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Minister: Japan may consider minesweeping in Hormuz if ceasefire is reached

Toshimitsu Mottigi, Japan's Foreign Minister, said that if the U.S. and Israeli war on?Iran ends, Japan could consider sending its military to minesweep in the Strait of Hormuz. This is a vital oil supply artery.

Motegi stated during a Fuji TV program that "if there was to be a total ceasefire, theoretically speaking, things like minesweeping might come up." "This is just a hypothetical but I would think it's worth considering if there were a complete ceasefire and the naval mines were causing an obstruction."

Japan's post-war constitution limits its military actions, but a 2015 security law allows it to use its Self-Defense Forces abroad if an attack threatens Japan's existence and there are no other options.

Motegi stated that Tokyo does not have immediate plans to make arrangements to allow passage of stranded Japanese ships through the Strait of Hormuz. He added it was "extremely" important to create conditions to allow all vessels to navigate the narrow waterway. It is the conduit for one fifth of world oil shipments.

Abbas Araqchi, the Iranian Foreign Minister, told Japan's Kyodo News Agency on Friday that Motegi had been in contact with him about allowing Japanese vessels to pass through the Strait.

Iran has closed the Strait to a large extent during this war which is now in its fourth weeks. The spike in oil prices worldwide has led Japan and other countries to release oil from their reserve.

U.S. president Donald?Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae?Takaichi on a Thursday. He urged her to "step-up" while he presses his allies, so far unsuccessfully, to send warships to help open the Strait.

Takaichi said to reporters after the Washington summit she had informed Trump of what Japan's laws allowed it to do and not allow Japan to do in the Strait. (Reporting and editing by William Mallard; Satoshi Sugiyama)

(source: Reuters)