Japan To Launch a Military Space Force In 2019 150
Taco Cowboy writes Japan is planning to launch a military space force by 2019. The Mainichi Shimbun is reporting that Japan plans to create a "space force" within its existing Self Defence Force, hoping to have it operational by 2019. Japan would provide the US military with information obtained by the force as part of the joint bid to strengthen ties in space, the so-called "fourth battlefield", Kyodo news agency said, citing unnamed sources. Note that this plan, which involves simply looking into space using old civilian astronomy equipment and radar, is just the beginning. The transforming space fighters and combat mechs will presumably come later.
But what of the children... (Score:5, Funny)
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Are you confusing Japan with China?
Re:But what of the children... (Score:4, Informative)
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It's funny, this is actually dealt with in Gundam X. The captain of the ship that everyone rides around in was a veteran child soldier who fought in the war that ruined everything. He wound up with pretty bad PTSD.
Voices of a Distant Star (Score:2)
Probably one of the better examples. A movie, not a TV series. Involve the use of children using mechs to fight in a war against aliens in distant space. Interestingly enough, the movie isn't really about this, but rather the long distance relationship between a girl that gets recruited, and a boy who does not. Presumably they use children because of reflexes, or size, or more likely the length of time involved.
What makes this story most interesting is that all the communication is done VIA texting. Yes Spa
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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt26... [imdb.com]
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good thing (Score:1)
super villians and aliens are such a nusiance. Superman is really busy, so spending the money on this is way overdue.
And there you have it... (Score:1)
...just the right event to kick off a new space race.
Strategic coverage (Score:4, Funny)
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The Yamato. Accept no imitations.
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Don't worry, Japanese Reagan is confident the wealth will start to trickle down any day now!
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You joke, but the Japanese have tried that, and almost every other economic idea imaginable over the past 25 or so years of recession. It shows how far our collective understanding of economics is from anything useful. The only dependable advice is "don't pick up that much debt in the first place". Advice which every modern nation seems determined to ignore at any cost (well, not just modern, most throughout history as well).
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Regardless, visit Japan and you'd never know their economy had been stagnant for over two decades. I'd take that kind of stagnation to American "growth" any day. They may be running a huge deficit, but at least the money seems to be used more productively than it ever is in the US. I'd love to see the kinds of massive infrastructure projects they undertake introduced over here. Stimulus spending in America consists of pointless and useless beautification on some stretch of road, not a new bridge link to cut
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I wasn't joking that much. Shinzo Abe has a lot in common with Reagan (including big weird hair) and Abenomics is a lot like Reaganomics. Similarly it's gutting their lower and middle classes and achieving nothing other than running up the high score numbers of the ultra-rich.
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Well, since your analysis of Reanagomics is so wrong, I can only assume your analysis of Abe is equally screwy, but my point was it's all so damn subjective - we can't even agree on economic events of the 80s. All we know objectively is that we don't know any sure recipe for getting out from under.
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Space Battleship Yamato.
non military space agreement?? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:non military space agreement?? (Score:5, Informative)
It exclusively limits the use of the Moon and other celestial bodies to peaceful purposes and expressly prohibits their use for testing weapons of any kind, conducting military maneuvers, or establishing military bases, installations, and fortifications (Art.IV). However, the Treaty does not prohibit the placement of conventional weapons in orbit. The treaty also states that the exploration of outer space shall be done to benefit all countries and shall be free for exploration and use by all the States. The treaty explicitly forbids any government from claiming a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet, claiming that they are the common heritage of mankind.[3] Art. II of the Treaty states that "outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies, is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means". However, the State that launches a space object retains jurisdiction and control over that object.[4] The State is also liable for damages caused by their space object.[5]
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I wonder how they will define "WMD" vs "conventional" weapons. wouldnt a conventional weapon shot from space at the earth have a much higher velocity than the same weapon used on earth?? I just dont see the need to weaponize space
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And the Japanese plan as described is entirely consistent with that treaty.
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Re:non military space agreement?? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:non military space agreement?? (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem is we always had a sort of informal treaty with the Russians that we wouldn't go after their space based assets and likewise they wouldn't either.
The problem is the Chinese have taken an aggressive approach to neutralizing US space assets in the event of conflict. The believe they could win a conflict with the US by eliminating the space advantage the US enjoys. In fact their strategy appears to believe that US battlefield superiority is tied almost exclusively to US space based assets. I think they will ultimately be surprised by how effective such a strategy would be and how much blowback they'd get from the world after they shoot down a bunch of GPS satellites.
Ultimately that's what this agreement with Japan is about, attempting to neutralize or degrade the ASAT (anti-satellite) capabilities of the Chinese. Japan is critically positioned to shoot down ASAT weapons fired from China.
