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Thought this was interesting. From 2007 though, so it might be a tad outdated.
ImageUploadedByDefence.pk1414586187.939101.jpg
 
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Australia’s Delicate Soryu-Sub Balancing Act
The fine line between defense partnerships and alliances must be managed carefully.

thediplomat_2014-05-12_02-47-30-36x36.jpg

By Clint Richards
October 29, 2014

Defense ties between Japan and Australia have been progressing steadily this year, with Japan quickly becoming an important partner for Australia. Since their deal for Japan to transfer military technology this July and the subsequent agreement to purchase Japanese Soryu-class diesel submarines, not to mention high-level “two-plus-two” meetings between their defense and foreign ministers, it would appear that the two countries might be drifting toward a more formal alliance. While Japan’s current administration might indeed be interested in such an alliance despite its constitutional restraints, Australia is likely not interested in any formal structure that binds it to helping defend Japan, particularly given the deterioration in tensions with China in the East China Sea over the past few years.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Japanese officials are starting to refer to the relationship as a “quasi-alliance.” They claim the rapid expansion of ties has led them to become each other’s greatest defense partner aside from the U.S., while the principal deputy director of the National Security Policy Division within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Takuma Kajita, has said their cooperation on submarine technology and Australia’s sharing of satellite intelligence reflects the growing relationship. According to Kajita, “[Prime Minister Shinzo] Abe wants to raise the relationship between Japan and Australia considerably, his instructions are very clear, and he wants good trilateral relations between Japan, Australia and the U.S.” Toward this end, Japan established on April 1 an “Australia-Japan Defense Cooperation Office” within the defense ministry to manage the rapidly growing relationship.

Australia for its part appears to be tempering expectations about any formal alliance. It must balance its desire for Japanese hardware and military agreements with the U.S. against its enormous trade and investment relationship with China. So with regard to the Soryu development agreement, Canberra appears to be splitting the difference between its two biggest defense partners, which may in turn still upset China. According to “sources close to the matter” who spoke with the Yomiuri Shimbun, Australia will likely purchase the JapaneseSoryu hulls and marry them to U.S. communications and weapons systems. This will ensure that the Australian and U.S. fleets maintain interoperability.

The sources also stated the three partners will probably hold talks in Australia on the sidelines of the G20 summit in November. “Officials of the three governments are coordinating views so that their leaders can exchange opinions on the joint development of the submarine while discussing military cooperation,” and that if the three countries agree to jointly develop Australia’s new submarine, their cooperative military relationship “will enter a new stage.”

This new, higher level of integration between the three is wholly advantageous for the U.S. and Japan, yet Australia has additional constraints. While it seeks the latest and most advanced military hardware, it cannot afford to be encumbered by any formal alliance with Japan, which is becoming more assertive in the East China Sea and boosting defense ties with China’s antagonists in the South China Sea, while simultaneously attempting to reinterpret its pacifist constitution to broaden its defense mandate. Japan’s interests are more in line with U.S. strategy, which seeks to contain China’s military rise at the lowest possible cost, by augmenting the military capabilities of regional allies in order to reduce the risk of direct confrontation. This approach is more difficult for Australia to maintain given its more diffuse interests in the region and less antagonistic relationship with China, creating a fine line Canberra must walk to keep from risking unnecessary conflict with Beijing.
 
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@Nihonjin1051 what started as a thread dedicated to the JMSDF has devolved into a thread about the entire JSDF, perhaps I could persuade you to change the title of the thread to include all of the JSDF? That or would you or I like to start another thread dedicated to all of Japan's military. In all honesty, I'm running out of pictures of the JMSDF.

Anyways, here's some air and coastal defense systems (Note: not all belong to the JMSDF)

patriot_LS_launching_station_semitrailer_flatbed_M860A1_air_defense_missile_system_US-Army_United_States_640.jpg


Patriot+III+Anti-Missile+Air+Defense+System+of+Japan+Air+Self-Defense+Force+%25282%2529.jpg


article-2306714-19359122000005DC-145_634x368.jpg


japan-military-export-deal.si_.jpg


Type+12+anti+ship+missile.jpg


800px-JGSDF_Type88_SSM-02.jpg


JGSDF_Type88_SSM-03.jpg


image495.jpg


As a bonus; this is what has China's panties in a bunch at the moment (A US AN/TPY-2 based in Japan)

FBX_T.jpg
 
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@Nihonjin1051 what started as a thread dedicated to the JMSDF has devolved into a thread about the entire JSDF, perhaps I could persuade you to change the title of the thread to include all of the JSDF? That or would you or I like to start another thread dedicated to all of Japan's military. In all honesty, I'm running out of pictures of the JMSDF.

Anyways, here's some air and coastal defense systems (Note: not all belong to the JMSDF)

patriot_LS_launching_station_semitrailer_flatbed_M860A1_air_defense_missile_system_US-Army_United_States_640.jpg


Patriot+III+Anti-Missile+Air+Defense+System+of+Japan+Air+Self-Defense+Force+%25282%2529.jpg


article-2306714-19359122000005DC-145_634x368.jpg


japan-military-export-deal.si_.jpg


Type+12+anti+ship+missile.jpg


800px-JGSDF_Type88_SSM-02.jpg


JGSDF_Type88_SSM-03.jpg


image495.jpg


As a bonus; this is what has China's panties in a bunch at the moment (A US AN/TPY-2 based in Japan)

FBX_T.jpg

Hi Buddy @SvenSvensonov , it appears that the efficiency of our Administration Team has taken care of the renaming of this thread. :)

Thanks for the pictures and updates ! Let's keep this thread rolling.
 
