Japan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Janiz

Senior Member
At the exact same time in the Sasebo Naval Base the oldest warship in JMSDF fleet, Kurama, was decomissioned after 36 years of service. It was the first Japanese warship to visit Russia after the of the Cold War (in 1996 she visited Vladivostok - after that seeing a Russian Navy warship in visiting Japanese ports or vice versa became a normal thing). She was also the first JMSDF warship sent to Indian Ocean to help out US Navy after the war on terror became reality in 2001. Pretty sad ceremony, as you can even hear the last Kurama's commander, Captain Mizuta's voice breaks in front of the camera. Tough life of sailors all over the world when a part of them is going to be destroyed I assume...

 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
according to Jane's
Japanese navy commissions second Izumo-class helicopter carrier
... and I don't have an access to the rest of the source which is
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Ihave seen the inside of these ships and the hanger is large!

And with five marked landing spots, and the ability to add another on the starboard rear side.

If necessary...the Japanese could use the Izumos for F-35Bs. They will not do so until they really think they need them, but if you ever see one of the Japanese Defense requests one yearr adding F-35Bs (not the Alpha conventional bird) to their Defense plans, you will know what they plan to do with them.

I bet they could run 10-12 F-35Bs off of each of those carriers.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Like this:

izumo-19.jpg
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
All Ocean Going 1200 t Yayeyama retired now, 24 Minesweeper in service whose 2 Uraga with helos but don' t have a minesweeping system also Minelayers according i read in Wiki Japanese with translation not easy ! pardon me eventually :)

Homeported to Yokosuka the main port HQ for Mine Warfare Force
4 Awaji planned not 3, 2017,18, 21, 22

JMSDF commissions first Awaji-class minesweeper

The first of three Awaji-class mine countermeasures vessels (MCMVs) has entered service with the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF).

The Ministry of Defense (MoD) in Tokyo published on its website photographs of the commissioning ceremony of JS Awaji (pennant number 304) in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, on 16 March.

Awaji was built by the Tokyo-headquartered shipyard Japan Maritime United Corporation (JMUC) and launched in October 2015, according to Jane's Fighting Ships . The ship is the first of the class ordered for the JMSDF.

The second ship of the class, Hirado , was launched in February 2017 and is expected to enter service in 2018.

According to specifications provided by JMUC, the MCMV has a standard displacement of 690 tonnes, a length of 67 m, a beam of 11 m, and a draught of 5.2 m. The vessel is powered by two diesel engines of 2,200 hp each and and has a top speed of 14 kt.

The platform's hull has been constructed from a composite fibre-reinforced plastic material to reduce the magnetic signature of the platform for minesweeping operations

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Japan-UK Fighter Project Sign Of Closer Defense Partnership
Tokyo and London explore building a combat aircraft together
Mar 24, 2017
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| Aviation Week & Space Technology

  • Anglo-Japanese Fighter


    Britain and Japan will look at jointly developing a fighter, probably for entry into service in the 2030s. The surprising move is the latest bringing the two countries closer in defense technology.

    Even if an Anglo-Japanese fighter does not emerge in the end,
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    is likely to be interested in assisting
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    (MHI) in an indigenous combat aircraft program. But in seeking cooperation, Tokyo probably hopes for a cost-sharing national partner, not just a heavy-lifting technical advisor.

    This may be a problem for France, the nation probably most inclined to work with the UK on a new fighter. The two have already agreed to do technology-acquisition work together.

    JAPANESE AND BRITISH FIGHTER REQUIREMENTS
    Tokyo needs to replace the MHI F-2 in the 2030s

    The
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    is supposed to leave
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    service before 2040


    Japan’s defense technologists are sure their Future Fighter should have a pilot

    British efforts have focused on unmanned aircraft, while leaving the door open to manned alternatives

    Tokyo and London will begin by exchanging information on the ambitions for their current, preliminary projects: the Japanese Future Fighter and Britain’s Future Combat Air System (FCAS). In assessing the feasibility of a joint program, they will also advise each other of their capabilities, says the Japanese Defense Ministry, presumably meaning they will lay their technology cards on the table.

    London is not Tokyo’s only potential partner. Japan will continue to discuss the possibility of joint development with other countries, including the U.S., the ministry said in announcing the March 16 agreement. It issued an international request for corporate expressions of interest in June.

