A small contingent of JSDF troops(200) will be training for amphibous landings in San Diego at MCB Camp Pendelton and Naval Base Coronado. It is speculated that these training excersises are to show any rival nation(China) that Japan could retake a small island by force if necessary.... I wonder what the Japanese populace feels about this excersise? ....It's like they(JMSDF) are taunting the PRC with the backing of the US. I do not mean to be political. The force is small but the meaning is significient.
If you respond to this thread please no political or racist comments.
It is very common for JMSDF ships & sailors to train in and visit San Diego. But this is the first time I remember any JSDF troops in San Diego. I lived in San Diego for 26 years.
Japanese soldiers to train in region
'Iron Fist' to focus on beach landings
By Rick Rogers
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
January 9, 2006
About 200 Japanese troops are in San Diego County to practice beach landings in what could be a show of force in the country's growing rivalry with China.
The soldiers, from the Japanese Self-Defense Force, will undergo "Iron Fist" training starting today. The exercise calls for the troops to conduct a night beach landing against a hostile force.
Capt. Kent Robbins, a Marine spokesman, said the amphibious training will be taught primarily at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, with the actual beach landing at Camp Pendleton. "Iron Fist" is a scaled-down version of what Marines learn, he said.
Japanese officials approached the Marines, who have a long history of beach landings, for help last summer, Robbins said. Amphibious landings are among the U.S. military's more demanding maneuvers.
The training could yield technical as well as symbolic benefits for Japan.
In Asia, defense experts and government analysts have suggested in media reports that "Iron Fist" is meant to warn China that Japan can retake a small island should one be captured.
Tensions between Tokyo and Beijing are rising as China's economic and military clout in Asia has soared. The two countries are at odds over numerous issues, from ownership of certain underwater gas reserves and other territory-rights feuding to interpretations of Asian wartime history and Japan's military alliance with the United States.
The Japanese news agency Kyodo said members of the Western Army unit of Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force left Tuesday for Camp Pendleton, where it would undergo special counterterror training and exercises.
This unit will be joined by more Japanese soldiers from Sasebo in Nagasaki Prefecture. The drills are slated to last about three weeks.
Robbins described the training as small-scale, the type more likely to be used against terrorists than against another country. He also declined to directly address the rivalry between Japan and China.
"Anytime we can conduct training with the Japanese forces, we are honored to do so," Robbins said. "We hope to increase the training opportunities in the future. We are excited to have them."
Camp Pendleton covers 125,000 acres, with 17 miles of coastline from Oceanside to the Orange County border. In the 1940s, tens of thousands of Marines learned to fight there before shipping out to battle Japanese troops during World War II.
Other U.S. allies – particularly Australia, Canada and Great Britain – have occasionally come to Camp Pendleton for training exercises.
The United States has maintained a military presence in Japan since the end of World War II in 1945. Today, about 50,000 U.S. troops are stationed there under a joint security pact.
If you respond to this thread please no political or racist comments.
It is very common for JMSDF ships & sailors to train in and visit San Diego. But this is the first time I remember any JSDF troops in San Diego. I lived in San Diego for 26 years.
Japanese soldiers to train in region
'Iron Fist' to focus on beach landings
By Rick Rogers
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
January 9, 2006
About 200 Japanese troops are in San Diego County to practice beach landings in what could be a show of force in the country's growing rivalry with China.
The soldiers, from the Japanese Self-Defense Force, will undergo "Iron Fist" training starting today. The exercise calls for the troops to conduct a night beach landing against a hostile force.
Capt. Kent Robbins, a Marine spokesman, said the amphibious training will be taught primarily at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, with the actual beach landing at Camp Pendleton. "Iron Fist" is a scaled-down version of what Marines learn, he said.
Japanese officials approached the Marines, who have a long history of beach landings, for help last summer, Robbins said. Amphibious landings are among the U.S. military's more demanding maneuvers.
The training could yield technical as well as symbolic benefits for Japan.
In Asia, defense experts and government analysts have suggested in media reports that "Iron Fist" is meant to warn China that Japan can retake a small island should one be captured.
Tensions between Tokyo and Beijing are rising as China's economic and military clout in Asia has soared. The two countries are at odds over numerous issues, from ownership of certain underwater gas reserves and other territory-rights feuding to interpretations of Asian wartime history and Japan's military alliance with the United States.
The Japanese news agency Kyodo said members of the Western Army unit of Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force left Tuesday for Camp Pendleton, where it would undergo special counterterror training and exercises.
This unit will be joined by more Japanese soldiers from Sasebo in Nagasaki Prefecture. The drills are slated to last about three weeks.
Robbins described the training as small-scale, the type more likely to be used against terrorists than against another country. He also declined to directly address the rivalry between Japan and China.
"Anytime we can conduct training with the Japanese forces, we are honored to do so," Robbins said. "We hope to increase the training opportunities in the future. We are excited to have them."
Camp Pendleton covers 125,000 acres, with 17 miles of coastline from Oceanside to the Orange County border. In the 1940s, tens of thousands of Marines learned to fight there before shipping out to battle Japanese troops during World War II.
Other U.S. allies – particularly Australia, Canada and Great Britain – have occasionally come to Camp Pendleton for training exercises.
The United States has maintained a military presence in Japan since the end of World War II in 1945. Today, about 50,000 U.S. troops are stationed there under a joint security pact.