Japan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Pmichael

Junior Member
Yes, Sweden is:

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


While not the Italian government, Leonardo has signed onto Team Tempest:

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


The British side is spinning those things like crazy. But the reality is not like that.

Also the >2billion thing for Tempest is "noted" like the UK wants to buy more than the only 48 ordered but it's not actually not in any budget included.
 
I really can't imagine how much MoD of Japan had invested F-3 related projects.(shinshin, FX-9 engine development, Skin radar technology, Supersonic bomb bay development, etc, etc)
Japan also have invested vast amount in direct energy weapon technology, AESA radar technology, GaN chip development, hypersonic missile technology, Silicon/Carbon composite material technology, stealth technology, etc.,etc.
Basically Japan has most of the technology only other nation will dream about.
if it's true what you described, it'd be good for Japan to have it, I guess,

but still complex weaponry like aircraft can 'get only as strong as its weakest link'

for example the F-22 doesn't have an EOTS, Chinese weakness is engine technology (I heard in this forum) and I could go on
 
interestingly,
South Korea ends intel-sharing deal with Japan
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

South Korea will
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
on North Korea with Japan amid a bitter trade dispute, Seoul said Thursday in a surprise announcement that is likely to set back U.S. efforts to bolster security cooperation with two of its most important allies in the Asian region.

South Korea's decision to cancel the intelligence-sharing pact will also further aggravate its ties with Japan, which are already at their lowest point since the two countries established diplomatic ties in 1965. Japanese media said Tokyo lodged a protest with Seoul, and quoted unidentified Tokyo officials as calling the South Korean move "extremely regrettable" and "unbelievable."

Many experts had predicted that South Korea would be unlikely to spike the 3-year-old intelligence-sharing deal for the sake of its relations with the United States. South Korea has been seeking U.S. help in resolving the trade dispute, and Seoul and Washington have also been working together to restart stalled talks on stripping North Korea of its nuclear weapons.

South Korea's presidential office said it terminated the intelligence deal because Japan's recent decision to downgrade South Korea's trade status caused a "grave" change in security cooperation between the countries.

"Under this situation, the government has determined that maintaining the agreement, which was signed for the purpose of exchanging sensitive military intelligence on security, does not serve our national interests," Kim You-geun, the deputy director of South Korea's presidential national security office, said in a nationally televised statement.

He said South Korea will formally notify Japan of its decision before Saturday, the deadline for an extension of the pact for another year.

Since early last month, Japan has imposed stricter controls on exports to South Korea of three chemicals essential for manufacturing semiconductors and display screens — key export items for South Korea — and decided to remove South Korea from a list of countries with a preferential trade status.

South Korea accuses Japan of weaponizing trade to punish it over a separate dispute linked to Japan’s brutal colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula from 1910-1945. Japan denies that, saying its steps were taken because of unspecified security concerns.

The Japanese trade curbs triggered an outburst of anti-Japan sentiment in South Korea. Many South Korean citizens rallied in the streets, canceled planned holiday trips to Japan, and launched widespread boycotts of Japanese beer, clothes and other products. The South Korean government, for its part, decided to downgrade Japan’s trade status.

Some experts say the tit-for-tat actions could eventually hurt South Korea’s economy more than Japan’s. Many big South Korean manufacturers including Samsung heavily rely on materials and components imported from Japan, while Japan doesn’t import many vital materials from South Korea.

Liberal South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who earlier declared his country would "never again lose" to Japan, used the Aug. 15 anniversary of Korea's liberation from Japan to extend an olive branch. Moon said Seoul will "gladly join hands" if Tokyo wanted to talk.

Lt. Col. Dave Eastburn, a Pentagon spokesman, encouraged Japan and Korea “to work together to resolve their differences.”

"I hope they can do this quickly. We are all stronger — and Northeast Asia is safer — when the United States, Japan and Korea work together in solidarity and friendship. Intel sharing is key to developing our common defense policy and strategy,” he said.