    The UK is shaping up as Japan’s closest defense-technology partner after the U.S. The two countries agreed in 2012 to strengthen bilateral cooperation, even before Tokyo formally said in 2014, after years of discussion, that it would allow arms exports under limited circumstances. The export decision made joint development and manufacturing possible because Japanese companies could now make parts for a partner.

    In 2016, the two governments said they would look at integrating an advanced Japanese seeker on the MBDA Meteor air-to-air missile, development of which has been led by the UK.

    The defense ministry in Tokyo gives no time frame for entry into service of the contemplated joint fighter, but the national schedules do not look too far out of step. Japan needs the Future Fighter to be ready in the 2030s as a replacement for the MHI F-2. The
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    Typhoon is due to leave Royal Air Force (RAF) service before 2040; a replacement will have to be ready a few years before that.


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    After Japan and Britain understand each other’s fighter requirements and technologies, they will decide by late this year whether to proceed with a joint study for a fighter, says The Nikkei newspaper.

    A crucial difference between the two sides could be regarding whether their next combat aircraft needs a pilot. Years of Future Fighter studies, the most recent of which is a concept design called 26DMU, have all envisaged a manned aircraft, because Japanese defense technologists think air-to-air combat is just too complex for a computer program. But FCAS work has focused on an unmanned jet.

    Underlining this point, Japan is flying a subscale demonstrator for a manned fighter, the MHI X-2, whereas Britain has been evaluating its technologies with the unmanned BAE Taranis. Furthermore, the UK and France have agreed to build two full-scale technology demonstrators for an unmanned combat aircraft by 2025.

    Still, the British Defense Ministry has said the FCAS effort could result in a manned aircraft.

    Japan’s fighter technologists want a big jet.
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    over maneuverability, relying on a big load of large, high-performance missiles for standoff engagement. The concept is somewhat similar to that of the RAF’s now-retired Tornado F3.

    The Future Fighter, to be called the F-3 when in service, would be built by MHI, the national fighter specialist. Japan wants to decide in its fiscal year ending March 2019 whether to go ahead with an indigenous project. It is not at all clear that the UK would want to commit by then, even if full-scale development did not need to begin until a few years later for entry into service in the mid-2030s.


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    DF-ANGLOJAPANQ_2_ColinThrom-AWST.jpg

    Credit: Colin Throm/AW&ST
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Stealth technology would be a focus of the Anglo-Japanese study, says Nippon News Network television. Gaining know-how in that aspect of fighter design is likely to be high among several priorities for Japanese fighter engineers, who have been working on the technological underpinning for the Future Fighter but have most recently developed a fighter, the F-2, only with considerable help from
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.

  • Some British stealth technology has been developed in cooperation with the U.S. and cannot be shared with other countries. But the rest has been acquired independently and can be supplied to Japan, to the extent that London is willing to share. Indeed, Tokyo may find that London is a little more generous in this area than Washington.

    IHI Corp. is building a demonstrator for an advanced, 33,000-lb.-thrust engine for the Future Fighter. Home to global propulsion giant
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    , the UK would not use a Japanese engine, so a jointly developed powerplant would be needed. It may not be too hard for the Japanese to walk away from their design, however; they could offer their newly developed technology for a joint engine. Moreover, Japan’s air force, probably wondering whether IHI has enough experience for the project, might be more than satisfied with the idea of Rolls-Royce’s involvement.

    From the British point of view, the exploratory discussions may open a path for BAE Systems to sustain and extend its skills in combat-aircraft engineering—even if no joint fighter results—by acting as a technology partner. That is just the sort of work the company has been looking for, because it has no immediate UK program for a fighter beyond the Typhoon.

    BAE is still building Typhoons in cooperation with
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    and Leonardo and, following development work, has moved to a largely manufacturing role in the
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    program. Having built and tested the Taranis, its engineers have the Anglo-French technology-demonstrator project to work on, with no guarantee that it will turn into a full development and production program.

    But under a £123 million ($150 million) heads-of-agreement deal signed between the Turkish and British governments in January, BAE will assist Turkey in developing the TF-X fighter. That nation will use BAE’s expertise and facilities, including for simulation and testing of radar cross-section—while incidentally helping to keep BAE in the game.

    Cooperation with the Japanese could turn into something similar and would probably run a few years behind Turkey’s program, conveniently spreading out the load on BAE’s key engineers. The UK would have the option to eventually join either the Turkish or Japanese programs as a development and production partner.

