War Games
China’s
recent declaration creating an Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) over a
large portion of the East China Sea, including the disputed Senkaku (Daioyu)
islands, has been a feast day in Japan for arm-chair strategists, would-be
thriller writers, retired generals and other assorted defense analysts and
pundits.
In the weak
of China’s declaration, five of Japan’s seven national weekly magazines
published articles proposing various scenarios for a new Sino-Japanese War
breaking out over the disputed islands. Can a book, or several books on the coming
Sino-Japanese War of 2014 be far behind? Besides the weeklies other pundits
charged in with various scenarios.
The War
is Boring website postulates a swirling, high-tech dogfight over the East China
Sea, involving Japanese F-15 Eagles, American F-22 Raptors and Chinese
fighters. Several Japanese and one American fighter are shot down, but the
Chinese lose several more. Round One goes to the Japanese-American team.
Shukan Gendai, a weekly tabloid speculates
that war would break out after China’s President Xi Jinping orders that a
Japanese civilian jetliner be shot down after declining to identify itself
while crossing the Chinese ADIZ on a flight to Japan. Currently, civilian
airliners are supposed to file flight plans and respond to inflight directions.
The Sunday Mainichi, one of Japan’s national
newspapers, ran an article with the ominous headline: “Sino-Japanese War to
Break Out in January”. It goes on to postulate that a collapsing Chinese
economy might persuade China’s autocrats that war against the despised Japanese
might take people’s attention away from their trouble.
Many
serious military analysts have been sounding off on strengths and weaknesses of
the two- (or three-) sided conflicts. In their collective view, China has the
advantage of holding numerous air bases or potential bases relatively close to
the prospective battlefield, while Japan has a qualitative edge on his air
craft and naval vessels.
The
Japanese air force at the moment maintains only one squadron of 20 F-15s at
Naha, the capital and largest city of Okinawa, and aircraft and pilots must be
getting worn down through the almost daily scrambles to investigate intruders
over the Senkaku air space. They will be reinforced next year by a second
squadron of 20 aircraft.
Japan
can call on aerial reinforcements from other parts of the country, but they
would still be constrained by lack of bases near the combat zone. That weakness
would, of course, be easily filled by one or more American aircraft carriers,
each of which has about 70 aircraft, should the United States be drawn into the
conflict.
And it
is likely that the U.S. will be drawn in. Washington’s official position is
illogical in that it professes to be neutral about who owns the Senkaku, while
at the same time asserting that they, like the rest of Japan, would fall under the
protection of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty that obliges America to defend the
country.
It is
almost absurd to think that the U.S. could be drawn into a shooting war with a
nuclear-armed China over a bunch of uninhabited and essentially useless islands
that not one in ten thousand Americans have ever heard of. Yet for 60 years
Tokyo has lived up to its side of the bargain, providing bases in Japan for
American forces; it might be inclined to call in the chips, demanding the U.S.
uphold its side.
While
most of these prospective war scenarios are fiction or imaginative, there is
plenty of real life fodder to build on, many of them have occurred during the
past twelve months. Chinese fisheries protection and coast guard ships now
regularly enter Japanese-claimed territorial waters around the Senkaku.
So far
these incursions have been made with only quasi warships and answered by the
Japanese Coast Guard and not the regular navy, but Chinese intrusions into
Japanese-claimed airspace have been met with fighters from the regular air force.
The government
of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is seen in China and elsewhere as being unusually
hawkish. This year the parliament passed legislation creating a new National
Security Council, patterned after the American version, and a new official
secrets act to allay Washington’s concerns of leaking secret defense information.
Next
year it is likely that parliament will adopt a new interpretation of the
Pacifistic constitution to permit collective defense, previously interpreted as
offensive military operations. Other indicators this past year:
In
January a Chinese frigate’s radar “locked on” a Japanese destroyer. This is
usually perceived as an indicator that the frigate will fire its weapons. The
Japanese vessel took evasive action.
The
Japanese navy launched its largest warship, the Izumo, what the Japanese term a “helicopter destroyer,” and what
the rest of the world might call a light aircraft carrier.
About
a 1,000 Japanese infantry took part in the Dawn Blitz exercise with U.S. Marines
at Camp Pendleton training to defend or if necessary retake one or more of the
string of islands south of Okinawa.
As
part of an exercise, Japan recently placed anti-ship missiles on Miyako island,
which stands beside the Miyako Channel, a strategic waterway wide and deep
enough to permit warships to pass through and is sometimes used by the Chinese
Navy to exercise in the broader Pacific.
The
Ministry of Defense said it is studying shooting down any Chinese drones that encroach
on Japanese sir space after one reportedly hovered near the disputed islands.
It reasons that, unlike regular aircraft, unmanned drones cannot respond to
warning shots.
It is
not just a Sino-Japanese War that captures the imagination of the arm-chair
warriors. Earlier in the year, when North Korea exploded its third atomic bomb
and threatened to rain intercontinental missiles on the United States, it spawned
a number of war scenarios involving Japan and North Korea (and others)
Tensions
with Pyongyang quieted down over most of the rest of the year, although the
recent and mysterious execution of supreme leader Kim Jung-un’s uncle and some
reports that it might be readying a fourth nuclear weapons test, might breathe
new life into the Korean war story sub-genre.
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