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The Nansei Islands: Japan’s Frontline in a Taiwan Emergency
China is ramping up its military actions and raising tensions in the Nansei Islands. Japan is bolstering its presence in response. Locals are caught in the middle.
Faced with China’s rapid military rise, security tensions are growing in Japan, especially in the Nansei Islands, the southwestern chain that includes Okinawa.
The seriousness of the situation can be understood from the joint statement issued after the Japan-U.S. summit held on February 7 between Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru and U.S. President Donald Trump. For the first time, the statement cited the “increasing bilateral presence in Japan’s Southwest Islands” as one of the efforts to strengthen the alliance.
In the middle of February, as part of a press tour organized by the Foreign Press Center Japan, I visited three key military locations in the Nansei Islands: the Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF)’s Naha Air Base, the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF)’s Naha Air Base, and Yonaguni Island, the nation’s westernmost “border island.”
The “Air Fortress” in the Nansei Islands Region
The JASDF’s Naha Air Base is Japan’s “air fortress” in the Nansei Islands region, which spans about 1,200 kilometers from the Osumi archipelago off Kagoshima Prefecture – at the southern tip of Kyushu, the most southwestern of Japan’s four main islands – to Yonaguni near the Taiwanese coast. This length is comparable to that of Honshu, the largest of Japan’s four main islands.
In 2017, the Japanese Ministry of Defense upgraded the Southwestern Composite Air Division at the Naha Air Base to the Southwest Air Defense Force (SWADF) to strengthen the air defense system in the south of Japan.
Including the SWADF, the JASDF has four Air Defense Forces: the Northern Air Defense Force (headquartered at Misawa Air Base), the Central Air Defense Force (headquartered at Iruma Air Base), and the Western Air Defense Force (headquartered at Kasuga Air Base).
What is surprising is the size of the airspace that the SWADF is responsible for. It covers a vast expanse of skies that stretches about 920 kilometers east-to-west and 780 kilometers north-to-south.
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Takahashi Kosuke is Tokyo Correspondent for The Diplomat.