Japan activates first marines since WW2
to bolster defenses against China
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[April 07, 2018]
By Nobuhiro Kubo and Tim Kelly
SASEBO/TOKYO, Japan (Reuters) - Japan on
Saturday activated its first marine unit since World War Two trained to
counter invaders occupying Japanese islands along the edge of the East
China Sea that Tokyo fears are vulnerable to attack by China.
In a ceremony held at a military base near Sasebo on the southwest
island of Kyushu, about 1,500 members of the Amphibious Rapid Deployment
Brigade (ARDB) wearing camouflage lined up outside amid cold, windy
weather.
"Given the increasingly difficult defense and security situation
surrounding Japan, defense of our islands has become a critical
mandate," Tomohiro Yamamoto, vice defense minister, said in a speech.
The troops conducted a 20-minute mock public exercise recapturing a
remote island from invaders.
The formation of the Japanese marine brigade is controversial because
amphibious units can project military force and could, critics warn, be
used to threaten Japan’s neighbors. In its post World War Two
constitution Japan renounced the right to wage war.
The brigade is the latest component of a growing marine force that
includes helicopter carriers, amphibious ships, Osprey tilt-rotor troop
carriers and amphibious assault vehicles, meant to deter China as it
pushes for easier access to the Western Pacific.
China, which dominates the South China Sea, is outpacing Japan in
defense spending. In 2018, Beijing which claims a group of uninhabited
islets in the East China Sea controlled by Tokyo, will spend 1.11
trillion yuan ($176.56 billion) on its armed forces, more than three
times as much as Japan.
The activation of the 2,100 strong ARDB takes Japan a step closer to
creating a force similar to a U.S. Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) able
to plan and execute operations at sea far from its home base.
"They've already demonstrated the ability to put together an ad hoc MEU.
But to have a solid, standing MEU capability requires concerted effort,"
Grant Newsham, a research fellow at the Japan Forum for Strategic
Studies.
"If Japan put its mind to it, within a year or year and a half it could
have a reasonable capability."
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Soldiers of Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF)'s Amphibious
Rapid Deployment Brigade, Japan's first marine unit since World War
Two, gather at a ceremony activating the brigade at JGSDF's Camp
Ainoura in Sasebo, on the southwest island of Kyushu, Japan April 7,
2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato
Newsham, who helped train Japan's first amphibious troops as a U.S.
Marine Corps colonel liaison officer assigned to the Ground Self
Defense Force (GSDF), said Japan still needs a joint navy-army
amphibious headquarters to coordinate operations as well as more
amphibious ships to carry troops and equipment.
Japanese military planners are already mulling some of those
additions. Its Air Self Defense Force (ASDF) wants to acquire F-35Bs
to operate from its Izumo and Ise helicopter carriers, or from
islands along the East China Sea, sources have told Reuters.
The United States last month deployed its F-35Bs for their first
at-sea operations aboard the USS Wasp amphibious assault ship, which
is based in Sasebo. The Kyushu port is also home to Japan's Ise and
close to the ARDB's base.
Separately the GSDF may acquire small amphibious ships up to a 100
meters (328.08 ft) long to transport troops and equipment between
islands and from ship to shore, two sources familiar with the
discussion said. Japanese ground forces have not operated their own
ships since World War Two.
"The idea is to bring forces and gear on large ships to the main
Okinawa island and then disperse them to other islands on smaller
vessels," said one of the sources, who asked not to be identified
because they are not authorized to talk to the media.
(Reporting by Tim Kelly; Editing by Michael Perry)
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