Japan maritime self defense force to send largest carrier to the south china sea
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ASIA DEFENSE Japan plans to dispatch its largest warship to the disputed waters. The Japan Maritime Self Defense Force (JMSDF) will dispatch its largest warship, the helicopter carrier JS
_Izumo_, on a three-month deployment to the South China Sea beginning in May, according to media reports. While deployed, the 27,000-ton warship will make port calls in Singapore, Indonesia,
the Philippines, and Sri Lanka and is also slated to participate in this year’s trilateral India-U.S.-Japan Malabar naval exercise taking place in the Indian Ocean in July. According to
Japanese defense sources interviewed by _Reuters_, “the aim is to test the capability of the _Izumo_ by sending it out on an extended mission.” Furthermore, the helicopter carrier “will
train with the U.S. Navy in the South China Sea.” No further details were provided by the Japanese Ministry of Defense. During last year’s iteration of the Malabar naval drill, which took
place in the Philippine Sea in June, the JMSDF sent the _Izumo’s_ predecessor, the 19,000-ton JS _Hyuga _— the lead ship of the _Hyuga_-class of helicopter carriers — to participate in the
exercise. The _Izumo_-class helicopter carrier, officially referred to as a helicopter destroyer in order to downplay the ship’s offensive capabilities, is the largest surface combatant
currently in service with the JMSDF. And while the _Izumo’s _primary role is surveillance and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief missions, the ship can serve as an effective
anti-submarine warfare platform. “The ship is designed to accommodate up to 14 helicopters (seven Mitsubishi-built SH-60k ASW helicopters and seven Agusta Westland MCM-101 mine
countermeasure helicopters), five of which can simultaneously take off and land, given the _Izumo’s_ large flight deck and five landing spots,” I explained elsewhere. While repeatedly denied
by Japanese officials and with no official plans to acquire the aircraft in the future, the JMSDF could launch the F-35B is the U.S. Marine Corps variant of the supersonic fifth-generation
F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter, capable of vertical or short takeoffs and vertical landings without requiring a catapult launcher, from the _Izumo_. The Japan Air Self Defense Force
will procure up to 100 additional new fifth-generation air superiority fighter aircraft by the 2030s and will receive 42 F-35As (the conventional take off and landing variant) over the
coming years. However, the _Izumo_ lacks a catapult system necessary to launch conventional fighter jets. The JMSDF will more likely deploy a number of V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft — a hybrid
between a conventional helicopter and turboprop plane with both vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) and short takeoff and landing (STOL) capability — from the carrier. Japan has placed an
order with the United States for a total of 17 V-22s and is expected to receive the first batch of aircraft in 2017. Next to a OQQ-22 bow-mounted sonar to track enemy submarines, the carrier
boasts two Raytheon RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile SeaRAM launchers and two Phalanx close-in weapon systems to defend against aerial threats. The JS _Izumo_ is expected to return to Japan
in August. Her sister ship, the _Kaga_, is scheduled to be commissioned this month.