Japan starts deploying Osprey fleet at a new base to beef up southwestern defense
The first of the fleet of 17 Ospreys safely arrived at its new home base of Camp Saga, Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force said Wednesday.
The move is part of Japan's accelerating military buildup, especially in the southwest in recent years, as a deterrence to China's increasingly assertive maritime actions in the area.
The tilt-rotor aircraft have been temporarily based at Camp Kisarazu, near Tokyo, since 2020 during construction of the base and other necessary facilities. The rest of the fleet is scheduled to complete its relocation in mid-August, the JGSDF officials said.
With the full, permanent deployment at Camp Saga, Japan plans to operate the Ospreys more closely with the country's amphibious rapid deployment brigade at Ainoura, in the nearby naval town of Sasebo, as part of the ongoing plan to reinforce the defense of southwestern remote islands, Defense Minister Gen Nakatani told reporters Tuesday.
'The security environment surrounding Japan has been increasingly severe, and it is our pressing task to strengthen our island defense capabilities,' he said.
Camp Saga ground forces also work with 50 helicopters based at another nearby camp, Metabaru, as well as with air force and navy personnel based in the area.
The use of the V-22 remains controversial in Japan, especially in southern Japan, due to a series of accidents involving the aircraft.
In November 2023, a U.S. Air Force Osprey crashed off Japan's southern coast, killing eight people. In October 2024, a Japanese army V-22 Osprey tilted and hit the ground while attempting to take off during a joint exercise with the U.S. military, and an investigation has found human error was the cause.

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US Osprey makes emergency landing in Japan, officials say
TOKYO - -A U.S. CV-22 Osprey made what Japanese officials called an emergency landing Thursday at Hanamaki Airport in northeastern Japan, about 300 miles north of Tokyo. Airport officials say the tilt-rotor aircraft touched down safely after reporting a mechanical issue mid-flight. The U.S. Air Force said the craft made a "precautionary landing" during a flight from Misawa Air Base to its home base, Yokota Air Base. No injuries were reported. Operations for commercial flights continued as normal. Video from Japanese broadcaster NHK shows the aircraft taxiing to the apron where uniformed personnel could be seen on top of the aircraft, near the center, inspecting the aircraft. Japan's Defense Ministry says it has dispatched staff to the site and is in contact with U.S. forces. The landing came six days after another U.S. Osprey set down in Akita Prefecture for a safety inspection, according to Japanese officials. That aircraft remained on the ground for over seven hours. A U.S. military public affairs officer described the Thursday incident as a "precautionary landing." The V-22 Osprey has been involved in several incidents in recent years, including a crash off Yakushima, in southern Japan, in 2023 that killed eight and grounded the fleet for months. Cullen Drenkhahn, a 1st lieutenant serving as a public affairs advisor for the 353d Special Operations Wing Kadena AB, told ABC News, "I can confirm a U.S. CV-22 Osprey conducted a precautionary landing today at Iwate Hanamaki Airport at 9:45 a.m." "The landing was executed safely and in accordance with policies. An assessment is ongoing to gather additional information. No injuries or damages occurred. There were no interruptions to airport operations," Drenkhahn said. "The aircraft is assigned to the 353rd Special Operations Wing and was flying from Misawa Air Base to its home base, Yokota Air Base. He added, "No further information at this time. the safety of our pilots and aircrew, as well as the men and women of Japan is our foremost priority."
