CANBERRA, Feb. 5 (Xinhua) -- Australia and Japan are expected to sign a
defense and security agreement soon which may open the way for Japanese troops
to train on Australian soil, one of Australia's leading newspapers reported
Monday.
The co-operation pact, which is under negotiation, will bring anew
dimension to Australia's relations with its biggest trading partner, providing
for joint military exercises, regular meetings between foreign and defense
ministers, exchanges of officials and closer work on regional challenges, The
Australian newspaper reported.
It will be Japan's first bilateral security agreement, other than the
U.S.-Japan alliance, which remains the linchpin of the Japanese defense
arrangements.
The agreement will be the first step towards Japanese troops exercising and
training in Australia for an expanded role in international peacekeeping
efforts.
Australian and non-combatant Japanese troops have worked together in
Cambodia, Timor-Leste and Iraq.
Both Canberra and Washington have been pushing the previously reluctant Japanese
Government towards bilateral security relations with Australia, rather
than limiting exchanges to their shared alliance with the United States, said
the newspaper.
Australian Prime Minister John Howard will sign the agreement with his
Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe when he visits Tokyo in mid-March.
The paper also said the agreement will be the culmination of a major foreign policy objective pursued by the prime minister and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer throughout their decade in government.