In defense of the realm.JAPAN'S MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT FACES an uncertain future. Can it really defend the archipelago, handle a "hot" crisis in the region or play a role in containing North Korea? Michael E. Stanley cuts through the "fog of war" and provides a clear-cut assessment of the nation's Self-Defense Forces. Winston Churchill once opined that every nation must have an army - either its own or someone else's. Japan has apparently opted for both. While relying on the superpower-level forces of the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , and hosting a significant portion of those US forces stationed in the Pacific region, Japan has developed its own land, sea and air forces as well. Despite the limitations of its "peace" Constitution, the three Self-Defense Forces are obviously far more than the result of a mere token effort. These forces have in recent years grown markedly in ability and professionalism, but the question hangs in the air: to what end? Changes in the region's stability during the last decade and a half have now thrust an evidently unwilling Japan into the treacherous geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics n. (used with a sing. verb) 1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation. 2. a. currents of northeast Asia Often used interchangeably with the term 'East Asia,' Northeast Asia is, as its name implies, in the geographic northeast region of Asia. Being a geographic, rather than a cultural term--as opposed to East Asia, which has varying definitions, some being cultural--Northeast Asia . Recent events have highlighted Japan's vulnerability to missile attack and air or sea incursion in·cur·sion n. 1. An aggressive entrance into foreign territory; a raid or invasion. 2. The act of entering another's territory or domain. 3. . The common concept that the country is a "rear area" is largely a wishful fiction. Tokyo is 10 minutes -- or less -- flight time for a North Korea-launched Nodong missile. There are questions and doubts about Japan's military capabilities - and about whether those capabilities are in fact limited to self-defense. In addition, the presence and capabilities of the US military forces based in Japan are not solely driven by or limited to providing a shield for Japan. The US units in the archipelago mesh tightly with those in South Korea; together, they are a well-planned, integrated and flexible force dedicated to maintaining a clearly capable forward military presence in the region. This is a far cry from the types and disposition of US forces in the region just prior to the opening of the Korean War Korean War, conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953. At the end of World War II, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) zones of occupation. in June 1950. Without the current presence, the resulting power vacuum A power vacuum is an expression for a political situation that can occur when a government has no identifiable central authority. The metaphor implies that, like a physical vacuum, other forces will tend to "rush in" to fill the vacuum as soon as it is created, perhaps in the form would eventually be filled by Japan or one of its neighbors. Those neighbors who had the unfortunate experience of occupation by Japanese forces during World War II tend to be quite sensitive to any change, real or imagined, in Japan's capabilities, and the suggestion of a fully armed Japan results in a predictably negative reaction. For them, the US military presence in Japan is often seen as a cork in the bottle; the US being here obviates any need for Japan to arm itself. Far too often, however, it seems that the shrill and formulaic reactions of neighboring nations are knee-jerk rituals out of sync with current reality. While Japan has some of the finest military systems and equipment in the world, such as the F-15 fighter, the shipboard ship·board n. 1. The condition of being aboard a ship: on shipboard. 2. Archaic The side of a ship. adj. AEGIS antiaircraft/antimissile system and Patriot air-defense missiles, the Self-Defense Forces have insufficient depth even to accomplish a complete defense of their own nation. To do so against an all-out attack would require the assistance of the US -- as spelled out in the Joint Security Treaty -- in no small measure. Even at twice their current strength, the Self-Defense Forces would be utterly incapable of carrying out any kind of serious offensive campaign. Advancing farces and AWACS AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) Mobile, long-range radar surveillance-and-control centre for air defense. Used by the U.S. Air Force since 1977, AWACS is mounted in a specially modified Boeing 707 aircraft, with its main radar antenna affixed to a rotating dome. I have been observing the Japan-US defense relationship at very close range for almost two decades. For the majority of that time, I have focused on the relationship between the two nations' air forces. I have seen the process of change at