(Reuters) As tension spikes
on the Korean peninsula, a French amphibious assault carrier sailed
into Japan's naval base of Sasebo on Saturday ahead of drills that risk
upsetting China, which faces U.S. pressure to rein in North Korea's arms
programs.
The
Mistral will lead exercises next month near Guam, along with forces from
Japan, the United States and Britain, practicing amphibious landings
around Tinian, an island about 2,500 km (1,553 miles) south of the
Japanese capital of Tokyo.
The
drills, involving 700 troops, were planned before Saturday's
test-firing of a ballistic missile by North Korea, in defiance of world
pressure, in what would be its fourth successive unsuccessful missile
test since March.
Japan and the United States are
worried by China's efforts to extend its influence beyond its coastal
waters and the South China Sea by acquiring power-projecting aircraft
carriers, a concern shared by France, which controls several Pacific
islands, including New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
Even
as they seek stronger economic ties with China, both France and
Britain, which has two navy helicopters aboard the Mistral, are
deepening security cooperation with Japan, a close U.S. ally that has
Asia's second-strongest navy after China.
The
Mistral forms part of an amphibious task force mission, the Jeanne
d'Arc, that is "a potent support to French diplomacy," the country's
defence ministry said in a statement.
Officials
and children's welcome dances greeted the Mistral in Sasebo, on the
western island of Kyushu, a major naval base for Japan's Maritime Self
Defense Force (MSDF) and the U.S. Navy.
The
Mistral, which left France in February, can carry up to 35 helicopters
and four landing barges, besides several hundred soldiers. It will stay
in Sasebo until May 5.
This
month China launched its first domestically-built aircraft carrier. It
joined the Liaoning, bought from Ukraine in 1998, which led a group of
Chinese warships through waters south of Japan in December.
China's
military ambitions, however, have been overshadowed in recent weeks by
tension on the Korean peninsula as Pyongyang conducts long-range missile
tests, and prepares for a possible sixth nuclear test.
"We did not expect the start of our
visit to coincide with a North Korean missile launch, France's
ambassador to Japan Thierry Dana said on the Mistral's bridge.
"Cooperation between our four nations in upholding laws, peace and
stability in the region will display our readiness to deal with North
Korea," he added.
In a
show of force, the United States has sent the USS Carl Vinson aircraft
carrier group to nearby waters, where it will join the USS Michigan, a
guided missile submarine that docked in South Korea on Tuesday.
The
Carl Vinson entered the Sea of Japan on Saturday, where it completed
naval drills with two Japanese warships dispatched from Sasebo, an MSDF
spokesman said.
(Source: Reuters; Reporting by Nobuhiro Kubo; Writing by Tim Kelly; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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