Japan's new warship draws fire
People's Daily Online
By ZHAO SHENGNAN in Beijing and CAI HONG in Tokyo (China Daily) 08:08, August 
07, 2013
In-Depth Coverage
Japan's biggest warship was unveiled on Tuesday, raising grave concerns about 
the country's military buildup as observers said the vessel is actually an 
aircraft carrier, banned by Japan's pacifist constitution.
Tokyo's move coincided with Manila's latest efforts to upgrade its military, as 
the Philippine navy received a second former US coast guard ship. Manila 
received the first ship in 2011.
Analysts see the upgraded warships in Japan and the Philippines as efforts to 
gain an upper hand in maritime disputes with China, as well as a catalyst 
igniting an arms race that would escalate regional tensions.
China's Ministry of National Defense expressed concern on Tuesday about Japan's 
'continuous military buildup' and urged it to adhere to peaceful self-defense.
'Japan should reflect on its history, adhere to self-defense and the promise of 
following the path of peaceful development,' the ministry's bureau for media 
affairs told China Daily. The ministry also called for Japan's neighbors and 
the international community to be 'highly alert'.
The Japanese military held a ceremony in the port city of Yokohama on Tuesday 
to show off its new 248-meter helicopter carrier 22DDH, which is expected to be 
a centerpiece of its naval power under the Self-Defense Forces, which are 
banned from aggressive action.
The Japanese-built carrier has a displacement of around 20,000 tons. It can 
accommodate 14 helicopters and will play a major role in disaster and rescue 
missions, as well as defend sea passages and Japanese territory, according to 
Japan's defense ministry.
But it is much larger than many countries' aircraft carriers in terms of 
displacement and deck length, and it can be easily and swiftly refitted to 
support F35-B fighters, which have strong combat capabilities, said Zhang 
Junshe, a senior researcher at the People's Liberation Army Naval Military 
Studies Research Institute.
'It is an aircraft carrier, and Japan just called it 'a helicopter destroyer' 
to downplay its aggressive nature,' Zhang said. Japan, defeated in World War 
II, is creating regional tensions by breaking the postwar order, he added.
The vessel was named Izumo, the same name as the flagship of the Japanese fleet 
that invaded China in the 1930s.
Although the vessel is not 100 percent an aircraft carrier at the moment, it 
can be a platform for Japanese forces to train under circumstances similar to 
that of an aircraft carrier, said Jin Canrong, an international affairs 
professor at Renmin University of China.
Besides, Tokyo likely intentionally chose the date of the vessel's debut — the 
68th anniversary of the US dropping an atomic bomb on Hiroshima — to woo public 
support for the government's military ambitions by taking advantage of 
sentiments about the attack, Jin said.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been considering developing a regular 
army, which would require changing the Constitution imposed on Japan by the 
United States and its allies after World War II. But a possible overhaul of the 
Constitution has stirred strong reactions among Japan's neighbors, which have 
long maintained that Tokyo has never come to terms with its militaristic past.
'Washington, which currently is facing defense budget cuts, needs Tokyo's 
assistance to guarantee the US focus on Asia. ... This also encourages Abe to 
beef up Japan's military,' Jin added.
China has always maintained that cooperation among countries should be 
conducive to regional peace and stability, according to the Ministry of 
National Defense's response to US-Philippine military cooperation.
Manila said last week that Washington had stepped up its military assistance 
package in the next fiscal year to about $50 million from $30 million, the 
highest level since US troops returned to the Philippines in 2000.

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