The arms race in the Asia-Pacific will intensify this year, observers believe, with several governments in the region – including US treaty allies Japan and the Philippines – planning big boosts to their defence budgets. The aim is to both counter China and to hedge against uncertainties over incoming US president Donald Trump, they added. The Japanese government’s 2025 budget approved last Friday included record defence spending of 8.
7 trillion yen (US$55 billion), despite recent signs of a thaw in ties with China under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. On Monday, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr signed the country’s 2025 budget into law, with defence spending expected to reach a record 315.1 billion pesos (US$5.
4 billion). This is more than 30 per cent higher than the 2024 military budget, official Chinese news agency Xinhua reported..
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China and Trump factor will heat up Asia-Pacific arms race, observers warn
Record defence budgets from Japan and the Philippines come as tensions with China grow and incoming US leader urges allies to spend more.