In May 2017 Japan will despatch the carrier JS Izumo to run a type of Freedom of Navigation Operation (FONOPs) against China's new empire on sea. Japan continues to develop and increase the size of its (defensive under the Constitution) “helicopter destroyers”. As viewers would notice these are really small-medium aircraft-helicopter carriers. They are of similar size to Japan’s former WWII carriers. While the current four carriers (see below) are mainly for helicopters they are capable of carrying F-35Bs fast strike fighters - a reality not lost on China.
The carriers JS Izumo (83) and newly commissioned JS Kaga (84) certainly don't look like "destroyers". (Photo courtesy Reuters and South China Morning Post)
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1. CARRIER CAPABILITIES
1. In commentsof 20 and 22 March 2017 Anonymous discussed activities of Japan’s four carriers:
They can each carry:
functions are mainly ASW but they are also capable of anti-shipping, mine counter measures,
ground attack and troop carrying, or
= be modified to carry larger aircraft, eg. F-35B VTOL strike aircraft and V-22
Osprey fast troop carrying tiltrotor craft.
= medium sized helicopters. and
= for Western aircraft carriers Hyuga and Ise are unusual in actually carrying some destroyer
armaments, ie. 16 x Mk 41 VLS and 6 x LWT tubes.
armaments, ie. 16 x Mk 41 VLS and 6 x LWT tubes.
Carrier comparison. From top ROK's Dokdo class Landing Platform Helicopter, UK Invincible class, Charles de Gaulle (France of course), Izumo, USS Nimitz (Diagram courtesy kmozzart).
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2. JS IZUMO IN SOUTH CHINA SEA (May 2017)
According to REUTERS JPN Japan is sending Izumoto the South China Sea in May 2017 to visit Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines (President Duterte may be invited aboard ("If [he has] time."). On this voyage see first part of this Youtube.
Might Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia also be added to the list?
The South China Sea activity will be Japan’s biggest show of naval force in the region since WWII. Japan will likely send other ships (identities not yet known, but typically they would include a destroyer, replenishment ship and maybe a submarine (for ASW practice)).
3. JS IZUMO at MALABAR 2017 in July 2017
Izumo will participate in the ASW themed Exercise MALABAR 2017, to be held off India between the USN, Indian and Japanese navies, in July 2017.
Izumo will return to Fleet Base Yokosuka, Japan in August 2017.
4. CHINA OPPOSES IZUMO’S SOUTH CHINA SEA VOYAGE
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying was reallly, really angry about Izumo's South China Sea voyage. On March 16, 2017 she said:
“Out of its selfish interests, Japan has been stirring up troubles and creating splits in the South China Sea. Their behaviour has prompted dissatisfaction and opposition of the Chinese people. If the Japanese side insists on doing so, or even attempts to get militarily involved in the South China Sea, harm China's sovereignty and security, and heighten regional tensions, the Chinese side will definitely take firm actions in response.”
[Hua continued] “I want to remind the Japanese side that they are not a party concerned in the South China Sea issue, and that they have a disgraceful history of occupying China's Xisha [Paracel] and Nansha [Spratly] Islands during its war of aggression against China. The Japanese side should reflect upon the history, and be discreet with its words and deeds, instead of making waves in the South China Sea and impairing regional peace and stability.”
Pete Comment – Clearly China approves of its own increases in power projection into the South China Sea but cannot imagine other countries have rights.
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A postscript:
IJN Sōryū. At 19,000 tons the same size as JS Hyuga and Ise. A good name for a submarine class :) The Sōryū carrier was part of the Pearl Harbour strike, bombed Darwin, then was sunk at Midway.