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Abe's Strategy: Rearrange Region's Power Balance

Hi @UKBengali , thanks for the warm welcome.

The strength of a nation depends on the national will, as well as the close ties one has with neighbors and the caliber of its strategic partnerships. Brute force alone does not equate. Its in my firm belief that with a strong and vibrant partnership with the united states, and with regional partners, the status quo will be maintained.

Do you think that Japan should be looking at having the United States in Asia? They are foreigners and are only in Asia for their own selfish interests.

Is it not better for Asians to try to try to come to a mutual understanding for a better future for all Asians? I am sure that three most powerful countries in Asia(China, Japan and India) can work at coming to some mutual understanding and the rest will follow.
 
Do you think that Japan should be looking at having the United States in Asia? They are foreigners and are only in Asia for their own selfish interests.

Is it not better for Asians to try to try to come to a mutual understanding for a better future for all Asians? I am sure that three most powerful countries in Asia(China, Japan and India) can work at coming to some mutual understanding and the rest will follow.

The United States , despite some objections by some nations, is a pacific power. It has a string of bases from hawaii, to guam, to its mutual defense treaty with the Philippines, it has its commitment with Taiwan, and it has bases in South Korea and Japan. I am a proponent for continued interaction between Japan, India, China, and other regional players including the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia. I do believe that the Untied States functions as a guarantor of regional peace and stability.

In addition, we live in a world where we are all connected through trade. Globalization has ensured this. Long gone are the days where isolationalism and regionalist tendencies. This concept of 'Asia for the Asians' is nonsensical; that was the very saying that was ushered by militarists of Imperial Japan some 60 years ago. We have learned from this, and we have to work with each other to maintain the balance of power.

Also, I look forward to continued cooperation and interaction between my country and your native Bangladesh.

@UKBengali , i believe that all nations operate for their own national interest.
 
Japan Reshapes National Strategy

Japanese national security strategy is shifting. The Pacific power’s new National Security Strategy highlights a comprehensive look ahead built around what they call a “comprehensive defense architecture.”

This architecture is built on effective joint forces, a close working relationship with key allies such as the United States Australia and Japan, and a proactive approach in which “Japan will maintain an improve a comprehensive architecture for responding seamlessly to an array of situations, ranging from armed attacks to large-scale natural disasters.”

Clearly this is not just a briefing board document. Recent events have demonstrated Japan’s engagement in the Philippine relief mission, including closely working with US forces in coming quickly to the aid of the Philippines and then moving out when no longer needed, and scrambling their Air Force in response to the Chinese unilateral declaration of an air defense identification zone.

The new strategy highlights the importance of Japan as a “proactive contributor to peace,” rather than just sitting back and hoping someone else takes care of their defense interests. The strategy focuses on the importance of protecting Japanese access to global supply chains and to natural resources, including energy. And in so doing, protection of sea lines of communication is a key challenge facing Japan and its allies. The document underscores a Japanese decision to be more proactive but in a broader alliance context, within which the relationship with the United States is paramount. But there’s another message to the US: you need to be proactive as well.

The document makes it clear that Japan is not simply going to sit back and be intimated by North Korea and China. And Japan is not simply arguing in black in white terms, war or peace, but the necessity to be engaged in shaping a security environment which meets the interests of Japan and its allies.

“In addition to the issues and tensions arising from the shift in the balance of power, the Asia-Pacific region has become more prone to so-called “gray-zone” situations, situations that are neither pure peacetime nor contingencies over territorial sovereignty and interests. There is a risk that these “gray-zone” situations could further develop into grave situations.”

Later in the document, the importance of being able to operate across the spectrum of security and defense is highlighted as well, including an ability to operate in such “gray zone” situations.

“Even in peacetime, Japan will maintain and improve a comprehensive architecture for responding seamlessly to an array of situations, ranging from armed attacks to large-scale natural disasters.”

What is underscored in the new strategy is the importance of blending military, security and political initiatives together in expanding effective Japanese alliance relationships. This approach is highlighted in the discussion of how to deal with sea lines of communication.

In particular, sea lanes stretching from the Persian Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz, the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to the waters of Japan, passing through the Indian Ocean, the Straits of Malacca, and the South China Sea, are critical to Japan due to its dependence on the transport of natural and energy resources from the Middle East.