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The US, Japanese, and Canadian Navies off the coast of southern California.
141027-N-JC752-354.JPG

141027-N-JC752-526.JPG
 
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Australia’s Delicate Soryu-Sub Balancing Act
The fine line between defense partnerships and alliances must be managed carefully.

thediplomat_2014-05-12_02-47-30-36x36.jpg

By Clint Richards
October 29, 2014

Defense ties between Japan and Australia have been progressing steadily this year, with Japan quickly becoming an important partner for Australia. Since their deal for Japan to transfer military technology this July and the subsequent agreement to purchase Japanese Soryu-class diesel submarines, not to mention high-level “two-plus-two” meetings between their defense and foreign ministers, it would appear that the two countries might be drifting toward a more formal alliance. While Japan’s current administration might indeed be interested in such an alliance despite its constitutional restraints, Australia is likely not interested in any formal structure that binds it to helping defend Japan, particularly given the deterioration in tensions with China in the East China Sea over the past few years.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Japanese officials are starting to refer to the relationship as a “quasi-alliance.” They claim the rapid expansion of ties has led them to become each other’s greatest defense partner aside from the U.S., while the principal deputy director of the National Security Policy Division within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Takuma Kajita, has said their cooperation on submarine technology and Australia’s sharing of satellite intelligence reflects the growing relationship. According to Kajita, “[Prime Minister Shinzo] Abe wants to raise the relationship between Japan and Australia considerably, his instructions are very clear, and he wants good trilateral relations between Japan, Australia and the U.S.” Toward this end, Japan established on April 1 an “Australia-Japan Defense Cooperation Office” within the defense ministry to manage the rapidly growing relationship.

Australia for its part appears to be tempering expectations about any formal alliance. It must balance its desire for Japanese hardware and military agreements with the U.S. against its enormous trade and investment relationship with China. So with regard to the Soryu development agreement, Canberra appears to be splitting the difference between its two biggest defense partners, which may in turn still upset China. According to “sources close to the matter” who spoke with the Yomiuri Shimbun, Australia will likely purchase the JapaneseSoryu hulls and marry them to U.S. communications and weapons systems. This will ensure that the Australian and U.S. fleets maintain interoperability.

The sources also stated the three partners will probably hold talks in Australia on the sidelines of the G20 summit in November. “Officials of the three governments are coordinating views so that their leaders can exchange opinions on the joint development of the submarine while discussing military cooperation,” and that if the three countries agree to jointly develop Australia’s new submarine, their cooperative military relationship “will enter a new stage.”

This new, higher level of integration between the three is wholly advantageous for the U.S. and Japan, yet Australia has additional constraints. While it seeks the latest and most advanced military hardware, it cannot afford to be encumbered by any formal alliance with Japan, which is becoming more assertive in the East China Sea and boosting defense ties with China’s antagonists in the South China Sea, while simultaneously attempting to reinterpret its pacifist constitution to broaden its defense mandate. Japan’s interests are more in line with U.S. strategy, which seeks to contain China’s military rise at the lowest possible cost, by augmenting the military capabilities of regional allies in order to reduce the risk of direct confrontation. This approach is more difficult for Australia to maintain given its more diffuse interests in the region and less antagonistic relationship with China, creating a fine line Canberra must walk to keep from risking unnecessary conflict with Beijing.

The Australians' concerns are understandable and only natural. The economic trade between China and Australia , the latter, of course, being an exporter of goods and raw material to the Chinese, is to be realized. Australia should not worry, but, rather, accept the much needed pragmatic approach in both foreign policy and economic policy. Take for example Japan's own relationship with China. Both are rivals in Northeast Asia in regards to military and defense , yet at the same time have an enormous economic trade that exceeds over $320 Billion per annum. There is no black and white in the game of geostrategic relationships.
 
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Vehicles of the JGSDF;

MCV - tank destroyer
Japan+Ground+Self-Defense+Force+(JGSDF+Tank+Destroyer+Maneuver+Combat+Vehicle+(MCV)+120+125+mm+(2).jpg


Komatsu LAV
Jqln0.jpg


NBC light recon
JGSDF_NBC_reconnaissance_vehicle_20120610-06.JPG


Type 92 mine clearance vehicle (NOT A BALLISTIC MISSILE!!!)
Japanese+Type+92+Mine+Clearing+Vehicle.jpg


Avenger air-defense system
Type+93.jpg
 
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JGSDF Air arm (assault and defense);

Yes, it's real!
JGSDF-Squadron-Histories.jpg


tumblr_mncwifg2gV1ry0q3wo2_500.jpg


Type 93
hawk.jpg


Type 03
399px-JGSDF_Type03_SAM_(launcher)_04.jpg


Type 03 radar
800px-JGSDF_Type03_SAM_(rader)_01.jpg


Type 87
JGSDF_Type_87_Self-Propelled_Anti-Aircraft_Gun_20120429-03.JPG
 
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More JGSDF pics

JGSDF_Type60_recoilless_gun.jpg


JGSDF_FH70_Howitzer_20070408.JPG


oVf3ECa.jpg


US_Army_52809_JGSDF_at_Yakima.jpg


(pic from Iron Fist Joint Training Operation)
450x300_q75.jpg


(Iron Fist)
450x300_q75.jpg


140213-M-SV584-022.JPG


140209-M-SV584-175.JPG
 
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Even more JGSDF pic

JGSDF and US Marines
schwabhokkaido_0.jpg


japan.jpg


maxresdefault.jpg


jgsdfwintertrngrs.jpg


JGSDF with US 3rd Recon
140701-M-DP650-249.JPG


Also cross training between JGSDF and US 3rd Recon
140701-M-DP650-114.JPG


japan-military.jpg
 
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