MOSCOW: Russia began military exercises in a Pacific island chain parts of which are also claimed by Japan, a Russian Defence Ministry spokesman said yesterday, a potential blow to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s efforts to keep the door open to dialogue with Moscow despite strains over the Ukraine crisis.
“Exercises began involving military units in the region, which are deploying to the Kurile Islands,” Colonel Alexander Gordeyev, spokesman for Russia’s Eastern Military District, told the Russian news agency Interfax.
He said more than 1,000 troops, five Mi-8AMTSh attack helicopters and 100 other pieces of military hardware would be involved in the manoeuvres.
A Japanese foreign ministry official in Tokyo said the ministry was checking whether the exercises were taking part on islands Japan considers its territory.
The islands are known as the Southern Kuriles in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan.
“If they are conducting a military exercise on the Northern Territories, we can by no means accept that in light of Japan’s stance on the islands. We’ve already informed the Russian side of that stance and asked for clarification,” the official said.
The dispute has strained relations between Japan and Russia since the end of the Second World War, when Soviet forces occupied the four islands at the southern end of the Kurile chain. The row has prevented the two countries from signing a formal peace treaty.
Russia is also at odds with Western powers over what Nato says is its massing of military forces along the border with Ukraine. Abe has made an effort to improve ties with Russia one centrepiece of his diplomacy. He has tread a fine line by imposing sanctions on Moscow in step with the US but keeping them lighter than those by Washington to keep relations with Russia from going into a deep chill.
REUTERS