally identified China as its greatest threat. Tokyo
also started acquiring counterstrike capabilities to target an adversary’s
missile launch sites, which, just a few years before, was considered
unthinkable for fear of upsetting China and violating a self-imposed
restriction on weapons that can be used offensively. No longer would Japan’s
military, the Japan Self-Defense Forces, remain in a purely defensive crouch.
Today, Tokyo is
preparing to put into service hypersonic weapons that can disrupt North Korean
and Chinese air and missile defenses, and deploying Tomahawk cruise missiles,
Joint Strike Missiles, and domestically upgraded Type 12 surface-to-ship
missiles to improve its ability to launch counterstrikes. Tokyo is also
investing heavily in space domain awareness - the ability to track satellites
and detect threats in orbit - committing $3.5 billion in 2025, up tenfold from
2020. In addition, Japan is hardening its position on its southwest islands,
which are close to Taiwan. (One of them, Yonaguni
Island, is just 68 miles away.)
Moreover, Japan has
been strengthening its regional defense ties to further solidify its position
against China. It has helped other countries in the region, including
Bangladesh and the Philippines, defend against Chinese incursions. Tokyo, for
instance, has provided the Philippines with an air surveillance radar system
and 12 of its 18 coast guard vessels. Japan has also loosened its defense
export rules so it can more easily share technology with its allies. In 2023,
it signed an agreement with Italy and the United Kingdom to jointly produce a
fighter jet. And in 2025, Australia announced it would buy 11 Mogami-class
stealth frigates from Japan for $6.5 billion - Japan’s biggest defense export
deal yet.
Equally significant
has been Tokyo’s investment in collective defense arrangements. Over the past
five years, Japan has inked agreements with Australia, the Philippines, and the
United Kingdom that expand opportunities for joint training, resource pooling,
shared logistics, and reciprocal access to bases. These are the building blocks
of a NATO-like system in the Indo-Pacific.

Going All In
Japan is now more
capable today than it has been at any point since the end of World War II. Yet
it faces a paradox: the success of its fortification risks encouraging U.S.
retrenchment. American policymakers and strategists who advocate foreign policy
restraint may argue that with a more capable Japan, the United States can do
less in the Indo-Pacific. But the opposite is true.
Japan’s new military
posture offers the United States a rare gift: a fully committed ally willing to
act as the forward anchor of regional collective defense. Washington should
meet this moment by strengthening its defense cooperation with Japan. Deterring
China will demand an alliance architecture built around combined planning,
interoperable forces, and integrated economic security policy. Geography works
against U.S. power projection: if the United States were to go to war with
China over Taiwan, the logistical strain on U.S. forces would be immense.
Washington would need to work with its regional allies to station its troops
and equipment close to the action.
The United States and
Japan have been collaborating more on defense over the past several years but
they need to go further. In 2025, Japan launched its Joint Operations Command,
which integrates the three branches of its armed forces. And Washington and
Tokyo have begun upgrading U.S. Forces Japan, which oversees American troops in
the country, from an administrative body to a joint force headquarters. But the
two allies still don’t have a body with the operational authority and structure
to coordinate U.S. and Japanese forces in a crisis. The United States should
place a senior officer in Tokyo - under the authority of the Indo-Pacific
combatant commander - to make quick decisions alongside Japan’s Joint
Operations Command. Over time, the United States and Japan should work toward a
truly combined command like U.S. Forces Korea. Otherwise, if U.S. and Japanese
troops come up against a common enemy, they will be fighting in parallel,
leading to inefficiencies and, potentially, accidents.
The United States and
Japan must also integrate their missile defense systems, including fusing
sensors between Aegis ships, ground-based interceptors, and space-based early
warning systems to create a seamless defensive umbrella across the so-called
first island chain, which stretches from Japan to the Philippines and separates
China from the Pacific Ocean.
Beyond command and
missile defense integration, the United States and Japan need to together
produce critical arms on Japanese soil. Today, the United States stations
precision-guided munitions, air defense interceptors, and antiship missiles in
Japan. That’s a good start, but those stocks would quickly run out in the event
of a war with China. Washington must leverage Japan’s advanced manufacturing
base, which already produces Patriot missiles, SM-3 interceptors, and Type 12
missiles, to jointly make SM-6 multimission missiles
and AMRAAM air-to-air missiles, which are precise and long-range.