On Wednesday, the top U.S. envoy on North Korea, Stephen Biegun, told reporters in Seoul that he appreciated what he called “strong and continued cooperation between the U.S., South Korea and Japan.”

The intelligence deal went into effect in 2016, reportedly at the strong urging of the United States, which wants to boost three-day security cooperation to better cope with
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and a rising China. The United States stations a total of 80,000 troops in the two Asian countries, the core of America’s military presence in the Asia-Pacific region.

Experts said the deal enabled a quicker exchange of information between Seoul and Tokyo; they had previously exchanged intelligence via the United States. In 2012, the countries nearly forged a similar deal, but it was scrapped at the last minute following a vehement backlash in South Korea.

However, it is unclear how effective the deal has been for both countries, especially in regard to intelligence on North Korea, one of the world’s most secretive countries. But there has been a general consensus that South Korea needed information gathered by Japanese satellites and other high-tech systems, while Japan enjoyed signal, voice and human intelligence from South Korea.

South Korea's Defense Ministry said in a statement Thursday that it will try to maintain a "stable and perfect combined security posture" with the United States regardless of the termination of the intelligence deal. It called the South Korean-U.S. alliance "powerful."

South Korean government and ruling party officials have publicly questioned how Seoul could share intelligence with a country that questioned Seoul’s handling of sensitive materials imported from Japan. Without providing concrete evidence, some Japanese officials, including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, suggested that some critical Japanese materials with potential military applications exported to South Korea may have reached North Korea. Seoul flatly denies that.

The fate of the deal had divided people in South Korea. Some argued that South Korea should do whatever it could to inflict pain on Japan, and that just floating the idea of ending the intelligence deal could force the United States to persuade Japan to lift its trade curbs. But some stressed that the deal’s cancellation would impair relations with the United States at a time when South Korea faces many security challenges, including the stalemate of nuclear talks with North Korea.

Moon’s government has lobbied hard to facilitate talks between the U.S. and North Korea on the nuclear crisis. But the diplomacy has remained largely stalemated for months, and North Korea now says it won’t go through South Korea to talk to the United States. The North
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
a series of short-range missiles and other weapons capable of striking much of South Korea.

Last month, a Russian military plane allegedly violated South Korean airspace in the first such trespassing by a foreign warplane since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War. Russian and Chinese warplanes allegedly also made a highly unusual joint entrance to South Korea's air defense identification zone, in what analysts said was an attempt to see how the Seoul-Washington-Tokyo security cooperation worked.

South Korea’s main conservative opposition party accused the Moon government of confusing “genuine courage” with “foolhardy courage.” The Liberty Korea Party said security coordination with Washington and Tokyo needed to be solidified in the face of strengthening cooperation among Russia, China and North Korea.

"We would have lots of things to lose from the deal's termination," said analyst Go Myong-Hyun of the Seoul-based Asan Institute for Policy Studies. "If the U.S. turned its back on South Korea, we would be completely isolated in Northeast Asia."

On Thursday evening, about 30 anti-Tokyo activists gathered near the Japanese Embassy in Seoul to welcome the intelligence deal’s termination. Jubilant participants held placards that read: “The scrapping of the South Korea-Japan deal is a people’s victory.”
not to share info about Charlie doesn't make sense to me
 

Pmichael

Junior Member
Well, Japan's engine industry isn't even meaningful large. IHI's aerospace business is even compard to second row players like Safran or subcontractors like MTU small, it's also the field with the largest deficit in imports and exports for Japan's aerospace industry. But Japan is generally a technology leader regarding gas turbines and material science, which helps alot for own engine designing ambitions.
The same with all the other subsystems, at some point everything falls down to material science.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Well, Japan's engine industry isn't even meaningful large. IHI's aerospace business is even compard to second row players like Safran or subcontractors like MTU small, it's also the field with the largest deficit in imports and exports for Japan's aerospace industry. But Japan is generally a technology leader regarding gas turbines and material science, which helps alot for own engine designing ambitions.
The same with all the other subsystems, at some point everything falls down to material science.[/QU
 

