Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks at NATO in Brussels.
 
Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wants to persuade European leaders that China–not just Russia–is responsible for boosting security concerns to levels not seen since the end of the Cold War.
Mr. Abe spoke late Tuesday, just before new confrontations in the South China Sea were reported.
“In the South China Sea, there has been a series of actions based on unilateral claims, and a sense of urgent vigilance is mounting among regional countries,” Mr. Abe said at the Brussels headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
He drew a parallel between Russia’s invasion of Crimea and China’s muscle-flexing in the East China Sea and South China Sea, while repeatedly referring to new tensions in the post-Cold War era.
“We cannot accept changes to the status quo by force or coercion. This is a global issue that also impacts Asia,” Mr. Abe said.
Earlier this week, Vietnam said it would take “all measures necessary” to protect its interests after a Chinese state oil company began drilling an oil rig in what Hanoi considers its exclusive economic zone. On Wednesday, Vietnamese officials said Chinese vessels rammed into Vietnamese coast guard vessels about 10 miles, or 16 kilometers, from the contested site.
Separately, Philippine police said Wednesday that their maritime group had apprehended a Chinese fishing vessel loaded with hundreds of sea turtles near Half Moon Shoal, a sandbar in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, drawing swift condemnation from Beijing.
Japan has its own territorial disputes with China over a group of tiny East China Sea islands administered by Japan.
Mr. Abe has routinely criticized the fast pace of China’s military expansion. In the latest speech, he put it in a European context. He said China’s defense budget has grown to 40 times the level at the end of the Cold War and now is roughly equivalent to the outlays of the U.K., France and Germany combined.
The prime minister said Japan has boosted the number of scrambles by its fighter jets “to the same level as during the height of the Cold War” owing to what he called incursions by Chinese military aircraft into skies near Japan.
To counter China’s military rise, Japan has been beefing up its security ties with nations in Southeast Asia. Mr. Abe used his current 10-day, six-nation tour to do the same with some European nations. In the U.K., he signed a pact to strengthen defense cooperation. With France, Japan agreed to start joint development of military equipment.