work as the Cold War drew to its surprising end and the structure of power in northeast Asia moved into a new and precarious pattern. In addition, the IT revolution began to make its effects felt in what military specialists term the RMA (RealMedia Architecture) See RealMedia. -- the revolution in military affairs The military concept of Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) is a theory about the future of warfare, often connected to technological and organizational recommendations for change in the United States military and others. . Great changes have begun as this ever-accelerating course of IT developments has started to clear many aspects of what 19th-century military philosopher Carl von Clausewitz Carl Philipp Gottlieb von Clausewitz (IPA: [ˈklaʊzəvɪts]) (July 1, 1780[1] – November 16, 1831) was a Prussian soldier, military historian and influential military theorist. termed the "fog of war." Failure to integrate this ongoing information and communication revolution into both long- and short-range planning will spell disaster should a truly "hot" crisis arise. As recent developments on the Korean peninsula have hinted, that possibility could be close at hand. The capabilities that will be critical to Japan's Self-Defense Forces in the coming decades will not be deeply dependent on new developments in blockbuster munitions mu·ni·tion n. War materiel, especially weapons and ammunition. Often used in the plural. tr.v. mu·ni·tioned, mu·ni·tion·ing, mu·ni·tions To supply with munitions. or longer-range missiles. Put concisely, the major challenges will deal with information technology and communications across a whole panoply pan·o·ply n. pl. pan·o·plies 1. A splendid or striking array: a panoply of colorful flags. See Synonyms at display. 2. of applications, logistics, technical support and capabilities for what is called MOOTW MOOTW Military Operations Other Than War MOOTW Messier Object of the Week : military operations other than war Operations that encompass the use of military capabilities across the range of military operations short of war. These military actions can be applied to complement any combination of the other instruments of national power and occur before, during, and after war. Also called MOOTW. . Included in this list is the need to gain public understanding that the Self-Defense Forces must expand their capabilities in these areas. To see how Japan has been responding to these challenges, a look at a system that came into operational use in recent years will provide a useful example. In the mid-1990s, the Japan Air Self-Defense Force The Japan Air Self-Defense Force (航空自衛隊 Kōkū Jieitai (JASDF JASDF Japanese Air Self Defense Force ) began standard training operations with Boeing-built Airborne Warning and Control Systems aircraft -- better known as AWACS. The system is essentially a flying radar facility; its altitude and mobility give it great advantages over ground-based radars. AWACS can see farther over the horizon than can ground-based radar; that ability provides a decisive information edge. Inside the AWACS are independent but linked radar consoles from which the actions of fighters and other aircraft can be controlled and directed. For example, the AWACS controllers can see incoming hostile aircraft and marshal interceptors to the most advantageous position to engage them. The controllers essentially provide a "God's-eye-view" of the aerial battlespace. In bilateral defense-of-Japan exercises such as Cope North and Keen Sword, US controllers in both ground and AWACS facilities routinely provide control for JASDF aircraft and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . Since the AWACS radar can peer well over the horizon, it can look into an adversary's own airspace and provide the key to mounting a successful aerial attack. This was done by the US and its coalition allies to great effect in the 1990-91 Gulf War and was a signal factor in the destruction of Iraq's air force before it could do any serious damage to the coalition forces. The more left-leaning elements in Japan's press seized on this capability; to them, the JASDF's AWACS aircraft would be used as spy planes for use in aggressive warfare. Emphasis on this aspect tended to obscure the fact that the sprawling length and breadth of Japan's airspace is a major factor in the defensibility of the nation, and that the acquisition of the AWACS system brought Japan up to par in the task of being prepared to defend it. The Japanese public on the whole had almost no understanding whatsoever of what the system's acquisition could mean for Japan's defense; they essentially left the matter in the hands of the bureaucrats and politicians. The AWACS system is now an integrated, indispensable element of Japan's own defense, and it complements the three US Air Force AWACS aircraft stationed at Kadena Air Base “Kadena” redirects here. For other uses, see Kadena (disambiguation). Kadena Air Base is a United States Air Force base located in the towns of Kadena and Chatan and the city