Skywatcher

Captain
I really can't imagine how much MoD of Japan had invested F-3 related projects.(shinshin, FX-9 engine development, Skin radar technology, Supersonic bomb bay development, etc, etc)
Japan also have invested vast amount in direct energy weapon technology, AESA radar technology, GaN chip development, hypersonic missile technology, Silicon/Carbon composite material technology, stealth technology, etc.,etc.
Basically Japan has most of the technology only other nation will dream about.
Until it goes to prototyping for a program, it's all a bunch of basic research and tech demonstrators.
 

SamuraiBlue

Captain
Well, Japan's engine industry isn't even meaningful large. IHI's aerospace business is even compard to second row players like Safran or subcontractors like MTU small, it's also the field with the largest deficit in imports and exports for Japan's aerospace industry. But Japan is generally a technology leader regarding gas turbines and material science, which helps alot for own engine designing ambitions.
The same with all the other subsystems, at some point everything falls down to material science.
The large commercial jet engine industry(GE & RR) are much more of a service provider than a manufacturer.
They monitor the health of the engines in real time around the globe with spare parts depot all around the world that can ready replacements even before the plane touches the ground.
Late comers just can't compete in that kind of playing field. On the other hand both GE and RR relies heavily on Japanese components. Fan blades, ceramic composite material, carbon composite etc., etc.
The latest XF-9's performance is said to be;
Maximum thrust: 147.10 kN (33,069 lbf) wet ; 107.9 kN (24,250 lbf) dry
Length: 4.8 m (16 ft)
Diameter: ~1 m (3 ft 3 in)
It's said to provide better performance than the F119

It was developed completely independently with no help from US.
 

Pmichael

Junior Member
What's your source for the reality?

You mean like the article I posted about SAAB stating that this is actual more about synergy effects for their Gripen E? Or the Swedish defence minister stating it's about "exploring" and not "committing" to the developement to next gen fighter capabilities in that MoU.

The large commercial jet engine industry(GE & RR) are much more of a service provider than a manufacturer.
They monitor the health of the engines in real time around the globe with spare parts depot all around the world that can ready replacements even before the plane touches the ground.
Late comers just can't compete in that kind of playing field. On the other hand both GE and RR relies heavily on Japanese components. Fan blades, ceramic composite material, carbon composite etc., etc.
The latest XF-9's performance is said to be;
Maximum thrust: 147.10 kN (33,069 lbf) wet ; 107.9 kN (24,250 lbf) dry
Length: 4.8 m (16 ft)
Diameter: ~1 m (3 ft 3 in)
It's said to provide better performance than the F119

It was developed completely independently with no help from US.

GE and RR all have the overwhelming majority of developement share in new turbines projects.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


In that paper released by the SJAC members, it's clearly stated the big deficit between export and import of engine (parts). Japan, as later comer, did an excellent job of etablishing itself as crucial partner regarding subsystems and components but they lack the system house capabilities regarding aircraft and engines.
 
an automatic translation of (dated 8/21)
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
護衛艦「いずも」、最初の利用は米軍機 日本側が伝える

事実上の空母に改修される海上自衛隊最大の「いずも」型護衛艦をめぐり、日本側が今年3月、米軍首脳に対し、米軍機が先行利用する見通しを伝えていたことがわかった。航空自衛隊への戦闘機F35Bの配備に先立って空母化を進め、米軍との連携を強化する方針を示した形だ。
:
"The first use of the destroyer Izumo

In March this year, the Japanese side reported to the US military leaders about the prospects of US military aircraft going ahead over the Izumo-type escort ship, the largest of the Maritime Self-Defense Forces, which was renovated as a de facto aircraft carrier. Prior to the deployment of the F35B fighter aircraft to the Air Self Defense Force, the plan is to advance the aircraft carrier and strengthen the cooperation with the US military."

(noticed through the USNI News
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
)
 
Top