📰 Body
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi departed for Australia on May 3, marking her first formal bilateral visit to the country since taking office. The trip aims to deepen defence, economic, and Indo-Pacific strategic cooperation between the two nations, representing a key step in Japan’s effort to consolidate its alliance network amid growing geopolitical uncertainty.
The visit comes against a complex backdrop: the US troop withdrawal decision from Germany has shaken confidence in transatlantic alliances; the Iran conflict and its impact on the Strait of Hormuz continue to disrupt global energy markets; and tensions in the South China Sea and across the Taiwan Strait show no signs of easing. Against this backdrop, Japan is accelerating its “Free and Open Indo-Pacific” strategy, seeking tighter security cooperation with like-minded nations.
Takaichi is expected to discuss strengthening the implementation of the Reciprocal Access Agreement (RAA) with Australia’s Prime Minister, which allows both countries’ militaries to conduct joint training and exercises on each other’s territory. The leaders are also likely to hold in-depth talks on intelligence sharing, joint weapons development, and critical mineral supply chain security.
Japan and Australia have steadily deepened defence cooperation in recent years. Alongside the United States and India, the two countries form the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) and have engaged in substantive collaboration on submarine capabilities, missile defence, and cybersecurity.
Analysts note that the visit sends a clear signal: even as US commitments to the global alliance system face uncertainty, Japan and Australia will continue to deepen bilateral cooperation to safeguard peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.
Source: Bloomberg