Russia-Japan tensions rise as Moscow fortifies disputed islands

Tokyo said in July it had asked Russia to reduce its military activity on the islands

A bust of Lenin in front of a Russian Orthodox church in Yuzhno-Kurilsk on the island of Kunashir. Photograph: Yuri Maltsev/File Photo/Reuters

Russia said on Monday it had built new barracks for troops on a disputed chain of islands near Japan and would build more facilities for armoured vehicles, a move likely to anger Tokyo after it urged Moscow to reduce its military activity there.

The announcement, from the ministry of defence, said Moscow planned to shift troops into four housing complexes on two of the four disputed islands, known as the Southern Kurils in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan, next week.

The news came after the Kremlin said Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe might visit Russia on January 21st as the two countries step up a push to defuse the territorial dispute to allow them to sign a second World War peace treaty, something the disagreement over the Pacific islands has long prevented.

There was no immediate reaction from Japan. Tokyo said in July it had asked Russia to reduce its military activity on the islands, a plea Moscow dismissed as unhelpful megaphone diplomacy at the time.

READ MORE

Soviet forces seized the four islands at the end of the second World War, and Moscow and Tokyo both claim sovereignty over them. Diplomats on both sides have spoken of the possibility of reviving a Soviet-era draft agreement that envisaged returning two of the four islands as part of a peace deal.

‘Unhelpful’ build-up

President Vladimir Putin and Mr Abe have held numerous face-to-face meetings to try to make progress.

But tensions have remained high. Tokyo says it is concerned by what it regards as an unhelpful Russian military build-up on the islands – which has included warplane, missile defence and other deployments. Moscow, meanwhile, says it is perturbed by Japan’s roll-out of the Aegis Ashore US missile system.

Russian politicians say they fear Japan might agree to deploy US missile facilities on the islands if it ever got any of them back and that Moscow could only countenance a deal if it received a cast-iron guarantee that ruled out such a scenario.

In the meantime, Moscow is fortifying the islands.

The defence ministry said on Monday it wanted troops and their families to move into the two new housing complexes on one of the four islands – Iturup (Etorofu in Japan), and into two others on the island of Kunashir (Kunashiri in Japan) – on December 25th.

It said troops were moved into two such similar facilities last year, with three more barracks planned for 2019.

“Also on both islands we have modern and heated storage facilities for weapons and armoured vehicles,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that more such facilities were planned. – Reuters