The US military will send dozens of its newest fighter jets to Japan as part of a $10 billion upgrade of its forces in the country, the Defense Department announced Wednesday.
In a news release, the Pentagon said the effort would be carried out “over the next several years” to “enhance the US-Japan Alliance, bolster regional deterrence, and strengthen peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.”
The modernization plan will see 48 fifth-generation F-35A fighters replace 36 F-16s at Misawa Air Base in northern Japan, and 36 brand-new F-15EX jets deploy to Kadena Air Base on the southern island of Okinawa, replacing 48 older F-15C/D models that have been pulled from the region in the past year, the Pentagon release said.
At Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, just south of Hiroshima on the main island of Honshu, the number of deployed F-35B aircraft will be modified, the Pentagon said, without giving specific numbers.
“The Department’s plan to station the Joint Force’s most advanced tactical aircraft in Japan demonstrates the ironclad U.S. commitment to the defense of Japan and both countries’ shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region,” the news release said.
Japan said basing the new fighter aircraft in the country would enhance US capabilities there.
“In the face of the most severe and complex security environment since the end of World War II, and amidst the increased military activities of neighboring countries, the United States is maintaining and strengthening the presence of U.S. forces in Japan to further enhance the deterrence and response capabilities of the Japan-U.S. alliance,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi, the government’s top spokesman, said at a regular briefing Thursday.
Japan’s alliance with the US has become increasingly important in a region that is seeing China, Russia and North Korea all pose threats that Tokyo seeks to counter.
Japan has festering territorial disputes in the north with Russia and with China over islands in the East China Sea. Meanwhile, North Korea’s growing missile program, which has seen Pyongyang send missiles over Japanese territory in recent years, draws condemnation from Tokyo with every projectile test.
Japan also keeps a wary eye on the situation surrounding Taiwan, the self-ruled democratic island that the Chinese Communist Party has vowed to bring under Beijing’s control, by force if necessary.
As much as 90% of Japan’s energy supplies come via sea lanes near Taiwan, according to Tokyo, which sees the status quo around the island as key to its security.
Okinawa is only about 450 miles (725 kilometers) from Taiwan, and both the US and Japan maintain key air bases on the island.
US air power in Japan
The US Air Force calls the Kadena Air Base, home of the 18th Wing, its “Keystone of the Pacific,” and for more than four decades the older model F-15s based there were central to US deterrence in the region.
But from 2022, as the twin-engine fighters neared the end of their service life, the US Air Force began pulling them from Kadena.
While the service has rotated other assets through the air base since, to cover the absence of the older F-15s, the permanent presence of the F-15EXs will bring stability to the force structure.
The F-15EX is a leap above the older models. Manufacturer Boeing says the jet has “unparalleled weapons capacity,” with an ability to carry 12 advanced medium-range, air-to-air missiles (AMRAAM) and to fire them from a range “farther than any other fighter in the US Air Force arsenal.”
Although not a stealth fighter like the F-35, Boeing says the F-15EX has next-generation survivability.
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