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Moving to Hawaii may sound like a dream come true, but for our family, it was a forced relocation thanks to a set of orders from the U.S. Navy. We were excited about island life, but five military duty stations into my marriage, I knew better than to expect an easy transition. Week one felt like a vacation. My husband and I had never been to Hawaii, so everything was fresh: waterfall hikes, shave ice, world-class beaches. Even the one-lane traffic on the North Shore felt charming. These weren't orders we requested or expected, but we kept telling ourselves: This is going to be great! As well as: The kids are resilient! They're going to be fine! By week two, our 5-year-old middle child, Alice, had fully committed to not being fine. Her Hawaii life was starting to sound like her personal version of 'Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.' She had to share a bed with her little sister. Her nose got sunburned. 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At pick-up, full of best-case-scenario expectations, we asked, 'How was your day?' But instead of happily chirping about new friends and exciting specials, she launched into a tirade that rivaled any talking head you've seen on cable news. Her school didn't even have a real playground — just a blacktop. All the other kindergartners had gone to pre-k together and didn't want to be her friend. She couldn't FaceTime Grandma after dinner because of the time difference. Her favorite after-school activity (playing on the backyard swingset) was 4,800 miles away. She was outraged that our hotel had only one potty instead of 'three potties, like a regular house.' And the novelty of eating dinner on paper plates on a hotel floor? Worn off, big time. I want to be the mom who validates feelings and listens with saintly patience. But when your 5-year-old delivers a personalized podcast nightly on why your new home is the actual worst —and blames you personally— it wears a person down. After a week, I made a quiet decision: I'd stop asking her how her day was. Not out of spite, but survival. If she wanted to tell me, she could, but I wasn't going to prompt her. Next, I tried that thing adults always tell other adults: 'Focus on the positive.' I have journaled on and off for decades — from middle school drama to post-partum exhaustion — and I hoped maybe it could help Alice, too. I bought a jaunty little composition book with a cartoon sun on the cover and dubbed it 'Alice's Positivity Notebook.' We were going to fake it until we made it. I told her we could still talk about every part of her day if she wanted, but for this notebook, she would just write down the good stuff. She could even draw a picture to go with it. Fifteen minutes into our first journaling session, I was already defeated. Every prompt I offered — What made you smile? Who was kind to you? What was something fun? — was met with a shrug or a flat 'no.' We were living any middle child's dream, sitting outside on a warm Hawaiian evening just the two of us, and here was Alice complaining about never getting a snow day again. (Please note that during our two years in Virginia Beach, we only had half a day of snow, and she had not enjoyed it.) Finally, she gave me something. 'I liked the clear noodles at lunch,' she mumbled. Victory. I wrote down her verbatim sentence about the 'clear noodles,' handed her the crayons, and watched fallen plumeria blooms drift across the hotel lanai while she drew. A sad realization dawned on me: I couldn't force her into gratitude. She had lost the only home she could remember. And even though we were somewhere beautiful, the view didn't erase the hard parts. I couldn't positivity-journal her way out of the grief of change. I remembered how I felt when we first got our orders to Hawaii. I was losing a job I loved (it turns out 'remote work' has limits). We were heading to one of the most expensive places in the country. We were moving away from our friends and community we'd established in the military-friendly town of Virginia Beach. I was nervous and overwhelmed. But when I voiced that to civilian friends, I was met with, 'We honeymooned in Maui, you're so lucky!' and 'We loved our week at Turtle Bay!' Talking about Friday night fireworks in Waikiki made for better conversation for my friends, so I stopped bringing it up, swallowing my apprehension. And now here I was, asking Alice to do the exact same thing. Trying to gaslight her into enjoying things she wasn't (Yet, I told myself. Yet.). If an adult talked to me the way I was talking to her — 'You're whining about having no friends and a pause in your career? Look at the sunsets and the novelty of wild chickens!!' — I'd want to scream. I was allowed to struggle with the transition, to miss what we had and to take time to build something new. She was allowed that, too. That night, I closed the notebook and reminded myself that with consistency, this notebook would be filled. Eventually, the entries would expand to include more than lunch noodles. The good, the bad: I needed to let her feel it all. I decided I would still notice the beauty for her, gently saving it for her when she was ready, but I wouldn't use it to silence the hard stuff. The luaus and waterfalls weren't going anywhere, so for the moment, we could be excited about clear noodles. Meanwhile, I started tending to my own feelings, too. I sought support from fellow military spouses — women who understand the 'and' of this lifestyle: the beauty and the privilege of living here and the challenges it presents. One friend in particular always reminds me, 'You're not imagining it. This is as hard as it feels.' It's her mantra, and I've adopted it as my own — a phrase I reach for whenever I start wondering if I'm overreacting or if someone else would be handling it all better. 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We still talk about the hard days when they come, but now the good parts of her day fill more than one bullet point… and Alice cheerfully recites them unprompted. This experience didn't just teach me to sit with my daughter's feelings — it taught me to stop trying to rush her out of them. My job isn't to shield her from discomfort or aggressively mine her for silver just to create a lining. It's to walk beside her with honesty, to hold space for what's hard, while teaching her to notice the 'and'— the beauty that can exist alongside the hard parts. Do you have a compelling personal story you'd like to see published on HuffPost? Find out what we're looking for here and send us a pitch at pitch@ Solve the daily Crossword