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Japan Weighs Options To Boost ASW Skills



TOKYO — Japan's growing need to improve its anti-submarine warfare (ASW) capabilities to counter quieter Chinese submarines in littoral waters could set off a three-way race between an upgraded indigenous platform against longer-term solutions, analysts said.

Last August, the Defense Ministry decided to start replacing its aging fleet of 46 SH-60J and 39 SH-60K Seahawk helicopters, providing an initial ¥7 billion (US $57.6 million) as part of a ¥48.1 billion development project. The procurement will lead to the deployment of about 80 new helicopters after 2022, MoD spokesman Tsuyoshi Hirata said.

The procurement mentions indigenous development, so it would seem to favor an easy upgrade of the SH-60K produced by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) with more advanced electronics, unless the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) is looking for a longer-term, more advanced solution, said Matthew Caris, an associate at Avascent Group, a Washington-based defense and aerospace consulting group.

"It seems like an odd time and a small amount of money to develop something truly new; perhaps it's the development of a new MHI H-60 variant with entirely indigenous electronics, which would make a lot more sense," he said.

A US-based source agreed the SH-60K provided a ready-made upgrade and was a logical move.

"The airframe itself is capable and already integrated into JMSDF operations, so a focus on improvements to mission system sensor and processing capability would likely be sufficient to most economically meet future helicopter ASW requirements," the source said.

But pressures are building that suggest the MoD may expand its search, analysts said.

The JMSDF is aware that it badly needs to update its capabilities against the emerging threat of more advanced Chinese submarines in shallow waters, local defense analyst Shinichi Kiyotani said, and at least some officers in the JMSDF are looking for something much better than the SH-60 platform, which has several disliked but not openly publicized inadequacies.

"The MSDF internally thinks that the SH-60 series is not so good technically any more. It's seen as slow and it suffers from vibration issues, which is a critical point if the MSDF wants more advanced ASW capabilities, and there are other issues," Kiyotani said.

"The impetus for this," Caris said, "is likely twofold: One, the increased aggressiveness and continued growth in the PLAN [Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy] sub fleet, [which the US Navy just announced is now bigger than the US sub fleet]; and two, the recognition that while the SH-60J/K is still in production, it is no longer state-of-the-art."

Designed for a deep-water Soviet threat, the SH-60J is essentially a licensed-built 1980s-era SH-60B Seahawk. Its HQS-103 dipping sonar is at least a generation behind state-of-the art systems for detection of threats in littoral waters, Caris said. And its electronically scanned radar lacks modern processing capabilities such as found on the MH-60R's automatic radar periscope detection and discrimination system, which is a key part of the US Navy's littoral ASW capability, he said.

While the SH-60K upgrade added a new rotorblade and an integrated avionics system, the advanced helicopter combat direction system, none of the basic ASW sensor systems on board was significantly upgraded, he said.

With this in mind, Kiyotani said that pressure is building in the JMSDF in particular and the MoD in general to look beyond an SH-60K upgrade.

"The MoD is increasingly unwilling to purchase expensive domestic aircraft," he said. "The [Shinzo] Abe administration has asked Japanese defense industry to go global, and the new procurement agency being set up in April is genuinely looking to favor an export drive with local production. From this view, the SH-60K is looked upon by some very important people as a backward step."

Added to this, Kiyotani said that MHI was already considering exiting the domestic helicopter market with its small contracts to concentrate on its global aerospace business focused on the highly advanced Mitsubishi regional jet.

"MHI may push for an SH-X upgrade on one level, but my sources tell me that senior MHI people want to exit these low-volume and limited domestic contracts and focus on technologies that converge with and focus sales in the global market."

If the JMSDF demands a more fundamental upgrade and the competition is thrown open, Caris said the procurement would probably pit the SH-60K against two later-generation frames in the shape of Lockheed Martin's SH-60R Seahawk or the NH-90 backed by the European Airbus group.

Against all this, Kiyotani deemed the NH-90 as the best solution. "It's very advanced, Australia has already adopted it, it has fly-by-wire, has an advanced composite airframe, it's very good and it has a long hovering time. If Japanese industry can produce it domestically, or at least make components, then it can export them," he said.


Japan Weighs Options To Boost ASW Skills
 
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UPDATE:



And the additional two Atagos that the JMSDF has announced:

DDG-179 Unnamed to start building in 2016 and be commissioned in 2018
DDG-180 Unnamed to start building in 2017 and be commissioned in 2019


:D:D
 
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JMSDF visits Kyoto for training exercise and coordinated meeting with civilian visitors.

4月19日(日)、20日(月)海上自衛隊練習艦隊の京都研修を支援しました。19日舞鶴市北吸岸壁では、入港歓迎行事が行われ、実習幹部169名(うち 女性自衛官18名)を含む総勢約910名が参加しました。京都研修では、世界遺産の「東寺」を訪れ、法話の聴講、金堂、講堂、五重塔、宝物館等を研修しま した。海上自衛隊の次世代を担う幹部自衛官のこれからのご活躍を祈念します。
研修の詳細はコチラの「新着情報」からどうぞ!


