Trump’s warning shot to Japan casts doubt on US defence guarantees in Asia
The US president’s recent remarks reveal that Washington ‘is no longer committed to defending Japan, South Korea or Taiwan’, an analyst says

Trump is expected to demand that both Tokyo and Seoul pay far more for the American troops stationed on their soil, threatening withdrawal if his terms are not met.
“The most important thing to note from his comments is that the United States is no longer committed to defending Japan, South Korea or Taiwan,” said Robert Dujarric, co-director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University’s Tokyo campus.
“If you are an official in the Japanese government and you still believe in the US security umbrella, then you are the sort of person who also believes [Trump] has been faithful in all his marriages,” he told This Week in Asia.
For Tokyo and Seoul, the alarm bells were already ringing before Trump’s remarks in the Oval Office last Thursday, when he called the long-standing US-Japan security treaty unfair and accused South Korea of exploiting America economically. Now, those bells are deafening.