JMSDF may have comprimised SM-2 information
If true this is not good news for the US...No telling where the information may wind up if comprimised.
If someone in the USN did this heads would roll and arrest would be made.
This may put the kibosh (finish) on any future F-22 purchase by Japan.
If true this is not good news for the US...No telling where the information may wind up if comprimised.
If someone in the USN did this heads would roll and arrest would be made.
This may put the kibosh (finish) on any future F-22 purchase by Japan.
Report: Japanese navy(JMSDF) leaked missile data.
The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday May 22, 2007 9:05:19 EDT
TOKYO Classified information about a U.S.-developed missile
defense system was leaked from Japan's navy to students at a naval
academy, a news report said Tuesday, as officials investigated
security gaps in military information shared between the allies.
Investigators say the leak involved ship-to-air SM-3 interceptor
missiles that are to be deployed on Japanese ships later this year,
Kyodo News agency reported, citing unidentified officials.
Investigators are already looking into the alleged leak of
information about the U.S.-developed high-tech Aegis radar system
used in warships. That information was also shared between the U.S.
and Japan.
"There are various investigations going on and I will not comment on
individual cases," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki told a
regular news conference Tuesday. Shiozaki did not specify whether
investigators were looking into the SM-3 case.
Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma said he had not "heard anything" about
the matter.
Hiromitsu Harada, a spokesman for Japan's Maritime Self-Defense
Force, and Kanagawa police refused to comment.
Spokesmen for the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo and the U.S. Forces Japan
likewise declined to comment on the report, saying it was policy not
to discuss intelligence matters.
Japan and the U.S. have been accelerating plans for a joint missile
defense system to counter threats from North Korean missiles and
nuclear weapons. Deployment of the SM-3 interceptors on Japanese
Aegis-equipped ships is part of the upgrade.
Investigators have also discovered leaks regarding a data system
called "Link 16" used to share information between U.S. and Japanese
military units, Kyodo said.
The SM-3 information is believed to have been leaked to students at
a naval academy, it said.
On Saturday, naval and local police raided the naval academy over
the alleged leak of Aegis technology.
Local media said authorities believe that computer disks containing
the classified data were illegally copied and circulated among
dozens of students and instructors at the academy.
The case first surfaced in March when police found one of the disks
at the home of a Japanese naval officer in Kanagawa during a
separate investigation of his Chinese wife over her immigration
status.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates expressed concern about the leak
during talks with Kyuma last month in Washington.
Earlier this month, Kyuma ordered annual interviews with all members
of the military about 250,000 of them to tighten controls on
information, the Defense Ministry said.
The leaks come amid speculation that Japan may want to buy the
newest and most expensive fighters in the Air Force, the F-22
Raptor stealth aircraft. Japan is planning to replace its aging F-4
fighters with a more advanced aircraft, but has expressed concern
over the high cost of the F-22 and possible licensing problems.
But the U.S. Congress has placed restrictions on sales, largely to
safeguard its advanced technology.