Japanese armed forces taking part in a drill near
Tokyo, January 2026
China-Proofing the Economy
In addition to
improving its hard power, Japan has been preparing itself to better withstand
Chinese economic coercion. Through its industrial policy, Beijing has come to
dominate manufacturing in batteries, drones, and legacy chips, and it exploits
its control of chokepoints over the economy, such as its near monopoly over the
processing of critical minerals such as gallium to its advantage. Tokyo learned
the risks of relying too heavily on China earlier than most. In 2010, after
Japan detained a Chinese fishing captain who rammed a Japanese coast guard
vessel near the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands, Beijing retaliated by cutting off its
exports of rare earths. Japanese industry was jolted, and the episode became a
case study in China’s willingness to weaponize interdependence.
Almost a decade
later, Tokyo established the Council for the Promotion of Economic Security, a
government body that coordinates defensive economic policy, and passed the
Economic Security Promotion Act to ensure stable supplies of critical goods,
protect essential infrastructure, develop vital technologies, and safeguard
sensitive intellectual property. In particular, Japan has upgraded its domestic
chip industry. Tokyo, for instance, allocated $6.9 billion for a plant for
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s leading semiconductor
manufacturer, in Kyushu. And it has poured over $10 billion into Rapidus, a chip-making startup and Japan’s most ambitious,
and risky, bet on technological sovereignty since the 1980s. Founded by eight
major Japanese companies, including Toyota and Sony, Rapidus
aims to mass produce two-nanometer chips by 2027, bringing Japan back to the
cutting edge of semiconductor manufacturing after falling two decades behind.
At the same time,
Japan has gone on the economic offensive against Beijing. It has joined the
United States and Europe in restricting exports of semiconductor manufacturing
equipment to China. Tokyo has also curbed Chinese investment in sensitive
Japanese technologies. The combined effect has been to deny Chinese firms the
specialized tools and intellectual property needed to make high-end chips. And,
crucially, Japan imposed sanctions on Russia outside a UN mandate - a notable
departure from its historically cautious approach. It is clear that Tokyo is
prepared to meet aggression with tough economic action.
Still, there is even
more that Japan can do to improve its economic security, such as protecting its
pharmaceutical supply chains. China dominates the global production of
essential medicines, including breakthrough drugs, and controls many of the
world’s key pharmaceutical ingredients, giving it massive leverage over the
public health of Japan and its allies. Tokyo and Washington should coordinate
on pharmaceutical security by mapping supply chain dependencies, investing in
alternative manufacturing capacity, and cracking down against unauthorized
distribution networks that provide Beijing with backdoors to manipulate supply
volumes and degrade drug quality.

Strengthen Your Quads
Protecting the region
from China’s economic and military dominance must ultimately involve
coordination among all four members of the Quad. An allied response to Chinese
industrial policy cannot simply subsidize domestic production in each country,
which would lead to inefficient duplication and fail to create a combined
market large enough to compete with the scale of China’s state-led economy.
Instead, Australia, India, and the United States can work with Japan to build
on Tokyo’s manufacturing leadership.
Japan has a history
of transferring its manufacturing excellence to other countries. In the 1980s,
when Japanese automakers established so-called transplant factories in the
United States, they did more than just build cars - they transformed American
manufacturing culture. A joint venture between Toyota and General Motors in
Fremont, California, took a failed GM plant with abysmal productivity and
combative labor relations and turned it into a model of efficiency within a year.
Toyota sent hundreds of U.S. workers to Japan for intensive training, then
embedded Japanese managers as on-site mentors who worked side by side with
their American counterparts. The transformation was remarkable: the same
workforce, using similar equipment, achieved Japanese-level quality and
productivity.
Today, the Quad
should apply this model to the production of advanced batteries, semiconductor
manufacturing equipment, aerospace and hypersonic materials, and precision
robots. Japan, for instance, produces 45 percent of the world’s industrial
robots. Its expertise could dramatically improve manufacturing productivity
across Quad countries. And with Australia’s critical minerals, India’s
rare-earth processing capabilities, Japan’s manufacturing precision, and the
United States’ research and development and market scale, each member of the
Quad brings something the rest need. By sharing knowledge and their respective
domestic advantages, Quad members can genuinely increase their productivity,
not just rest on subsidies.
Once these countries
have built up their capacity, they should, through a series of bilateral trade
agreements or “minilateral” partnerships, finally cut
China out of critical supply chains in pharmaceuticals, critical minerals,
drones, and legacy chips. The end result would be a trading system protected
from China’s economic coercion. To be sure, excluding China would be costly. It
remains the largest trade partner for Australia, Japan, and the United States. But
by diverting trade flows toward one another, Quad members can ditch the
vulnerability of the Chinese market for the collective security of its most
reliable partners.
Cutting China out, as
painful as it would be, would simply head off the inevitable. For at least two
decades, Beijing has systematically squeezed Australian, Indian, Japanese, and
U.S. companies out of its market when they are no longer needed for its industrial
plans. If Japan took the lead on this reorientation, it could at least control
some aspects of how the decoupling process unfolds.

Stepping Up, Not Stepping Back
Beijing’s campaign to
manufacture political controversy over Takaichi’s
Taiwan comments reflects a broader objective: to intimidate Japanese
policymakers, divide Japan’s governing coalition, and deter other supporters of
Taiwan from speaking out. Chinese leaders understand that the U.S.–Japanese
alliance represents the single biggest obstacle to their ambitions for regional
primacy. A Japan that is economically resilient, diplomatically active, and
militarily capable undermines Beijing’s plan to isolate Taiwan, coerce its
neighbors, and raise the costs of U.S. engagement.
The United States’
faint support of Japan in its spat with China undermines deterrence in the western Pacific. The United States
should stand with its ally by endorsing Takaichi’s
comments about the existential nature of a Taiwan crisis for Japan and other
allies. Washington has an interest in fostering a broad coalition that speaks
out against Chinese aggression toward Taiwan because China is more likely to be
deterred from attacking the island if it believes many countries will rise in
opposition. Silence, by contrast, signals to Beijing that it can peel off U.S.
allies one by one through economic pressure - and that Washington will not
defend those who call out China’s behavior.
The United States and
Japan stand at a pivotal juncture. As Tokyo continues to take bold steps to
prepare for an era of prolonged confrontation with China, Washington’s
commitment is wavering. Tokyo has done the hard part. Now it is time for
Washington to step up. If it doesn't, it will prove Beijing right - that the
United States’ alliances are temporary, its promises are hollow, and its power
is in decline.
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