zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Beyond Cars
/
Japan Sending Its Definitely-Not-An-Aircraft-Carrier Into The South China Sea
Japan Sending Its Definitely-Not-An-Aircraft-Carrier Into The South China Sea-February 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:14:08

In an effort to showcase its own might in the South China Sea, Japan is set to dispatch its largest warship, the JS Izumo aircraft carri—I mean, , on a three-month tour through the contested body of water. The move comes as China continues in the area—often violating other nations’ maritime rights in the process—to stake a claim to the region that China has argued mostly belongs to itself.

reports the ship will make stops in Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines and Sri Lanka. And after that, it will join the Malabar joint naval exercise with Indian and U.S. naval vessels in the Indian Ocean in July.

A source told Reuters that the aim is to test the Izumo on an extended mission.

The Izumo, which costs between $1 billion and $1.5 billion, is 816 feet long and can carry up to 14 helicopters. According to , the vessel will be used primarily for anti-submarine warfare and command-and-control operations. It has two Raytheon RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile SeaRAM launchers for air defense and two to take on anti-ship missiles. It can carry a crew of around 470 and up to 400 of Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force troops. Though it is a helicopter carrier, reports that it can also carry fix-winged aircraft like the short-take-off-but-vertically-landing F-35B.

We as much in 2015, when Japan inducted the vessel into its navy:

There is no reason the Izumo cannot deploy dozens of JGSDF AH-64D Apache attack helicopters, heavy and medium assault helicopters or even the one day.

Seeing as Japan already has the F-35A on order, and there have been no claims saying the Izumo’s design precludes it from accepting the short takeoff and vertical landing version of the Joint Strike Fighter in the future, it remains a real possibility.

While Japan does not have any claim to the South China Sea (), Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Brunei do. The area is highly contested due to its vast oil and gas deposits and fishing grounds. More than $5 trillion in trade passes through the sea each year as well.

Given Tokyo’s close alliance with Washington, and its strained relations with Beijing, it makes sense for Japan to flex its muscles in the body of water. noted in February that Chinese Coast Guard ships encroached into waters near the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands, which was the fourth incursion of the year at the time, according to Japan. In the event of a military conflict, U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis said during his visit to Japan last month that Article 5 of the , which allows for the use of military force, covers the islands.

The Izumo itself is a fascinating vessel. Japan insists on calling it a helicopter destroyer likely because Article 9 of its constitution “ war as a sovereign right of the nation,” which would seemingly forbid offensive weapons like an aircraft carrier, even though it clearly appears to have the capacity to function as a STOVL (short take-off and vertical landing aircraft) carrier. To be sure, the Izumo is not the equivalent of the American Nimitz-class or Ford-class super carrier. Instead, it’s similar to smaller carriers like the Italian aircraft carrier Cavour or the Spanish ship Juan Carlos I.

The U.S. Navy, by contrast, calls its small carriers “amphibious assault ships.”

It will be interesting to see how Beijing reacts to the deployment of the Izumo in light of its expansionism in the region. Japan’s pacifist constitution, under Article 9, disavows the use of force. But under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has for a revision to the constitution, Japan has been increasingly pushing the envelope. With neighbors like an increasingly belligerent China and a bellicose North Korea, could anyone blame them?

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Beyond Cars
When Is a Ship a Yacht, and When Is It Not?
When Is a Ship a Yacht, and When Is It Not?
Yachts have been in the news a lot more frequently in recent years. There have been stories like when a Dutch yacht builder in Rotterdam to get a 417-foot-long sailing yacht commissioned by Jeff Bezos out to sea, or when authorities around the world in the wake of Russia’s...
Feb 15, 2026
Artemis I Passes 81 Miles Above Moon's Surface Before Heading for Record-Breaking Distance from Earth
Artemis I Passes 81 Miles Above Moon's Surface Before Heading for Record-Breaking Distance from Earth
Much like the , it took scientists and engineers years and to get the . After four launch attempts over two months, the most powerful rocket ever built by NASA successfully launched just last week. Good things are now coming to those who waited: The mission is going swimmingly,...
Feb 15, 2026
The Cat's In The Bag: Furry Friend Attempts to Sneak on Plane in Owner's Luggage
The Cat's In The Bag: Furry Friend Attempts to Sneak on Plane in Owner's Luggage
Working as a , but every once in a while agents come across something worth posting to the often hilarious TSA social media accounts. The unnamed traveler was flying out of New York’s John F. Kennedy International airport on November 16, but when his checked bag made it to...
Feb 15, 2026
Here's Why Cities That Go Car Free Tend to Stay Car Free
Here's Why Cities That Go Car Free Tend to Stay Car Free
Cities. They suck for cars, suck for driving and it turns out their inhabitants tend to without cars making noise, jamming everything up and polluting all over the damn place. If you’d like examples of the good that eliminating cars can actually do for urban centers, check out this...
Feb 15, 2026
Brazil Brings Back Mask Mandate on All Flights
Brazil Brings Back Mask Mandate on All Flights
International commercial air travel was a significant factor in the rapid spread of COVID-19 in early 2020. Understandably, most national governments responded by requiring the passenger aviation industry to adopt masking requirements. As attention to COVID has waned (and ), many nations have gotten rid of their mask requirements...
Feb 15, 2026
A Railroad Strike Could Fill New York City With Sewage
A Railroad Strike Could Fill New York City With Sewage
Remember that , the one that spelled such potential doom for America that the Biden administration started ? Well, that was only — the threat was delayed, never resolved. Now, with the rejection of , railroad workers are closer than ever to showing their bosses the true power of...
Feb 15, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved