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Japan Defence Forum

Say one thing and do another.
You open threads about China Japan friendship and simultaneously post about alliances against China with Japan centric articles.

What is your agenda here?
 
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Don't get me wrong, I actually appreciate you posting here instead of the usual Indian level troll.

But I would have to be pretty daft to not connect the dots.

On a personal note, it seems that both our countries have geopolitical differences, militarization is very obvious in East Asia. I think it is important for Japan to have a more active role in Asia-Pacific and move out from its 'defense' role into a proper military. I can guarantee you that no one in Japan is even dreaming of an invasion of China or anything of the like. I mean, even Abe's LDP party is having some resistance within the Diet regarding his defense plan that's supposed to be voted on this coming Friday.

I am actually a proponent for warming of relations between Japan and China; continued people - to people exchanges.
 
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JS Ashigara (DDG-178) is an Atago class guided missile destroyer in the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF). Ashigara was named for Mount Ashigara, and is the first Japanese ship to bear the prefix JS (Japanese Ship) instead of JDS (Japanese Defense Ship).

Why did they change the prefix system i mean its Still a Military vessel right? The system was proper already. Just want to know that from someone who is Japanese.
 
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The main reason why no one in Japan is dreaming of invading China is because they know China has the capability and the anger to nuke them immediately in defense
 
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the reason why Japanese has never dreamed about invading China again right now is because they had fulfilled those wild desire years ago, no need to do that again right now
 
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the reason why Japanese has never dreamed about invading China again right now is because they had fulfilled those wild desire years ago, no need to do that again right now

Correct ! That was a fool's errand during those times when my country was blindly fooled by the fascist government. That was history, and we have learned heavily for that. Over 3,000,000 Japanese died in that destructive war.
 
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Why did they change the prefix system i mean its Still a Military vessel right? The system was proper already. Just want to know that from someone who is Japanese.

Ships with a potent offense capability are listed as JS, whereas transport ships , patrol ships, are JDS.
 
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Don't get me wrong, I actually appreciate you posting here instead of the usual Indian level troll.

But I would have to be pretty daft to not connect the dots.

A Chinese living in Australia conversing with a Japanese living in the US. The growing prevalence of this kind of cross-cultural communication makes me cautiously optimistic that everything will work out. And I'm not even a lefty post-modern internationalist.
 
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TOKYO June 11, 2014 (AP)
By MARI YAMAGUCHI Associated Press




Japan and Australia agreed Wednesday to jointly develop stealth submarine technology, as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pushes his country toward a more assertive global military role.

The submarine technology was a top item at talks among the nations' foreign and defense ministers in Tokyo and was included in an agreement to step up cooperation in defense equipment and technology.

Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera told a joint news conference after the talks that the ministers agreed to begin the research next year. It will focus on technology that is applicable to any vessel including submarines, he said, but declined to give further details.

"I have high expectations for successful results," he said. Onodera said the research and possible technology transfer would not violate Japan's pacifist constitution.

Onodera and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida were joined by their Australian counterparts, Julie Bishop and David Johnston, at Wednesday's meeting. The four also agreed to strengthen military ties.

The research aims to develop faster submarines with reduced water resistance and quieter propellers, Japanese defense officials said earlier this week. But the joint research will not necessarily lead to the sale of Japanese submarines to Australia, which is exploring purchasing submarines from Germany and France as well.

The research, however, widens the possibility of Japan supplying military technology overseas. The Abe government in April eased Japan's self-imposed limits on military exports, paving the way for its largely domestic defense industry to go global. Japan has also agreed to develop hazmat suits with Britain, and is seeking to export search and rescue aircraft to India.

Abe says the U.S.-Japan alliance remains central to his security policy, but has widened defense cooperation with Britain, France, India and several Asian-Pacific nations, particularly Australia, amid an expansion of Chinese military activities in the region and concern that budget pressures may reduce America's presence.

He is trying to ease constitutional restraints so Japan's military can use force not only in Japan's own defense but also to defend foreign troops.

Onodera has said Australia has a strong interest in Japan's submarine technology. Johnston is expected to tour a Japanese Soryu-class submarine at Yokosuka naval port, south of Tokyo, during his visit.

The 2,950-ton diesel-electric submarine is the most advanced model in Japan's fleet of 16 submarines. It comes with air-independent propulsion technology acquired from Sweden, and is armed with torpedoes and Harpoon missiles.