of Okinawa, in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. Kadena Air Base is the hub of U.S. , Okinawa. Japan's AWACS may well play a significant supporting role supporting role n → second rôle m supporting role n → ruolo non protagonista should hostilities erupt on the Korean peninsula. Until the deployment of Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force personnel to various peacekeeping missions in such places as Cambodia, Mozambique, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Israel's Golan Heights Golan Heights, strategic upland region (2003 est. pop. 10,500), c.500 sq mi (1,250 sq km), SW Syria. It borders S Lebanon, NE Israel, and NW Jordan. It takes its name from the ancient city of Golan and was known as Gaulanitis in New Testament times. -- a development of the 1990s -- Japanese forces had no need for long-range air transport capability. Their C-130s (a 4-engine turboprop turboprop: see turbine. turboprop Hybrid engine that provides jet thrust and also drives a propeller. It is similar to the turbojet except that an added turbine, behind the combustion chamber, works through a shaft and speed-reducing gears to turn a ) and C-is (a two-engine jet of indigenous design) were sufficient for the task of moving personnel around the islands of Japan. However, with the advent of these distant deployments, the difficulty of supporting them with the "short legs" of the JASDF transports became evident. It is realistic to expect that Japan will continue to dispatch its troops for such UN-sponsored efforts around the world; it is also realistic to expect that at some point in the not-too-distant future, Japan will look into acquiring longer legs either by buying (or building under license) transport aircraft such as the US-made C-17, or by trying to develop and build anew, larger transpo rt on its own. Acquisition of such an aircraft type will not only help deploy Self-Defense Forces personnel farther and faster, but will allow for larger-scale Japanese participation in international crisis-response operations. While the Japanese aircraft industry has not yet tackled the design and construction of a large transport, the possibility that it might do so is not out of character. Each of Japan's military aircraft projects since the end of the Pacific War has been a step in keeping the nation's industry reasonably current with the worldwide state of the art. From the T-l trainer (Japan's first jet), the F-l fighter (the nation's first combat aircraft) and the C-1 (its first jet transport) on through to the license-built F-4EJ and F-15J fighters and to the current domestically developed T-4 jet trainer and F-2 fighter (largely based on licensed technology from the US-made F-16), each step has been a calculated move to acquire skills and technology and to "keep current" in aerospace development. Japan even has a special niche of its own when it comes to military technology: The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (海上自衛隊 Kaijō Jieitai (JMSDF JMSDF Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (Navy) ) operates the US-1, a four-engine turboprop flying boat designed and manufactured by ShinMaywa industries. The JMSDF is the only naval or air arm to still use such aircraft. A decade ago, their value was proven in the rescue of a US Air Force fighter pilot who had suffered a midair collision during a transpacific trans·pa·cif·ic adj. 1. Situated on or coming from the other side of the Pacific Ocean. 2. Spanning or crossing the Pacific Ocean. deployment. He ejected safely but parachuted into the winter seas about 1,000 kilometers east of Tokyo. No US asset could have possibly reached him in time to effect a rescue; a JMSDF US-1 set down on the heaving sea and plucked him from what would otherwise have been an unsurvivable situation. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. its own laws, Japan cannot export military aircraft, but the time just may come when civilian variants of transports or trainers make their appearance overseas. This seems almost unthinkable now, but Japanese participation in overseas peacekeeping operations was equally unth inkable a little more than a decade ago. JASDF and the USAF In June 1999, the Japan Air Self-Defense Force sent a detachment of F-15s to participate in a Guam-based Cope North bilateral exercise with the US Air Force. That was the first time Japanese combat aircraft had landed outside Japanese airspace since the end of World War II End of World War II can refer to:
Just before this issue of Japan Inc hits the stands, the JASDF will be participating in a Cope North exercise within Japan, but with a very special twist. For the first time, JASDF fighters will engage in air-to-air refueling from US Air Force tanker aircraft
