Japan Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Takanami and Akizuki classes the 2 last DDG
View attachment 39604
Here is the "latest" Japanese destroyer. The Asahi, DDG-119, 25DD Class:

Asahi-class (1).jpg

Image8.jpg

It is an iteration/version of the Azikui class...not quite as heavy displacement, and more general pupose/ASW leaning, where the Akizuki vessels, all four of them, are much more directed at AAW.

Asahi-DD119-01.jpg

These will be directed more at general purpose SLOC duties. I believe they intend to have at least two of these vessels. The second is well under construction.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
XSSM ground launched

MAST Asia 2017: JMSDF Tested its XSSM Anti-Ship Missile against Barracuda USV-MT Target

At MAST Asia 2017 (Maritime Air Systems & Technologies), the naval defense exhibition held last week in Tokyo, Navy Recognition learned that Japan's Acquisition Technology and Logistics Agency (ATLA), a branch of the MoD, used a surface target from Canadian company Qinetiq Target Systems to test one of its latest generation anti-ship missile: the XSSM.

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Special ship
Experiment ship of Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF): JDS ASUKA (ASE-6102),
Operator: Fleet Research and Development Command,
Length x Breadth: 151 m X 17.3 m,
Displacement: 4250 tonnes standard 6200 tonnes full load,
Home port: YOKOSUKA.
 
this view:
looked familiar to me ... Oct 19, 2016
cool, I send good luck wishes to her! from a pub in the middle of Europe :)
bRGfy.jpg
LOL!

launching of the DDG-120 is to happen in October of this year (to the extent I understood
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)
 
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I noticed Tokyo to choose cheaper Aegis option to beef up missile defense
June 23, 2017
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To strengthen defensive capabilities against a possible ballistic missile attack by North Korea, the Defense Ministry will seek funding in the fiscal 2018 budget for a land-based Aegis missile defense system.

Ministry officials have been weighing whether to go with the land-based Aegis Ashore, or the more expensive state-of-the-art Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, which was developed by the U.S. military.

But several government sources said June 22 that it has been decided to seek funding to further study the introduction of the Aegis Ashore system.

Defense Ministry officials will officially give Aegis Ashore the thumbs up in July, and the green light will be given to seek government funding in the fiscal 2018 budget.

The Maritime Self-Defense Force uses the Aegis system on its warships as part of the nation's ballistic missile defense system. The Aegis destroyers carry Standard Missile 3 (SM-3) interceptors that can shoot down ballistic missiles outside the Earth's atmosphere. If the SM-3 fails to hit its target, then all money rides on the Patriot Advanced Capability 3 (PAC-3) surface-to-air missiles to shoot down the incoming missile after it re-enters the atmosphere.

Present cost estimates for the Aegis Ashore system have one unit priced at about 80 billion yen ($721 million). If the SM-3 Block IIA missile now being developed by Japan and the United States is used in the Aegis Ashore system, all of Japan could theoretically be covered with two units.

Installing the Aegis Ashore system will also allow for greater flexibility when deploying the MSDF's Aegis destroyers in waters around Japan to guard against enemy ballistic missile launches.

On the other hand, installing the THAAD system would have meant deploying at least six launchers around Japan, with each unit costing more than 100 billion yen.

Plans are now being made to have Defense Minister Tomomi Inada visit and inspect an Aegis Ashore experimental facility in Hawaii in July.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
I noticed Tokyo to choose cheaper Aegis option to beef up missile defense
June 23, 2017
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AEGIS ashore is an EXCELLENT system.

...and I might add, I first recommended such a system in 1999-2000 with:

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m
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...and was told by compatriots at USNI at the time they they thought it had a lot of promise.

18 Years ago...and now it is relity in Eastern europe and apparently the Japanese are seriously considering it too.[/URL]
 
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Japan creates/designs and builds excellent warships.

The four Akizukis and these two Asahis will make for six very new, very modern, and very apable vessels.
Asahi good but he have a VLS with only 16 cell's Akizuki 32 according our reliable Japanese members :) fitted for 16 in more or modules installed but no missiles inside
 
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