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It's de facto exactly the same. In the case of a war, any sort of informal treaty with Russia would have been forgotten and we would have taken out the other's space based assets. Of course. It's not like "they're raining death down on us from above...but we're powerless to stop them! We have an informal treaty!"
And certainly China doesn't believe it could "win" a conflict with the US. And the US military procedures and military systems are designed with the idea that GPS may become unavailable (anyway
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The US isn't going to invade China, ever. That whole never get involved in a land war in Asia thing applies even if we didn't appear to know that before Afghanistan we certainly know it now.
Any war with China will be Naval and focused on the east China sea and the straight through the south china sea. The US navy is at least 20 years ahead of the Chinese PLA Naval forces. Any battle is going to be focused on the US Navy blockading Chinese shipping and starving their economy.
As far as the parents claim that
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At the time the treaty was signed the US and Nato were the threat and the Russians were the solution to the threat. The US and Nato agreed to never invade and the Russians agreed to use their Nukes to guarantee that. The Russians alone violated their portion of the treaty. The US and Nato had no obl
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It's called the Outer Space Treaty. Japan has ratified they treaty.
But as far as I understand it only bans placing nukes in outerspace.
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Re:non military space agreement?? (Score:4, Interesting)
I could have sworn that there was a non militarization of space treaty in place
According to TFA, this 'military space force' is a somewhat hyperbolic description of orbital debris tracking(presumably for satellite protection, as such systems currently are). Depending on the local appetite for defense contracts and the diplomatic PR issues such a purely 'defensive' system will have a greater or lesser chance of becoming the target acquisition mechanism for some sort of anti-satellite system on the ground.
To the best of public knowledge, I don't think anyone has yet followed through on some grand design to put weapons on satellites; but you can put more or less whatever you want on the ground and satellites are not known for their durability...
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So it's more like a Space Coast Guard than a Space Navy?
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To the best of public knowledge, I don't think anyone has yet followed through on some grand design to put weapons on satellites
The Soviets put a 23mm autocannon on their Almaz space station.
They also created a nuclear orbital bombardment system to put warheads into low Earth orbit to attack the US. It was called (in English) FOBS; Fractional Orbital Bombardment System. The LEO boosters and de-orbit systems were tested with dummy warheads and the system was put into service in '69. Their command economy couldn't sustain further development so they traded it in for SALT II negotiating points.
Re:non military space agreement?? (Score:5, Informative)
Japan Announces a Military Shift to Thwart China
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/02/world/asia/japan-moves-to-permit-greater-use-of-its-military.html [nytimes.com]
Japan's prime minister announced a reinterpretation of the country's pacifist Constitution on Tuesday, freeing its military for the first time in over 60 years to play a more assertive role in the increasingly tense region.
The antiwar Constitution remains enough of a touchstone for many in Japan that the reinterpretation has spurred rare street protests, and even the self-immolation of a lone protester in Tokyo this week.
The Obama administration said Tuesday that it welcomed Japan's action, adding that it would aid the country's armed forces to "do more within the framework of our alliance."
This is all about China.
Even the source article [mainichi.jp] brings up China.
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Japan is a dying country with no resources. China is a growing country with a hell of a lot of resources. Which country do you want to do business with?
The only one that manufacturers capacitors worth a damn?
Yes. YES YES YES. (Score:2)
Bring on space battles. I want space battles in my life time. I know aliens probably won't happen and neither will colonizing aonther planet or even the moon, but at least let me have space ship battles.
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Re: Yes. YES YES YES. (Score:2)
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I would be satisfied just in knowing that there is a branch of the service called SPACE MARINES.
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the reality is... (Score:2, Interesting)
The reality, is man vs man space combat will likely never happen. Organics are too vulnerable. If there is ever combat in space, it will be via drones sniping each other over ridiculously long distances.
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If we ever get to that point, it might also be the end of the space age. With billions of small particles in orbit from all the blown up drones, there won't be a safe orbit left for civilian satellites.
This is what I fear... (Score:1, Interesting)
The Middle East has the world's eyes, but it is no more than two drunks fighting behind a cantina compared to what happens if the Pacific Rim goes up.
People dislike the US, but one thing America has been good at has been keeping the peace in that theater since WWII.
The Pacific Rim affects the world. People don't realize that the casualties of WWI were dwarfed by civil wars in China, or the magnitude of people, technology, and military might in the region.
It is understandable (and reasonable) for Japan to d
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Space Junk Chain Reaction (Score:4, Insightful)
Who needs weather satellites, GPS, and communication equipment anyway?
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You could blow the junk into smaller pieces so they will burn up faster too.