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Japanese Red Cross Society signs service cooperation agreement with Japanese Coast Guard


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Yuji Sato, Chief of Japanese Coast Guard (left) and Tadateru Konoe, President of Japanese Red Cross Society (right) with the signed agreement in hand. Photo Credit: JRCS




The Japanese Red Cross Society (JRCS) and Japan Coast Guard (JCG) recently signed a service cooperation agreement which aimed at establishing procedures for effective relief activities and protection of victims in times of large scale disasters. As part of the agreement, the JCG will use its ships and airplanes to transport JRCS’s relief teams and supplies to disaster-affected areas. The agreement makes it possible for JRCS and JCG to cooperate without regional restrictions, which facilitates timely and adequate provision of relief activity and protection to disaster victims.

Regional agreements already exist between each Chapter of JRCS and the JCG’s local offices in response to regional disasters, where joint-trainings were conducted as part of the cooperation. The new agreement is aimed at preparing for large-scale disasters affecting an extensive area, such as the Nankai Trough Earthquake and earthquakes directly below Tokyo.

The JRCS and JCG will establish a communication system to ensure that the most recent information is available. When a large-scale disaster occurs, JCG will respond to requests from JRCS to carry out the transportation of relief items and supplies using their ships and airplanes. The National Society will provide initial medical treatment activities, while the JCG will transport the sick and wounded.

At the signing ceremony, JCRS President, Tadateru Konoe, said, “Relief and recovery teams sometimes face the challenge of reaching disaster-affected areas, especially if the land-route is blocked. With this agreement it is possible to provide large-scale response by using ships and airplanes.”

Yuji Sato, Chief of the JCG, expressed his expectations by saying that while JCG has the power of mobility, JCRS has the skills to provide medical treatment. “If we use these capacities in cooperation with each other, we will be able to provide quick and proper relief and carry out our rescue operations more effectively.”




Japanese Red Cross Society signs service cooperation agreement with Japanese Coast Guard - IFRC
 
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SDF gears up for life-saving operations in combat on outlying islands


The Self-Defense Forces are shifting the focus of their combat casualty evacuation care training for front-line units to bring it in line with the policy more toward defending the nation’s outlying islands.

One such exercise was held late last month with the U.S. Marines at the Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in California. The scenario revolved around a hill occupied by enemy combatants with rocket launchers.

During the training, Ground Self-Defense Force medics with rifles at the ready cautiously approached two GSDF members who were playing the part of the injured to assess the extent of their trauma.

“Left thighbone amputated and perforating wounds in the right thigh and the right abdomen,” shouted a member of the medical unit that addressed the immediate needs of the injured.

The wounded were then carried by stretcher to a waiting Marine Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft that transported them to a medical facility.

During the drill, which was open to reporters, dozens of GSDF members charged the hill and took it from the enemy.

GSDF personnel said they also practiced emergency measures on training dummies, such as how to stanch bleeding.

The exercise marked a departure from the typical life-saving drills the SDF formerly carried out.

Until the end of the Cold War, the SDF training was aimed at repulsing an invasion by the former Soviet Union.

The SDF’s medical response under that scenario centered on the doctors and nurses at its 16 hospitals throughout the nation.

But the SDF is currently bolstering its ability to defend the Nansei Islands amid Japan’s increasingly strained ties with China. Bilateral relations significantly deteriorated when the Japanese government purchased three of the Senkaku Islands from private ownership in 2012.

Both nations have long claimed sovereignty over the uninhabited islets in the East China Sea. Beijing is also aggressively pursuing its maritime interests in the region on the back of its growing military power.

The Nansei Island chain stretches between the main southern island of Kyushu and Taiwan, including the Senkakus.

Analysts say that operations to recapture an island occupied by an enemy would likely result in SDF casualties. In addition, the distances involved in transporting the wounded to proper medical facilities from the remote islands are also a concern.

To prepare for such a scenario, the National Defense Program Guidelines, compiled in late 2013 to outline the nation’s defense policy for the coming decade, stated that the SDF will establish a unit whose focus is to retake far-flung islands. The guidelines also call for enhancing its ability to save the lives of personnel injured during combat operations.

Still, there are hurdles that the SDF must clear to achieve those goals.

The SDF’s three branches have, combined, 800 members that are licensed emergency medical technicians. In some cases, they are allowed to perform procedures such as inserting trachea tubes or administering intravenous fluids. But they, unlike doctors and nurses, face strict restrictions on the measures they can take and medications they can provide.

The Defense Ministry plans to set up a panel of experts, including doctors and legal experts, in fiscal 2015 to look into widening the scope of what SDF medics can do and allow them to carry out procedures beyond those currently sanctioned by law.




SDF gears up for life-saving operations in combat on outlying islands - AJW by The Asahi Shimbun
 
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海賊対処行動水上部隊に派遣されている護衛艦「むらさめ」隊員の記録を紹介します。


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