"We would like the Australian side to closely look at Japanese defense equipment so we can build an even more cooperative relationship between Japan and Australia," Onodera told reporters last Friday.

Australia is also in talks with Germany and France about a 40 billion Australian dollar ($37 billion) plan to replace its Collins-class submarines.

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Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia, contributed to this report.
Reference: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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Prime Minister Shinzo Abe once again underlined the necessity of reinterpreting the war-renouncing Constitution to allow Japan to engage in collective self-defense during a debate Wednesday, while the main opposition leader failed to capitalize on the opportunity to attack Abe and roll back his influence within the ruling LDP-led coalition.

In the 45-minute debate, Abe reiterated his belief that Self-Defense Forces should engage in peacekeeping missions such as mine-sweeping in the Strait of Hormuz in order to protect national interests, even if such action costs SDF lives.

“If nobody removes the mines, there will be an economic panic (in Japan). And Japan will definitely suffer serious economic damages,” Abe said to Democratic Party of Japan leader Banri Kaieda, who asked in return if the prime minister thought it was necessary for SDF members to run the risk of death for the sake of protecting petroleum imports.

Some 80 percent of the tankers carrying petroleum to Japan pass through the strait, and mine-sweeping operations are one of a cluster of scenarios under consideration by the ruling camp as it moves to rework the nation’s defense posture.

Currently, SDF forces cannot remove mines from the sea unless a cease-fire agreement is reached in the affected area, as such action is deemed an offensive use of force, and is prohibited by the Constitution unless the country is under direct military attack.

While Abe made use of the session to renew his push for Cabinet approval on the right to collective defense, the debate was also crucial for Kaieda whose leadership has been called into question by ranking DPJ members.

Kaieda insisted the DPJ was firm on its refusal to back Abe, while the prime minister countered by saying that the DPJ has shown it does not have a solid consensus on the issue.

Kaieda was elected to the DPJ leadership on the promise of reviving the party’s fortunes following defeats in the 2012 Lower House election and the 2013 Upper House election.

But ranking officials such as former Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara have signaled that Kaieda should step down ahead of party elections in September 2015, citing lackluster performance.

Abe aide remark stirs ire
KYODO
WASHINGTON — An aide to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe commented on the separation of state and religion Tuesday in a remark that could be interpreted as putting pressure on a Buddhist-backed party dragging its feet over Abe’s proposed defense reforms.

Isao Iijima, special adviser to the Cabinet, told an audience in Washington that relations between New Komeito and supporter Soka Gakkai could come into question if the government changes its current position on the separation of state and religion.

As junior partner in Abe’s coalition, New Komeito has so far resisted Abe’s push to lift the ban on collective self-defense.

“If the legal interpretation of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau were to be changed,” the relation between New Komeito and Soka Gakkai could be criticized as going against the principle of separating state and religion, Ijima said.

Abe has already urged the ruling coalition to endorse proposed revisions to the interpretation of the Constitution by the end of the current Diet session on June 22.

But New Komeito defended its relationship with Soka Gakkai on its website.

“Successive governments have consistently upheld the constitutionality of the New Komeito-Soka Gakkai relationship, maintaining for decades that it does not violate the principle of the separation of religion and state.”




Reference: The Japan Times
 
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(Reuters) - Japan is in early talks with top global helicopter makers and their Japanese partners about a deal worth around $2 billion to build transport aircraft for its military that would also be sold overseas, sources with knowledge of the discussions said.

The talks, which began in earnest over the past two months, represent another milestone in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's bid to nurture a domestic military export industry that would also bring down Japan's defence procurement costs at a time of rising tensions between Tokyo and an increasingly assertive China.

Abe has eased decades-old restrictions on Japan's military exports and is looking to give its armed forces a freer hand in conflicts by changing the interpretation of a pacifist constitution dating from Japan's defeat in World War Two.

The project, dubbed the UH-X, is meant to replace around 150 of Japan's aging fleet of troop-carrying Huey helicopters, a design by Bell that dates from before the Vietnam War. It is likely to run for at least a decade and cost as much as $2 billion, one of the people with knowledge of the process said.

Airbus Helicopters (AIR.PA), a division of the European aerospace giant, has joined with defence contractor Kawasaki Heavy Industries (7012.T), while Bell Helicopter, a unit of industrial conglomerate Textron (TXT.N), is partnered with Fuji Heavy Industries (7270.T), the maker of Subaru cars, the two sources said.