In this regard, Japan will provide assistance to those coastal states alongside the sea lanes of communication and other states in enhancing their maritime law enforcement capabilities, and strengthen cooperation with partners on the sea lanes who share strategic interests with Japan.

The Arctic plays an important role in this. “The Arctic Sea is deemed to have enormous potential for developing new shipping routes and exploration of natural resources. While it is expected that states concerned work together under relevant international rules, such potential could provide new causes of friction among them.”

In effect, since the end of the Cold War, Japan has evolved through two clear phases with regard to defense and security policy and is about to enter a third. The first phase was extended homeland defense, where the focus was primarily on defending the homeland from direct threats. A more classic understanding of defense was in play, whereby force had to be projected forward to threaten Japan and as this threat materialized, defenses were fortified. It was defense versus emergent direct threats to Japan.

Then life changed. Technology made warfare more dynamic, and the nature of power projection changed. Tactical assets can have strategic consequences, the speed of operations accelerated and operations highlighting the impact of “shock and awe” high speed operations made it clear that relatively static defenses were really not defenses at all.

At the same time, globalization accelerated, and with it the significance of maritime and air routes for the viability of the Japanese way of life. When terrorists crashed into the World Trade Center, Japan got the point. No man was an island, and neither was an island economy simply protected by having a global policy of shopkeepers. More was required to defend the Japanese way of life.

The emergence of the Chinese colossus and the greater reach of the Korean crisis into a direct threat to Japan, and the resurgence of Russia, its nuclear weapons and its military forces, all posed the question of threats able to reach Japan rapidly and with significant effect.

A static defense no longer made sense; a “dynamic defense” became crucial. This meant greater reach of Japanese systems, better integration of those systems within the Japanese forces themselves, more investments in C2 and ISR, and a long-term strategy of re-working the U.S.-Japanese military relationship to have much greater reach and presence.

The “dynamic defense” phase carries with it the seeds for the next phase – the shaping of a twin anchor policy of having reach in the Arctic and the Indian Ocean. Such reach is beyond the capabilities of the Japanese themselves, and requires close integration with the United States and other allies. And such reach requires much greater C2, ISR and weapons integration across the Japanese and allied force structure.

The great strength of the U.S.-Japan alliance rests not only on a linage of mutual respect for sea operations, and shared technology, but Japan also creates a North/South Combat Axis for operations.

Instead of leaving the United States with a Hawaiian-centric strategy with the need to focus on going to West Pac East-West, the Japanese contribution is a very strong (or at least growing again) as a maritime ally which can, in partnership with the United States, help the US go North-South from Japanese Bases to cover an operational area ranging from Pacific Arctic to the Indian Ocean.

U.S. weapon systems are a key part of the Japanese approach. Clearly, at the top of the list is building out from the Aegis global partnership and including Ospreys and F-35s as centerpieces. Japanese F35s would be part of the Pacific Fleet of US and Allied F35s and Japan is where the first F-35s are coming in 2015. By 2020 there could be as many as five squadrons of F-35s from the US and Japanese. This will clearly be the center of excellence for the fledgling F-35 enterprise. On top of this, the Japanese will build their F-35s in rebuilt Mitsubishi facilities, thus becoming the third final assembly line for F-35s, with Fort Worth, and Cameri, Italy, the other two.

The cross domain synergy among these new systems, combined with Japanese integration with their legacy systems, is the building block for the new “comprehensive defense architecture.”

There is a fundamental difference between PRC and Japanese goals and context. The PRC is an authoritarian regime seeking to reshape inernational rules to their benefit; Japan is a democracy embedded in alliances seeking to see that international rules are crafted and created which support globalization, not domination.
 
But the Qing emperor rejected as he feared Vietnam could claim Southern China in one day. As a compromise, the name Vietnam (Yuenan) was found.

Nguyen emperor changed it to Great Nam (Dai Nam ) from the reign of emperor Minh Mạng on, the nation was renamed Đại Nam (大南, literally "Great South").
 
Japan unveils defence plan to counter China


Japan has unveiled a more assertive defence strategy that includes increased military spending and a build-up of naval forces to counter China, in the most detailed expression yet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s vision of his country as a stronger and more independent military power.

