Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force holds military review

 
Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force holds military review
                  English.news.cn | 2012-10-15 09:39:46 | Editor: Tang Danlu
 

 

 

(Photo Source: chinanews.com) 

Related:
  
TOKYO, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) — Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda emphasized the importance of Japan’s Self-Defense Force (SDF) on Sunday during his fleets inspection, saying that the role of SDF is increasing following emerging territory issues.

“Various developments over territory and sovereignty have been arising,” Noda said in Sagami Bay off Kanagawa Prefecture on the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) escort ship Kurama. “In the new era, the roles of the SDF have become increasingly important,” local media reported. Full story

 

 

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Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force holds military review

 
Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force holds military review
                  English.news.cn | 2012-10-15 09:39:46 | Editor: Tang Danlu
 

 

 

(Photo Source: chinanews.com) 

Related:
  
TOKYO, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) — Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda emphasized the importance of Japan’s Self-Defense Force (SDF) on Sunday during his fleets inspection, saying that the role of SDF is increasing following emerging territory issues.

“Various developments over territory and sovereignty have been arising,” Noda said in Sagami Bay off Kanagawa Prefecture on the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) escort ship Kurama. “In the new era, the roles of the SDF have become increasingly important,” local media reported. Full story

 

 

   1 2 3   

 

 
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Chinese warships spotted off Japanese island: Tokyo

Chinese warships spotted off Japanese island: Tokyo

TOKYO — Chinese warships, including two destroyers, were spotted in waters near a Japanese island on Tuesday, the defence ministry in Tokyo said, further stoking tensions with Beijing over a disputed archipelago.

“A Japanese aircraft spotted seven Chinese naval ships in waters 49 kilometres (30 miles) south-southeast of Yonaguni island at 7:00 am (2200 GMT),” a ministry official said.

Yonaguni is an inhabited territory internationally acknowledged as Japanese.

The ministry said the ships were two destroyers, at least one of which had missile capacity, two frigates, two submarine rescue ships and one supply ship.

“They were moving north, from the Pacific Ocean to the East China Sea,” the spokesman said.

“They were in contiguous waters, 44 kilometres southwest of Nakanokamishima,” a defence ministry spokeswoman said separately.

Contiguous waters lie just outside territorial waters and are governed by international maritime law.

“At this time, we are not seeing such acts as helicopters flying from these naval ships and approaching toward our nation or (the ships) sailing within our territorial waters,” Defense Minister Satoshi Morimoto told a press briefing.

“We are continuing to be on alert and maintaining surveillance of the area waters with aircraft and ships. We will continue to carefully collect information about the movement of the Chinese naval vessels.”

The announcement comes after days of relative calm in a long-running dispute between Japan and China over the sovereignty of a small group of islands in the East China Sea.

Tokyo and Beijing are at loggerheads over the Senkaku islands, which are administered by Japan, but claimed by China, which calls them the Diaoyu islands.

Over the last few weeks Chinese government ships — maritime surveillance ships and fisheries patrol vessels — have repeatedly sailed close to the archipelago, but the country’s armed forces have apparently stayed away.

China’s increasingly well-funded navy is somewhat hemmed in by the long chain of Japan’s Okinawan islands and must pass near to them to get into the Pacific from the East China Sea.

However, there are gaps between the islands that allow vessels to stay well away from Japan’s contiguous zones, an area that extends a further 12 nautical miles beyond the 12 nautical miles of territorial waters.

Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), to which both Japan and China are signatories, foreign vessels, including military ships, have the right to use the contiguous zone.

But states are permitted to exercise control to “prevent infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws and regulations within its territory or territorial sea,” UNCLOS says.

Reports over the weekend said Japan and the United States were considering a joint military drill to simulate retaking a remote island from foreign forces.

The exercise, part of broader joint manoeuvres to start in early November, would use an uninhabited island in Okinawa, Jiji Press and Kyodo News agencies quoted unidentified sources as saying.

The drill would involve Japanese and US troops making an amphibious and airborne landing using boats and helicopters, Kyodo said.

The report came after months of vociferous disagreements over the Senkaku islands, which flared in August and September with landings by nationalists from both sides and the subsequent nationalisation of the islands by Tokyo.

Large public protests rocked Chinese cities, forcing Japanese firms to shutter or scale back their operations.

Two-way trade, worth well in excess of $300 billion last year, is starting to show signs of impact from the spat, with automaker Toyota on Tuesday reported to be planning to temporarily close a factory in China because of falling demand for Japanese goods.

Junglies swap Yeovilton for Dartmoor for a taste of life in the field

News

Junglies swap Yeovilton for Dartmoor for a taste of life in the field
15 October 2012

Trainee commando fliers and engineers spent a week living and flying on Dartmoor as they were given taste of life as the wings of the Royal Marines.