AgustaWestland, part of Italy's Finmeccanica Spa (SIFI.MI), is looking to sell Japan helicopters through Japanese trading company Mitsui & Co. (8031.T), which would be assembled by Fuji Heavy, they said.

By creating a market beyond Japan for the UH-X project, officials hope to bring down the per-unit costs of the helicopter for Japan's Self-Defence Forces (SDF), part of a bid to keep pace with China's expanding military.

"The aim is to keep costs down," said one of the people with knowledge of the project, who asked not to be named because the discussions remain private.

Japan's government sent out an early "request-for-information" from the bidders over the past two months. Officials hope to move quickly to the next stage in which the bidding companies would be asked to submit detailed proposals, including costs, the sources said.

While the UH-X project was public knowledge, the involvement of Airbus Helicopters, AgustaWestland and Bell Helicopters and their local partners had not been previously reported.

Airbus and Bell declined to comment on their intentions in Japan, while AgustaWestland did not respond to a request to discuss its business in Japan. Kawasaki and Fuji Heavy declined to comment, while no-one from Mitsui & Co was immediately available for comment.

MORE BANG FOR YOUR YEN

Japan and China have been mired in a dispute over ownership of tiny islands in the East China Sea, with tensions spiking last month when Japan said Chinese aircraft had come within a few dozen metres of its warplanes.

In the 20 years to 2012, Japan was the sixth-biggest military spender in the world, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. China jumped to second place from the seventh after it hiked its defence spending more than five-fold over the same period.

Japan said last year that it would raise its military spending by almost 3 percent over five years. But with spending constrained, Japan's military planners have turned to ways to increase the efficiency of defence spending programmes to counter China.

Industry analysts say Japan's armed forces often pay two to three times more for military equipment than other comparable countries because defence contractors are limited to fabricating small lots for the SDF.

Selling the new helicopter overseas should lower the cost paid per unit by Japan's military by widening the production base. Including foreign companies would also help spread development costs.

In a related move, Japan plans to create an arms procurement agency to streamline spending and promote military exports that merge spending by the sea, land and air forces, according to people involved in the planning.

HELICOPTER PROPOSALS

Kawasaki and Airbus Helicopters, formerly Eurocopter, which are already partners on the successful BK117 utility transport that first flew 35 years ago, are offering a new design for the UH-X, according to the sources who spoke to Reuters.

The Ministry of Defence awarded Kawasaki Heavy the UH-X contract in 2012, but cancelled the contract in March 2013 after two SDF officers said they had helped the company win the deal by leaking information on the bid.

Bell and Fuji Heavy are proposing an aircraft based on the Bell 412 utility helicopter, military versions of which are used in countries ranging from Britain to Colombia, Ghana and Thailand.

AgustaWestland is offering its 10-seat twin-engined AW169, the prototype of which first flew in 2012. Using Mitsui as its partner in Japan, the company has told the Japanese government it would recruit Fuji Heavy to assemble the aircraft under licence.

A partnership of Sikorsky Aircraft, which is owned by United Technologies Corp (UTX.N), and Japan's biggest defence contractor Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (7011.T) had initially shown interest in the UH-X, but did not responded to requests for information from the Defence Ministry, according to one of the sources. Mitsubishi Heavy and Sikorsky declined to comment.
 
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I would like to see the rise of your Rikusentai units @Nihonjin1051 i am got info right now your MoD working together with US Marine Corps to create such units within your Navy



Report: Japan To Create Amphibious Marine Corps

The Japanese military plans to create a force of about 3,000 troops modeled after the US Marine Corps and capable of rapidly launching amphibious missions, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

The new force, which would use amphibious vehicles and V-22 Ospreys, would likely be based out of Kyushu or the Nansei Islands, which include Okinawa, according to the Journal. To accelerate its formation, Japan hopes to increase exercises with the U.S. military, such as “Iron Fist 2014,” a seven-week amphibious exercise at Camp Pendleton, Calif., that is finishing up this week.

Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera has said he hopes Japanese troops can also transfer to Guam, where Marines from Okinawa are being repositioned.

“Our nation has numerous remote islands, and islands of various sizes and they give us the basis for our exclusive economic zone that ranks sixth in the world,” Onodera told the Journal. “That makes it important to provide defense for islands over the coming years.”




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Reference:
Defense News
 
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