Mr Abe’s cabinet approved the 10-year national security strategy on Tuesday, along with nearer-term guidelines covering specifics such as budgets and equipment. The guidelines call for Y24.7tn ($240 Billion) in defence spending over the next five years, an increase of roughly Y1tn compared with Japan’s previous five-year policy, passed by a preceding government.



Japan plans to add seven destroyers to its navy, including two equipped with advanced Aegis guided-missile systems, bringing the size of its destroyer fleet to 54. It also plans six new submarines, raising its total to 22, and 20 fighter jets, increasing the total to 280.

Although it envisions no net increase in military personnel – the size of the land, sea, and air Self Defence Forces will remain a relatively modest 159,000 – it intends to reorganise and develop its forces to deal with new threats. The most notable addition will be an amphibious brigade, trained to capture territory in operations launched from the sea, a type of warfare Japan had given little thought to before the island confrontation with Beijing.

It seeks both closer co-operation with the US, the guarantor of Japanese security since the second world war, and a greater role of its own in regional and global defence – what both Mr Abe’s supporters and critics see as a further stretching of Japan’s anti-war constitution.


The strategy paints a picture of a Japanese leadership that is both determined to keep the US deeply involved in Asia and aware that China’s ascendancy – and, possibly, the US’s own economic and political problems – have raised questions about its staying power. “Its relative influence in the international community is changing,” the carefully worded final document states.

Japan, for its part, “will continue to adhere to the course that it has taken to date as a peace-loving nation”, the strategy says. At the same time, it will “strengthen its own capabilities” and take “an even more proactive role as a major global player”.

It says that Japan should consider formally eliminating a ban on arms exports that has made it difficult for the country to participate in international projects to develop shared weapons systems, such as next-generation fighter jets.
 
@Nihonjin1051 :

BD people are grateful for the support that Japan has given the country for the last 40 years. Even recently Japan pledged an extra 6 billion dollars of very low-interest loans for BD. Japanese people can feel rightly proud of their role in the development of many Asian nations

It is true that every country looks after it's own interests. What is the issue with the US is that it is based on the North American continent and it has an interest in keeping Asians divided so that it stays relevant.

Now, the big problem in Asia is that one country is becoming so powerful that it looks like it will start to dominate the continent. Japan is too small in size and population and India is frankly not up to the level of being any balance to China now or in the foreseeable future.

I do not see how having the US in Asia will really help the situation - remember as China starts approaching the US in military might over the next 1-2 decades, then even any US support will not be enough to contain the Chinese. What would be a better way is to somehow try and work with the Chinese in order to come to a mutual understanding that will both recognise China as the most powerful country in Asia but also at the same time place limits on China so that other countries do not feel it becoming overbearing.

In the end, only Asians by themselves can make Asia peaceful and prosperous and allowing in outsiders will only harm Asia in the long-run.
 
Japan unveils defence plan to counter China


Japan has unveiled a more assertive defence strategy that includes increased military spending and a build-up of naval forces to counter China, in the most detailed expression yet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s vision of his country as a stronger and more independent military power.

Mr Abe’s cabinet approved the 10-year national security strategy on Tuesday, along with nearer-term guidelines covering specifics such as budgets and equipment. The guidelines call for Y24.7tn ($240 Billion) in defence spending over the next five years, an increase of roughly Y1tn compared with Japan’s previous five-year policy, passed by a preceding government.



Japan plans to add seven destroyers to its navy, including two equipped with advanced Aegis guided-missile systems, bringing the size of its destroyer fleet to 54. It also plans six new submarines, raising its total to 22, and 20 fighter jets, increasing the total to 280.

Although it envisions no net increase in military personnel – the size of the land, sea, and air Self Defence Forces will remain a relatively modest 159,000 – it intends to reorganise and develop its forces to deal with new threats. The most notable addition will be an amphibious brigade, trained to capture territory in operations launched from the sea, a type of warfare Japan had given little thought to before the island confrontation with Beijing.

It seeks both closer co-operation with the US, the guarantor of Japanese security since the second world war, and a greater role of its own in regional and global defence – what both Mr Abe’s supporters and critics see as a further stretching of Japan’s anti-war constitution.