Sea Kings with air and ground crew from 848 Naval Air Squadron decamped from the comfortable surroundings of Yeovilton to Okehampton to experience operating the helicopters in an austere, inhospitable environment.

Dear mum, last time we ever go camping on Dartmoor… A Sea King about to set down at the main camp as rain lashes down

WHILE their front-line colleagues are gearing up to enjoy Mediterranean autumn sun, the ‘Junglie Training Academy’ of 848 Naval Air Squadron spent a week on a wet and inhospitable Dartmoor.

Fliers and ground crew left Yeovilton behind and set up base at Oakhampton Camp on the edge of the moor to learn how to operate in the field – just as their colleagues in 845 and 846 squadrons do supporting commando operations around the globe.

848 feeds the two front-line Commando Helicopter Force Sea King squadrons with around 50 pilots and aircrew, plus more than 150 helicopter maintainers, engineers and technicians every year.

The relative quiet of Dartmoor and its infamously austere environment meant 848 could play out a wide-ranging, full-on war scenario.

Troops hunker down with supplies as a Sea King sets down at a forward operating base

The aim was to give trainees a taste of operating the Sea King Mk4 in a stressful environment outside the ‘comfort zone’ at Yeovilton.

For most of the trainee engineers, it was the first time they’d serviced the helicopters away from their well-equipped hangars back in Somerset. But beyond that, there were also assessed for their leadership skills.

And as the Commando Helicopter Force are the wings of the Royal Marines, there were plenty of green berets to provide expert instruction on security and field skills, plus defending a hastily-established forward operating base from a full-scale assault.

The engineers were also taught lessons from Afghanistan, where the Junglie force has served extensively, including how to strip out a Sea King potentially under enemy fire.

Back in 2009, one Junglie Sea King was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade in an area occupied by insurgents. Experts deemed the helicopter ‘saveable’ – and decided to transport it back to Camp Bastion for repair.

Before it could be airlifted to base, heavy components had to be removed from the stricken ‘bird’ by the engineers, while troops provided cover for them to work safely.

Students map out and record aircraft debris on the moor during a crash management training exercise

That successful operation has now become a mainstay of training in the field for the Junglie engineers.

For the aircrew, sorties in the hilly terrain concentrated the minds on valley flying and approaches to pinnacles and ridges as they dropped off troops and supplies.

There was some epic flying for the students with the seasoned instructor in the left-hand seat constantly pointing out all the potential pitfalls that awaited the unwary pilot.

The detachment to Okehampton achieved all its aims and provided invaluable experience for trainee aircrew and engineers alike.

“The week-long military training exercise has always been an important test for aircrew as they complete their training, but it is also a great opportunity for the engineers on the squadron to demonstrate their leadership and professional aptitude in a challenging environment,” said 848’s senior engineer Lt Cdr Paul Barker.

“The week was an overwhelming success bringing together aircrew and engineers to work as a highly-motivated team and preserve the Junglie ethos.”

Irish Navy renews claims to Atlantic island of Rockall in flag showing ceremony

Irish Navy renews claims to Atlantic island of Rockall in flag showing ceremony

Oil deposits are at center of claims to tiny outpost off Donegal


Ireland has made another claim on the Island of Rockall – claimed by Britain, Denmark and Iceland.

Ireland has made another claim on the Island of Rockall – claimed by Britain, Denmark and Iceland.


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Ireland has made another claim on the Island of Rockall – claimed by Britain, Denmark and Iceland.

The Atlantic Ocean rock is located 230 nautical miles to the northwest of Bloody Foreland in County Donegal.

It has long been claimed by the Irish with the government sending in the Irish Navy to restate its claims.

Naval vessel the LE Roisin exercised Ireland’s sovereign rights over the craggy outcrop in a ‘showing the flag’ patrol according to the Irish Independent.

The paper reports that ownership of the tiny island, which rises 70ft out of the ocean and is a mere 83ft across, is hotly contested given its location.

Rockall sits on what is believed to be vast oil and gas fields worth billions of euro.

The Defence Forces confirmed to the paper that the Irish Naval Service routinely conducts maritime security patrols to exercise Ireland’s sovereign rights.

The report says that in 1955, Britain announced it had landed a party on Rockall and taken possession of it in the name of Queen Elizabeth.

A flagpole was erected, the Union Jack hoisted and a commemorative plaque bolted to the granite.



Read more: http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Irish-Navy-renews-claims-to-Atlantic-island-of-Rockall-in-flag-showing-ceremony-174089061.html#ixzz29PjYNyT8

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