Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Wednesday he welcomed that Japan and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) had agreed on a new partnership programme, ahead of his attendance at the NATO Vilnius summit.
At a joint announcement with NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, Kishida said he looked forward to furthering cooperation in new areas including cyber-security, and hoped to deepen cooperation with NATO as it increases its engagement with the Indo-Pacific.
The new partnership programme comes as NATO explores a deeper engagement with Asia while China increases its military presence.
Stoltenberg said at the announcement that NATO is concerned with China's heavy military buildup and its expansion of nuclear forces, and also condemned the launching of missiles by North Korea.
"No other partner is closer to NATO than Japan," he said, adding that Asia matters to Europe just as much as Europe matters to Asia.
China has lashed out at a communique issued by NATO during its two-day summit in Lithuania's capital Vilnius claiming that China challenged the military alliance's interests, security, and values.
China has said it opposes NATO's "eastward movement into the Asia-Pacific region" and warned any action threatening Beijing's rights would be met with a resolute response.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Featured Video Of The Day
Bengaluru Man Says Wife Offered Gold To Attackers To Stop. But They Didn't
"Take Uber": Manager Refuses Work From Home Request During Pune Rains After 37 Years At Microsoft, Xbox VP's First LinkedIn Post Is His Layoff Iran Fires 10 Ballistic Missiles At US Military Command Centre In Jordan 'US Jobs Are For Americans, Not Foreign Fraudsters': Vance Amid H-1B Probe Israel Threatens To Attack Iran "With Greater Force" Amid US Strikes "State Of Instability": Congress Stirs Pot After Sharad Pawar-E Shinde Meet Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.

