Summary
(TORU
YAMANAKA/AFP/Getty Images)
Japanese
helicopter carrier Huga in Yokohama in March
2009.
Japan
is participating in Dawn Blitz 2013, a military
exercise hosted by the United States, and in doing
so it is showing its suspicions of China, which
Tokyo fears could secure territory with a surprise
military presence. Dawn Blitz commenced its live
phase June 11, and it will conclude
June 28.
The focus of the exercise is to practice an
amphibious landing and simulate a retaking of San
Clemente Island off the Californian coast. This
exercise will involve more than 5,000 personnel from
the United States, Canada, New Zealand and most
notably, Japan. The move corresponds with Japan's
ongoing remilitarization and provides the Japan
Self-Defense Force the opportunity to learn the
skills needed to
deter
aggressive action within the context of their
ongoing island disputes.
Analysis
Japan's
attempts to participate in more military exercises
with the United States come as part of its
broader
military normalization. Recent political
developments have given this process a boost.
Japan's long-time ruling party, the Liberal
Democratic Party, resumed control of the government
in December of 2012 after three years
of opposition control. The previous
Liberal Democratic Party government was
practically paralyzed politically, and in
frustration the Japanese public voted the Democratic
Party of Japan into office, but it too
struggled to revive the entrenched bureaucracy. Upon
the Liberal Democratic Party's return to
office, it has been able to mobilize
Japanese government institutions and pursue
several more aggressive military and defense
initiatives.
The
most dramatic of initiatives is a proposal to repeal
or amend Article 9 of the Japanese
constitution. This pacifist article relegates Japan
to having a purely defensive military, and while the
Japan Self-Defense Force has grown considerably over
the last two decades, it has done so within
the political constraints of Article
9. As the force grew, the
government eschewed overtly offensive
power-projecting weapons platforms such as
intercontinental ballistic missiles or nuclear
submarines. While the Liberal Democrats have
broached the topic of constitutional reform, they
have also met with a public more eager to pursue
economic reforms than contentious constitutional
issues. Elections for the upper house of parliament
in July may further embolden the ruling party. But
even without constitutional revision, Tokyo has
found ways to advance the security and defense
initiatives it deems vital.
Other
Defense Initiatives
The
Liberal Democratic
Party has started considering other
defense initiatives in the interim. One policy
advocates the use of pre-emptive strikes targeting
imminent threats, such as North Korean ballistic
missiles if Pyongyang were on the
verge of launching them toward Japan. Another
initiative would involve joint patrols with U.S.
Naval battle groups operating in the region. Whereas
the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force has
operated with the U.S. Navy for years, it
has never fully integrated into an
operating battle group (specifically carrier task
forces) as standard operating procedure. The
United States has long urged Japan to take a greater
role in regional security, but it is intensified
regional disputes with China that has given Japan
the impetus to do so.
In
some ways, Dawn Blitz 2013 will be a first for the
Japan Self-Defense Force. First, V-22 Ospreys will
be landed on the deck of one of Japan's helicopter
carriers. This will not only enhance direct
interoperability with the U.S. military, it will
also further familiarize Japanese forces to
equipment and techniques that would be useful
in staging a contested landing. Japan is looking
into purchasing its own V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft,
and along with its attempt to increase its
amphibious capabilities, it is moving toward
creating the general capability
to reclaim an island seized by a potential
enemy. The United States and Japan canceled
previous attempts at island-recapture drills farther
west -- they did not want to provoke China
excessively -- but their drill in California shows
their interest in conducting such training.
Second,
this marks the first time that all the branches of
the Japan Self-Defense Force have worked together.
This is a critical skill set in a maritime
environment, especially for amphibious landings. In
fact it shows how constrained these forces
have been in their past operations and how much
further they have to go in order to match the level
of other elite militaries. It will take years to
completely build up the institutional
knowledge necessary to competently execute
these complicated operations, but in the
meantime the Liberal Democratic Party is
pushing the Japan Self-Defense Force toward
becoming a conventional and very capable
national military
force.
No comments:
Post a Comment