
Japan conducts first domestic surface-to-ship missile test
TOKYO: Japan on Wednesday (June 25) called its first surface-to-ship missile test within its territory necessary training given the current "severe security environment", as it boosts military capacity to counter China.
The Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) fired a single "Type-88" missile towards Pacific coastal waters from a training ground in the northern island of Hokkaido on Tuesday.
The Japanese military usually conducts its surface-to-ship missile drills at bases in the United States, but those training sessions are costly with the number of personnel who can participate often limited.
"Domestic live-fire exercises like this one provide training opportunities for more troops," top government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi told a regular press conference Wednesday.
Such drills are "extremely important for us to maintain and improve the capability to defend islands and other areas, given the current severe security environment", he said.
He stressed that the exercise was not aimed at any specific nation, but Japan has previously called neighbouring China its greatest security challenge as Beijing builds up military capacity in the region.
The relative weakness of the Japanese yen has also inflated the cost of using American facilities for training, Japanese media reports said.
Japan is in a multi-year process of increasing its defence spending to the Nato standard of roughly two per cent of gross domestic product (GDP).
It is also bolstering its military alliance with Washington, moving to make US and Japanese forces more nimble in response to threats such as a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. - AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Italy court acquits consultant in India helicopter case
FILE PHOTO: A logo of helicopter maker Leonardo is pictured on their booth during the European Business Aviation Convention & Exhibition (EBACE) in Geneva, Switzerland, May 22, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo MILAN (Reuters) -An Italian appeals court has fully acquitted an Italian-American consultant who had previously settled a charge of international corruption in a case related to a 2010 helicopter contract between defence company Leonardo and the Indian government. According to the ruling reviewed by Reuters, the appeals court in the northern city of Brescia upheld a review request filed by Guido Ralph Haschke, revoking the plea bargain and acquitting him "because there was no case to answer". Haschke, 73, a U.S. and Italian citizen living in Switzerland and an international consultant with a background as a World Bank executive, agreed to a plea bargain of one year and 10 months during the first trial in 2014 after being accused of being a middleman in the alleged corruption. The case was a big political issue in Italy and India when it opened in 2012 and tarnished the company's reputation at a time when India had established itself as one the world's biggest arms buyers. Sentences of under two years for people with a previous clean record are conditional in Italy and do not result in time behind bars. Italy's Supreme Court in 2019 acquitted the defendants in the case, two former executives of the Italian state-controlled defence group previously known as Finmeccanica. That prompted Luca Lauri, Haschke's lawyer to initiate the appeal proceedings that led to a ruling late on Monday, in which, according to a statement released by the law firm, the consultant was accorded "the broadest possible acquittal". Haschke had told Reuters in 2014 that his plea bargain was not an admission of responsibility but a "technical decision to avoid years of trials". The case revolved around corruption allegations related to a contract worth 560 million euros ($660 million) to supply a dozen helicopters to the Indian government. The deal between the defence group and India was subject to international arbitration which ended in 2019, effectively cancelling the contract. ($1 = 0.8467 euros) (Reporting by Emilio Parodi, additional reporting by Giulia SegretiEditing by Keith Weir and David Evans)


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Children dying in S. Sudan after US aid cuts: NGO
NAIROBI: The impact of US aid cuts has already taken a toll in South Sudan and children are dying, Action Against Hunger told AFP on Tuesday. The east African nation has remained deeply poor and unstable since independence in 2011 and is massively dependent on international aid despite its oil wealth. It is among the countries facing shortfalls following US President Donald Trump's decision to slash funding for the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which had provided over 40 percent of global humanitarian aid. On Tuesday, the British Lancet journal projected that the cuts to USAID could lead to more than 14 million deaths by 2030, including over 4.5 million children under the age of five. 'I think it's not just a fear. It's already a reality. We're already having some mortality rates coming in,' said Denish Ogen Rwot, Action Against Hunger's communication and advocacy lead in South Sudan. 'Already we are having children die,' he added. The international NGO works across South Sudan, including in the increasingly violent Jonglei state, providing food and supplies. Rwot estimated they had lost 30 percent of their funding due to the USAID cuts. 'That means now we'll have facilities without food... and how do we work without these supplies?,' he asked. Rwot recently visited northern Warrap state, near the border with Sudan -- itself enduring a civil war -- describing how the warehouses there were 'very empty'. 'They're still registering people, but there is no food for them,' he said. It comes a day after the World Food Programme (WFP) warned that acute malnutrition rates among refugee children in South Sudan -- fleeing the war in Sudan -- had 'already breached emergency thresholds'. Action Against Hunger has been forced to reduce its staffing in the country from 300 to 86, further impacting its ability to respond during a crisis. 'We are running on sheer faith,' Rwot said.


The Sun
3 hours ago
- The Sun
Kurdish PKK fighters to destroy weapons in ‘goodwill' act: commanders
SULAIMANIYAH: Fighters from the Kurdistan Workers' Party will soon destroy their weapons as a 'goodwill gesture' to signal their commitment to disarming after decades of conflict with Turkey, two commanders said. The planned disarmament marks a turning point in the militant group's transition from armed insurgency to political negotiation, as part of a broader effort to end one of the region's longest-running conflicts. The group declared an end to its armed campaign in May -- a conflict that has claimed more than 40,000 lives since 1984 and long strained Turkey's relations with its Kurdish population and regional neighbours. 'As a gesture of goodwill, a number of PKK fighters, who had taken part in fighting Turkish forces in recent years, will destroy or burn their weapons in a ceremony in the coming days,' the commander said, requesting anonymity because he is not authorised to speak to the media. The move was confirmed by another commander who also spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity. The Kurdistan Workers' Party -- widely known by its Kurdish initials PKK -- has led a decades-long armed campaign for Kurdish rights in Turkey and is considered a terrorist organisation by Ankara and its Western allies. Representatives of political parties, local observers and the media will attend the ceremony, which will take place in the autonomous Kurdistan region in northern Iraq. The commander said the PKK had yet to decide on the exact number of fighters -- men and women -- who would disarm, the location and the timing of the event. In recent months, the PKK has taken several historic steps, starting with a ceasefire and culminating in its formal dissolution announced on May 12. The shift followed an appeal by its founder Abdullah Ocalan, delivered in a letter from Imrali prison, on an island south of Istanbul, where he has been held in solitary confinement since 1999. The first commander said a new statement from Ocalan was expected soon. A delegation from the pro-Kurdish Turkish DEM party, which has played a key role in facilitating contacts between Ocalan and Ankara, is expected to meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan next week before visiting Ocalan in prison. Most of the PKK's fighters have spent the past decade in the mountains of northern Iraq, where Turkey also maintains military bases and has carried out frequent operations against Kurdish fighters. Until now, there has been little detail about how the dissolution mechanism would work but Ankara has said it would carefully monitor the process to ensure full implementation.