The strategy paints a picture of a Japanese leadership that is both determined to keep the US deeply involved in Asia and aware that China’s ascendancy – and, possibly, the US’s own economic and political problems – have raised questions about its staying power. “Its relative influence in the international community is changing,” the carefully worded final document states.

Japan, for its part, “will continue to adhere to the course that it has taken to date as a peace-loving nation”, the strategy says. At the same time, it will “strengthen its own capabilities” and take “an even more proactive role as a major global player”.

It says that Japan should consider formally eliminating a ban on arms exports that has made it difficult for the country to participate in international projects to develop shared weapons systems, such as next-generation fighter jets.


We will be building more 7 Atago Class of destroyers:

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@Nihonjin1051 :

BD people are grateful for the support that Japan has given the country for the last 40 years. Even recently Japan pledged an extra 6 billion dollars of very low-interest loans for BD. Japanese people can feel rightly proud of their role in the development of many Asian nations

It is true that every country looks after it's own interests. What is the issue with the US is that it is based on the North American continent and it has an interest in keeping Asians divided so that it stays relevant.

Now, the big problem in Asia is that one country is becoming so powerful that it looks like it will start to dominate the continent. Japan is too small in size and population and India is frankly not up to the level of being any balance to China now or in the foreseeable future.

I do not see how having the US in Asia will really help the situation - remember as China starts approaching the US in military might over the next 1-2 decades, then even any US support will not be enough to contain the Chinese. What would be a better way is to somehow try and work with the Chinese in order to come to a mutual understanding that will both recognise China as the most powerful country in Asia but also at the same time place limits on China so that other countries do not feel it becoming overbearing.

In the end, only Asians by themselves can make Asia peaceful and prosperous and allowing in outsiders will only harm Asia in the long-run.

Japan is simply too ambitious and delusional, and i don't think they could accept to be China's UK.
 
China must show respect to their smaller neighbours.Vietnam already proved when they defeat USA and its allies that economy ,military and diplomatic clout alone cant win a war.Comparing to USA at that time China dont have a credible allies wing .Your only power is your economy .
It is the larger countries responsibility to show respects to their smaller neighbours .Look in SA BD did a lot of irreponsible mentality against us ,SL also in earlier times.But we dont intimidate them for that.We only aiming for cooperation.
Your egoistic attitude will be dangerous to yourself in long term.

This is a complete and utter BS lie. India has been at war with all its neighbors since the country came into existence in 1947. But this is not surprising coming from an Indian, most of them are habitual and deceptive liars. Using some of our own traitors within our country they have destroyed democracy and installed their puppet dictator in Bangladesh. That is why we Bangladeshi people, as well as Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan (if they still have a choice) will ally with China to balance the threat coming from India. If possible we will help China to make India disintegrate into many manageable pieces, specially we will hope that China supports the independence of North East states and let them free themselves from the colonial occupation of "mainland" India.

Also Pakistan and Bangladesh will hope that all Muslim countries of the world ally with China. The only exceptions are NATO member Turkey and small European Muslim majority countries like Bosnia, Albania and Kosovo.

I am glad that Japan is coming out strongly with their remilitarization, it will also make China think about creating their own alliance based on SCO, which I hope all Muslim countries will join, except for the above mentioned countries.

Within 10 years Russian weapons will loose their edge compared to Chinese weapons tech, so India will be forced to give up their deceptive Non-aligned foreign policy (mainly based on Russian weapons tech superiority over China) and will be forced to join the US led alliance of Asian Pivot, which will include US, Japan, Australia, Vietnam, Philippines and India.

And in the end the US led alliance will lose, bringing misery to all the countries included in this alliance, that is my humble prediction.
 
@Nihonjin1051 :

BD people are grateful for the support that Japan has given the country for the last 40 years. Even recently Japan pledged an extra 6 billion dollars of very low-interest loans for BD. Japanese people can feel rightly proud of their role in the development of many Asian nations

It is true that every country looks after it's own interests. What is the issue with the US is that it is based on the North American continent and it has an interest in keeping Asians divided so that it stays relevant.

Now, the big problem in Asia is that one country is becoming so powerful that it looks like it will start to dominate the continent. Japan is too small in size and population and India is frankly not up to the level of being any balance to China now or in the foreseeable future.

I do not see how having the US in Asia will really help the situation - remember as China starts approaching the US in military might over the next 1-2 decades, then even any US support will not be enough to contain the Chinese. What would be a better way is to somehow try and work with the Chinese in order to come to a mutual understanding that will both recognise China as the most powerful country in Asia but also at the same time place limits on China so that other countries do not feel it becoming overbearing.

In the end, only Asians by themselves can make Asia peaceful and prosperous and allowing in outsiders will only harm Asia in the long-run.

@UKBengali ,

One thing that I do want to see is increased cooperation with South Asian nations. I wish to see increased Japanese investments in Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. We need to develop our friendships there.
 
This is a complete and utter BS lie. India has been at war with all its neighbors since the country came into existence in 1947. But this is not surprising coming from an Indian, most of them are habitual and deceptive liars. Using some of our own traitors within our country they have destroyed democracy and installed their puppet dictator in Bangladesh. That is why we Bangladeshi people, as well as Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan (if they still have a choice) will ally with China to balance the threat coming from India. If possible we will help China to make India disintegrate into many manageable pieces, specially we will hope that China supports the independence of North East states and let them free themselves from the colonial occupation of "mainland" India.

Also Pakistan and Bangladesh will hope that all Muslim countries of the world ally with China. The only exceptions are NATO member Turkey and small European Muslim majority countries like Bosnia, Albania and Kosovo.

I am glad that Japan is coming out strongly with their remilitarization, it will also make China think about creating their own alliance based on SCO, which I hope all Muslim countries will join, except for the above mentioned countries.

Within 10 years Russian weapons will loose their edge compared to Chinese weapons tech, so India will be forced to give up their deceptive Non-aligned foreign policy (mainly based on Russian weapons tech superiority over China) and will be forced to join the US led alliance of Asian Pivot, which will include US, Japan, Australia, Vietnam, Philippines and India.

And in the end the US led alliance will lose, bringing misery to all the countries included in this alliance, that is my humble prediction.

Good analysis. In fact, China just needs another 5 years as its most critical phase of the development.

The US now is jumping like a mad monkey because they can't afford to wait anymore.
 
This is a complete and utter BS lie. India has been at war with all its neighbors since the country came into existence in 1947. But this is not surprising coming from an Indian, most of them are habitual and deceptive liars. Using some of our own traitors within our country they have destroyed democracy and installed their puppet dictator in Bangladesh. That is why we Bangladeshi people, as well as Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan (if they still have a choice) will ally with China to balance the threat coming from India. If possible we will help China to make India disintegrate into many manageable pieces, specially we will hope that China supports the independence of North East states and let them free themselves from the colonial occupation of "mainland" India.

Also Pakistan and Bangladesh will hope that all Muslim countries of the world ally with China. The only exceptions are NATO member Turkey and small European Muslim majority countries like Bosnia, Albania and Kosovo.

I am glad that Japan is coming out strongly with their remilitarization, it will also make China think about creating their own alliance based on SCO, which I hope all Muslim countries will join, except for the above mentioned countries.

Within 10 years Russian weapons will loose their edge compared to Chinese weapons tech, so India will be forced to give up their deceptive Non-aligned foreign policy (mainly based on Russian weapons tech superiority over China) and will be forced to join the US led alliance of Asian Pivot, which will include US, Japan, Australia, Vietnam, Philippines and India.

And in the end the US led alliance will lose, bringing misery to all the countries included in this alliance, that is my humble prediction.

So much hostility and perceived hatred for the United States. And you reside in the United States? Such gratitude you show to your host country , while taking advantage of the resources she has to offer you.
 
There will be a violent clash in Asia. There is fundamental difference in our vision and Japan vision for Asia. Japan vision is a global order led by the US, back with Japanese militarization to control Asian people and maintain the status quo with the US being the global hegemon. Our vision is a multi-polar world and that Asia security should be resolved with the Asian interest in mind. No intervention by foreign powers to shape our geopolitical interest.

I find in Asia, Japan, Philippines , and soon to be Vietnam are an outcast. Their value as the West's asslicker is fundamentally different from what we are trying to achieve, which is to have parity and equality with the West. It is a shame that these countries cannot be replace by Middle-east country. The actors in Middle-east have the same goal as we do.
 
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