    But Japan may want Britain’s money as well. Those two countries and France have similar-size defense budgets. Japan should need a partner as much as the other two, for developing a first-rank fighter. Indeed, the exploratory talks threaten to unseat France as the UK’s prospective partner.

    In another sign of London and Tokyo moving closer in military affairs, the British Defense Ministry said on March 15 that it and its Japanese counterpart had agreed to supply each other with material and services when deploying their forces.

    A flight of RAF Typhoons visited Japan in November, giving the Japanese air force its first opportunity to exercise at home with a country other than the U.S. It was the first British fighter deployment to Japan in decades.

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Janiz

Senior Member
A video of Japanese CG at work saving Chinese sailors in August last year near Senkaku Islands starting from 18:40. One of them wasn't even wearing lifejacket (!). Surely the longest moments of his life. The rest of the video talks about JCG's work around Japanese archipelago - from Okhotsk Sea where they catch illegal fishing boats, East China Sea around Senkaku Islands and the Sea of Japan where they deal with Korean spy boats. Pretty good way of advertising their work to the public so that people know that they work hard.

 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Replace C-1 in this Sqn

Japan deploys new Kawasaki C-2 aircraft to Miho airbase

Japan’s Air Self-Defense Force has deployed new domestically made Kawasaki C-2 military transport aircraft to the Miho airbase in the Tottori Prefecture, local media reported Thursday.

According to the Kyodo news agency, the Miho airbase has become the first place of deployment of these aircraft. Three Kawasaki C-2 jets were delivered to the airbase on Tuesday, while the solemn ceremony of the deployment took place earlier on Thursday, the news outlet said.

The new military transport aircraft are expected to be fully checked by September and in December, the aircraft will start taking part in different operations. It is expected that 10 Kawasaki C-2 aircraft will be stationed at Japan’s bases by 2020, according to the news agency.

The Kawasaki C-2 (previously XC-2 and C-X) is a mid-size, twin-turbofan engine, long range, high speed military transport aircraft developed and manufactured by Kawasaki Aerospace Company. In June 2016, the C-2 formally entered service with the Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF).

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
'Bolster our ballistic missile defense,' urges Japan ruling party
By:
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March 30, 2017
TOKYO — Japan's ruling party on Thursday urged Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government to consider acquiring the capability to hit enemy bases and to beef up missile defense, as North Korea defies U.N. sanctions with its nuclear and missile development.

"North Korea's provocations have reached a level where our country can by no means overlook them. ... We cannot afford to lose any time to bolster our ballistic missile defense," said a Liberal Democratic Party proposal submitted to Abe.

Japan has so far avoided taking the controversial and costly step of acquiring bombers or weapons such as cruise missiles with enough range to strike other countries, relying instead on its U.S. ally to take the fight to its enemies.

But the growing threat posed by Pyongyang, including a simultaneous launch of four rockets earlier this month, is adding weight to an argument that aiming for the archer rather than his arrows is a more effective defense.

"Our assessment is that threat from North Korea has advanced to a new stage, and this assessment is shared by the United States," Abe said at a ceremony where the proposal was submitted. "We intend to grasp today's proposal firmly."

The LDP proposal demanded that the government promptly start necessary consideration for the acquisition of capability to hit enemy bases, such as cruise missiles, to improve deterrent effects of the U.S-Japan alliance.

"The first (missile) attack can be met with our missile defense. But as for repetitive attacks, it is important to put under control the opponent's launch sites and prevent second and further firing," Itsunori Onodera, an LDP lawmaker and former defense minister, told the ceremony.

"This is not a proposal about preemptive attacks, but about counter attacks to prevent the second (missile) launch."

Acquiring weapons capable of reaching Japan's neighbors would likely anger China, which is strongly protesting the deployment of the advanced U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, anti-missile system in South Korea.

The LDP proposal also called on the government to swiftly start examining the possible introduction of such advanced missile defense systems as Aegis Ashore and THAAD, and to accelerate technological development for operating Japan's own early warning satellites.

Aegis Ashore is a land-based version of the missile defense system used at sea, while early warning satellites are used to detect missile launches. Japan currently relies on the United States for such information.

Washington-based 38 North, a website that monitors North Korea, said on Tuesday satellite imagery of North Korea's main nuclear test site taken over the weekend indicated that Pyongyang could be in the final stages of preparations for a sixth nuclear test.

