Japan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

These will serve the Japanese Defense Forces very well.
I found this narrative:
Osprey Purchase Latest Move by Japan’s Military to Counter China
The sale of five
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aircraft to Japan will substantially bolster U.S.-Japan military-to-military cooperation and improve the island nation’s ability to help counter-balance China’s assertive behavior as tensions rise in the Pacific, Pentagon officials said.

The Japanese Defense Forces’
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also comes as tensions between Japan and neighboring China appear to be worsening.

Not only have the two countries been locked in a territorial dispute over contested islands in the East China Sea, but China recently released a statement criticizing a move by Japanese parliament to pass a bill that would allow Japanese troops to fight abroad for the first time since World War II, according to a news report from Agence France-Presse.

“It is fully justified to ask if Japan is going to give up its exclusively defense-oriented policy”, China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement, according to the report.

Japan’s defense-only military policy, woven into its constitution with large U.S. involvement, has been in place since the end of World War II. In recent years, however, the Japanese have been stepping up their international military maneuvers and some in the country are advocating for the country to further develop offensive military capabilities.

“We solemnly urge the Japanese side to… refrain from jeopardizing China’s sovereignty and security interests or crippling regional peace and stability,” Hua said in the statement posted on the ministry’s website.

Japanese forces invaded China in 1937 just prior to the full outbreak of World War II.

The sale of five Ospreys to Japan will constitute the first international sales of the tilt-rotor aircraft, in service with U.S. Marines and Air Force Special Operations forces since 2007.

With speeds up to 280 knots and a combat radius of 450 miles, the V-22 Osprey changes the equation regarding a force’s ability to maneuver and project power, particular when it comes to amphibious operations, Navy officials have said.,

The Osprey can carry 24 combat-loaded troops in the back and sling-load vehicles and artillery.

U.S. State Department officials, who work closely with their Pentagon counterparts regarding Foreign Military Sales efforts, welcomed the Osprey sales as evidence of a growing U.S.-Japan military partnership.

“This proposed sale of V-22B Block C Osprey aircraft under the Foreign Military Sales program will greatly enhance the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force’s humanitarian and disaster relief capabilities and support amphibious operations. This sale will promote burden sharing with our ally and interoperability with U.S. forces,” David McKeeby, spokesman for the Department of State’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, told Military.com.

Several days ago, the Pentagon announced a $332.5 million deal between the U.S. Navy and Bell-Boeing to deliver and support five of the Block C version of the V-22 Ospreys to Japan’s Self-Defense Forces.

It was delayed after Japanese officials faced stiff resistance from critics inside Japan cited the Osprey’s poor early safety record.

The deal includes training support and equipment to help the Japanese maximize the value of the tilt-rotor aircraft.

“It is vital to the U.S. national interest to assist Japan in developing and maintaining a strong and ready self-defense capability. Japan is modernizing its transport fleet to better support its self-defense and special mission needs, and this proposed sale is consistent with U.S. objectives and the 1960 Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security,” McKeeby added.

The U.S.-Japan deal comes at a time when the U.S. Navy is working to bolster and further fortify its alliances in the Pacific region as part of its rebalance to the area and an effort to counter-balance China’s increasingly assertive behavior in the region.

While state Department officials say Japan’s defense policy is an internal matter for the country to resolve, Mckeeby did point to Japan’s increasing role in global security operations. These include dispatching naval assets to counter piracy, sending reconstruction support forces to Iraq and Kuwait, deploying peacekeepers to South Sudan and Haiti and providing humanitarian assistance to the Philippines.

We consult regularly with the Japanese government on our respective forces’ roles, missions, and capabilities to ensure that our alliance is always ready to carry out its mission to protect Japan and to maintain peace and stability in the region,” he added.
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
I found this narrative:
Osprey Purchase Latest Move by Japan’s Military to Counter China
It is clear to me that the Japanese are going to place more emphasis than before on the air assault capabilities of their Osumi (3) LPD and Hyuga (2) DDH vessels.

A part of this is surely because of their desire to be able to react quickly to potential Island situations.

If they work out the way I think they are going to work out, I expect to see them order more Ospreys.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
I agree Jeff and would add, that Japan as a series of island chains naturally should favor ranged air and amphibious options for its defenses forces to allow transitioning of men material and assets from island to island in a nation emergency. Whether using landing craft to assist in humanitarian crisis on out laying islands, or counter assault landing operations.
Osprey fits that its size, speed, and vertical landing capabilities make it tailor made for landing moderate sized assets during preliminary periods of operation in territory that has limited to no conventional fixed wing aviation access.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Knowing the JMSDF standard they will make full use of these assets no question about it


V22 adds a capability that JMSDF will benefit from

It's faster and quicker than any other helo and can carry more over a further distance

If JMSDF adds F35B that means they will have air cover over the sea

Btw it's no secret JMSDF is building a MEU based around USN, will they be air centric? Let's what and see
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Japan's JMSDF May Patrol South China Sea to Limit China's Claims and Island Expansions
Admiral Katsutoshi Kawano, Chief of Staff, Joint Staff of the Japanese military (and former Chief of Navy), declared that China’s unwavering stance on various territorial disputes and the number of artificial islands it is constructing have led Japan to consider patrolling the South China Sea and conducting surveillance there. Japan’s top military commander is on an official visit to Washington.
...
Japan's rising concerns have resulted in recent discussions as to whether it should patrol the South China Sea, and implement anti-submarine activities.
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South China Sea is set to become an increasingly interesting place throughout this century
 
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