In mid-February, Defense Agency director-general Shigeru Ishiba Shigeru Ishiba (石破 茂 Ishiba Shigeru, born February 4, 1957) is Japan's Minister of Defense under Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda. He is a graduate of Keio University and formerly served in the Mitsui bank. flatly stated that if Japan were to detect North Korea fueling its ballistic missiles, then it might exercise the option to attack them as an act of self-defense. These brave words had little to back them; the missile sites are at the far edge of the effective range of JASDF aircraft. There would be little or no fuel leeway. Those fighters defending North Korean airspace could mount a fairly effective defense just by engaging the attack aircraft so as to cause high fuel consumption. (Of course, one option that Japan has used in a highly visible role before is a one-way mission.) These limitations evaporate, however, if JASDF aircraft can refuel re·fu·el v. re·fu·eled also re·fu·elled, re·fu·el·ing also re·fu·el·ling, re·fu·els also re·fu·els v.tr. To supply again with fuel. v.intr. in the air. A jet-powered combat aircraft usually consumes up to one-third of its fuel load just getting off the ground. A common pattern for US planes is an air-to-air refueling soon after takeoff, more refueling mid-flight, if necessary, and an additional refueling on the way home. Japan's F-15 fighters have been built with the air-refueling piping in place but covered by the skin of the aircraft. Now the fuel inlet doors have been installed and the fighters can refuel. On the new F-2 attack fighter, which is a Japanese-built variation on the F-16 and is just coming on line, the refueling hardware has been in place since the initial design stages. After this spring's Cope North, JASDF fighters will participate in a Cope Thunder exercise in Alaska. For the first time, combat aircraft bearing the Rising Sun insignia will fly outside the Asian region. Cope Thunder is a huge air-combat, realistic exercise that is, in the words of one US pilot: "The closest you can get to war without bullets." In order to reach Alaska and make it back to Japan, the participating JASDF F-15s will have to refuel on the way to and from this excursion. The refueling tankers in these cases will be US aircraft, but a budget has been allotted al·lot tr.v. al·lot·ted, al·lot·ting, al·lots 1. To parcel out; distribute or apportion: allotting land to homesteaders; allot blame. 2. for the first JASDF tanker aircraft, built on the Boeing 767 airframe, an d they will likely be in operation in three to four years. From that time, Japan's combat aircraft will surely play a larger role, for example, in a multinational crisis response in the region. Japan's flying tankers will also be able to support US aircraft just as Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force supply vessels have supported naval efforts in the Indian Ocean Indian Ocean, third largest ocean, c.28,350,000 sq mi (73,427,000 sq km), extending from S Asia to Antarctica and from E Africa to SE Australia; it is c.4,000 mi (6,400 km) wide at the equator. It constitutes about 20% of the world's total ocean area. . Thinking the unthinkable It is more than a little apparent that the changes taking place in Japan's defense capability have been in the planning for quite a while. There is one additional aspect that has recently been brought to the fore, chiefly by pundits who have a minimal understanding of what is involved: the hitherto "unthinkable" possibility that Japan may opt to arm itself with nuclear weapons. It is fairly obvious that if Japan should choose to do so, the technical challenges would prove to be no real hurdle. Plutonium is at hand, and a base for ballistic missile technology is in place. Contrary to the claims of Japan's Space Agency, its current generation of launch vehicles would be rather easily adaptable to the task of accurately hefting nuclear warheads. It is highly likely that if the order was given, within the space of a year -- and possibly a much shorter span -- Japan could mount its own initial nuclear deterrent. It is time for Japan's leaders to engage more openly with their own people and with the world. Three an d four decades ago, when Japan's military was a weak little benchwarmer bench·warm·er n. Sports A substitute player. , this was not a pressing concern. Now it is. Michael E. Stanley is a freelance photographer and writer based in Chiba and a frequent contributor to Japan Inc. * MICHAEL E. STANLEY (In Defense of the Realm, page 44) arrived in Japan from California in 1979. The Japanese economy took off and the assignments that came in were just too good to pass up. His photographic penchant for difficult environments saw him working in such places as rain forests, deserts, underwater on coral reefs and in US and Japanese fighter planes for various Japanese publishers. His work has appeared in a diverse assortment of magazines, such as Ginka, Sinra, Elle Japon, Premiere, Shukan Bunshun, Mainichi Graph, Number and Bungeishunju. He has just finished a five-year stint teaching at Tama University, and is now working on two different photography books, one of which deals with a field he studied in his university days and continues to pursue: the archaeology of Japan. |
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