Japan’s forces going amphibious, but no decision on
the vehicles yet
By Erik Slavin in Stars and Stripes
YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — Japan
plans to buy 52 amphibious vehicles through 2018 but hasn’t yet decided on a
model, a Defense Ministry official said Monday.
Japan is working on assembling a
Marines-like unit within its Self-Defense Forces, amid concerns over Chinese
claims of the Japan-administered Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. Both
countries have scrambled fighter jets over the uninhabited islands during the
past two years, and low-level maritime standoffs have increased in nearby
waters.
A recent Japanese media report said the Defense Ministry
will buy the Amphibious Assault Vehicle, or AAV-7, which also
is used by the U.S. Marine Corps. The ministry spokesman, however, denied any
decision on a model had been made.
“We have purchased four AAV-7s in
fiscal 2013 and two AAV-7s in fiscal 2014 as samples for reference,” the
ministry spokesman said on condition of anonymity, as is customary in Japan.
The Defense Ministry began studying
procurement options in April but hasn’t set a deadline for the study’s
completion, according to the spokesman.
Japan trains regularly with the U.S.
military on amphibious warfare, including during an expeditionary combat
simulation at the bilateral Keen Sword exercise in November. Last year,
Japanese troops traveled to California to train with Marines on reclaiming an
island as part of the Iron Fist exercise.
The Marine Corps is focused on
upgrading its aging AAV-7 stock and adding a new vehicle to take over its role.
Marine Commandant Gen. James Amos
favors the Amphibious Combat Vehicle, though that program has faced budgetary
pressures in Congress and design concerns from military analysts.
The wheeled Amphibious Combat Vehicle would
provide greater protection on land, but would have limited “swim” capability
and require a vessel or heavy-lift air transport to get it from sea to shore.
Stars and Stripes reporter Chiyomi
Sumida contributed to this report.
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