Caught between China’s rapid military rise and growing doubts about the US focus on a region it has long dominated, Indo-Pacific nations are racing to arm themselves, and each other. At Asia’s premier defence forum earlier this week, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth pressed regional partners to shoulder more of the security burden. Yet, he faced persistent concerns that US priorities may be drifting, with conflict in Iran competing for attention.
"We can do two things at one time,” Hegseth told the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, a free-wheeling gathering of global defence chiefs, military and intelligence officials. His Japanese counterpart Shinjiro Koizumi said he believed the US commitment was "unwavering”, while acknowledging that some countries may still underestimate its resolve.
In interviews with Reuters on the sidelines of the annual gathering, regional defence chiefs and military officers made clear the push was on to do more with each other beyond the traditional US umbrella. "All the defence secretaries here present are unanimous in the need to make agile and speedy upscaling of their own individual defence capabilities,” Philippines’ Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro told Reuters.
He described it as "buttressing” the US’s traditional role, with Manila deepening defence ties with partners such as Japan, Australia, Canada and New Zealand. "The commitment of the United States becomes more solid when more actors, at least in the deterrence phase, come in, because there is a common threat.”
Japan is positioning itself as a hub for that broader network. Koizumi said Tokyo aims to act as a "connecting point” for closer regional co-operation beyond China. In April, Japan unveiled its biggest overhaul of defence export rules in decades, scrapping restrictions on overseas arms sales and opening the way for exports of warships, missiles and other weapons. Singapore Defence Minister Chan Chun Sing said in the current environment "we should ... develop flexible partnerships with like-minded countries forming coalitions of the able and willing.” This, he said, would help "bridge gaps, test ideas, find paths in new and uncharted territories.”