Successive governments have interpreted Japan's post-World War II pacifist constitution as allowing a military for "self-defense" only. Under Abe's watch, Japan's parliament in 2015 voted into law a defense policy shift that could let troops fight overseas for the first time since 1945, a milestone in his push to loosen the constraints of the U.S.-drafted constitution.
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Japan-UK Fighter Project Sign Of Closer Defense Partnership
Tokyo and London explore building a combat aircraft together
Mar 24, 2017
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
| Aviation Week & Space Technology

  • Anglo-Japanese Fighter


    Britain and Japan will look at jointly developing a fighter, probably for entry into service in the 2030s. The surprising move is the latest bringing the two countries closer in defense technology.

    Even if an Anglo-Japanese fighter does not emerge in the end,
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    is likely to be interested in assisting
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    (MHI) in an indigenous combat aircraft program. But in seeking cooperation, Tokyo probably hopes for a cost-sharing national partner, not just a heavy-lifting technical advisor.

    This may be a problem for France, the nation probably most inclined to work with the UK on a new fighter. The two have already agreed to do technology-acquisition work together.

    JAPANESE AND BRITISH FIGHTER REQUIREMENTS
    Tokyo needs to replace the MHI F-2 in the 2030s

    The
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    is supposed to leave
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    service before 2040


    Japan’s defense technologists are sure their Future Fighter should have a pilot

    British efforts have focused on unmanned aircraft, while leaving the door open to manned alternatives

    Tokyo and London will begin by exchanging information on the ambitions for their current, preliminary projects: the Japanese Future Fighter and Britain’s Future Combat Air System (FCAS). In assessing the feasibility of a joint program, they will also advise each other of their capabilities, says the Japanese Defense Ministry, presumably meaning they will lay their technology cards on the table.

    London is not Tokyo’s only potential partner. Japan will continue to discuss the possibility of joint development with other countries, including the U.S., the ministry said in announcing the March 16 agreement. It issued an international request for corporate expressions of interest in June.

    The UK is shaping up as Japan’s closest defense-technology partner after the U.S. The two countries agreed in 2012 to strengthen bilateral cooperation, even before Tokyo formally said in 2014, after years of discussion, that it would allow arms exports under limited circumstances. The export decision made joint development and manufacturing possible because Japanese companies could now make parts for a partner.

    In 2016, the two governments said they would look at integrating an advanced Japanese seeker on the MBDA Meteor air-to-air missile, development of which has been led by the UK.

    The defense ministry in Tokyo gives no time frame for entry into service of the contemplated joint fighter, but the national schedules do not look too far out of step. Japan needs the Future Fighter to be ready in the 2030s as a replacement for the MHI F-2. The
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    Typhoon is due to leave Royal Air Force (RAF) service before 2040; a replacement will have to be ready a few years before that.


    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!



    After Japan and Britain understand each other’s fighter requirements and technologies, they will decide by late this year whether to proceed with a joint study for a fighter, says The Nikkei newspaper.

    A crucial difference between the two sides could be regarding whether their next combat aircraft needs a pilot. Years of Future Fighter studies, the most recent of which is a concept design called 26DMU, have all envisaged a manned aircraft, because Japanese defense technologists think air-to-air combat is just too complex for a computer program. But FCAS work has focused on an unmanned jet.

    Underlining this point, Japan is flying a subscale demonstrator for a manned fighter, the MHI X-2, whereas Britain has been evaluating its technologies with the unmanned BAE Taranis. Furthermore, the UK and France have agreed to build two full-scale technology demonstrators for an unmanned combat aircraft by 2025.

    Still, the British Defense Ministry has said the FCAS effort could result in a manned aircraft.

    Japan’s fighter technologists want a big jet.
    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
    over maneuverability, relying on a big load of large, high-performance missiles for standoff engagement. The concept is somewhat similar to that of the RAF’s now-retired Tornado F3.

    The Future Fighter, to be called the F-3 when in service, would be built by MHI, the national fighter specialist. Japan wants to decide in its fiscal year ending March 2019 whether to go ahead with an indigenous project. It is not at all clear that the UK would want to commit by then, even if full-scale development did not need to begin until a few years later for entry into service in the mid-2030s.


    Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

    DF-ANGLOJAPANQ_2_ColinThrom-AWST.jpg

    Credit: Colin Throm/AW&ST
If the UK and JApan team up together on an advanced 5th ge fighter...it is going to be one heck of an aircraft.

I am gad will be with our allies and teamed up with the F-22 and F-35.
 
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