But a military space race would be a good thing towards progress in space.
It gives governments reasons to invest into space.
Plus they will need to build up so they are not the wimpiest ones in space.
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The atmosphere is not a yes/no thing. There's not much drag in LEO, but it's not 0. Over time, orbits there decay. And the more non-circular an orbit (as tends to be the case from explosions), the more likely it will pass through thicker atmosphere at perigee. Just one more case where if violence isn't solving your problem, you're not using enough of it.
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All of that is secondary to survival, and until we figure out how to make government leaders stop being such assholes, threatening each others' populations with annihilation, we're going to need plans for defense - and if the enemy leverages space for any tactical or strategic advantage, then so must we.
That said, the article says they're just using telescopes to track stuff in space for military purposes, not building Gundams, so you can untwist your panties now that you know this.
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Though in principle, I agree "no space war" -- Japan is just desperate due to the pressure from Manga and Anime to build space flying battle suits.
We may get a few tiny mummified bodies floating in space encased in really impractical anthropomorphic battle suits that die because the giant sword threw off their flight profile and occupant spiraled into a roller coaster 'death vomit". Really, there's nothing here to worry about -- it's a self correcting problem.
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what a great idea! Lets blow shit up in space
FTFA: "The term brings to mind dystopian visions of fighters patrolling near space, but will actually revolve around protecting satellites from space debris orbiting the Earth."
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Planetes [wikipedia.org] anyone?
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In the modern world, we all do. Which is why we should be more alarmed that all of these things are so very vulnerable to an increasingly long list of state-actors who don't like the West, and are so difficult to replace on short notice.
We've "gotten away with it" for a long time now. But any honest person knew those days were numbered.
At some point, we're going to have to really deal with the problem of space junk, and with the problem
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Your James Bond film sounds very intriguing and I would like to subscribe to your... movie.
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Blowing shit up is entirely unlike the Japanese plan described.
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Looks like Japan has considered that angle. [theguardian.com] I don't know about naming something from Japan "S.T.A.R.S. [wikia.com]", though...
Awesome! (Score:3)
Let's hope it's comprised of 5 giant mechanical lions that can combine together into a single massive mechanical humanoid.
Re:Awesome! (Score:4, Insightful)
Hopefully they hire better pilots. The last massive mechanical humanoid pilots didn't think to use their giant sword (with a 100% effectiveness rating against giant space monsters) until after they've tried other methods that had nearly 0% effectiveness.
Starblazers (Score:2)
Space Battleship Yamato.... finally...
Star Blazers (Space Battleship Yamato) (Score:2)
I watched that as a kid.
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I still have the entire first series on video tape and part of the second.
Favorite part, by far, is their battle inside Planet Gamolon. Nothing better than watching it at night, lights off, volume to 11.
Not advisable if you are prone to epileptic seizures.
Headline is Misleading (Score:2)
The article headline here makes it sound like Japan is getting ready to start space warfare, when in fact the article itself says that this program is meant to protect existing orbital assets by tracking space debris. I don't get why they use the term "fourth battlefield" in the article either, since it doesn't seem like anyone affiliated with this program actually said that. If anything, this sounds like it could lead to efforts to capture space junk and dispose of it safely.
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...and thats where it starts..
I guarantee it won't be long until someone uses the word "terrorism" to excuse any and all radical deviations from the program's original agenda.
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Mech fighters (Score:1)
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Gundams are easy. Breeding Tsundere girls with naturally pink and blue hair...a bit harder.
need to stop space godzilla (Score:2)
need to stop space godzilla
We're off to outer space (Score:2)
yada yada yada
Mainichi Shimbun (Score:1)
Never a better moment to quote Blade Runner (Score:1)
"I've... seen things you people wouldn't believe; attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion; I've watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. All those... moments... will be lost... in time, like... tears... in rain."
voltron or power rangers (Score:2)
it could go either way.
Science Patrol? (Score:1)
Will they call the Science Patrol, and fight Kaiju?
Code name... (Score:1)
Code name: Star Blazers! Cue the theme, raise the Yamato, and ready the wave motion gun!
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Mitsubishi A6M (Score:1)
commenting on transformers and mech bots is racist (Score:1)
It's 2199, not 2019. The article has a typo. (Score:2)
Japan will create its Space Force, better known as Star Force, in 2199. The article has a typo.
hmmm. (Score:1)
If Japan wants to do this, they'll have to do something about the (un)reliability of their rockets and probes.
The track record so far isn't exactly wonderful and indications are that the problems are cultural rather than technical (If you're brought up not to question authority, you don't interrupt your superior when he's making a mistake - even if that mistake might be crashing an aircraft, or putting a flawed rocket motor design together.)
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