Advertisement
Advertisement
Members of the Japan Self-Defence Forces stand guard near Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) land-to-air missiles, deployed at the Defence Ministry in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters

Japan to upgrade defence system for Olympics as North Korean missile threat grows

The move, likely to start next year, will double the range of current PAC-3 missiles to around 30km

Japan is upgrading its Patriot PAC-3 missile defence system in time for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, adding range and accuracy needed to intercept more advanced North Korean ballistic missiles, four sources with knowledge of the plan said.

The move represents the most significant upgrade to Japan’s missile defence system in a decade and is part of an increase in military spending in the region, where geopolitical tensions are rising.

The roll-out of the new advanced Missile Segment Enhancement, which could double the range of the current PAC-3 missiles to around 30km, will likely start next year, said the sources, who were not authorised to speak publicly about the project.

“The upgraded PAC-3 is necessary to counter the Musudan,” said one source, referring to Pyongyang’s intermediate-range ballistic missile.

North Korea in June test-fired what appeared to be two Musudan rockets. The first failed, but the second travelled 400km, more than halfway towards the southwest coast of Japan and reached a height of 1,000km – enough altitude to give its warhead a range of more than 3,000km.

A Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) land-to-air missiles, deployed at the Defence Ministry in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters

Experts said that test represented a technological advance for the Pyongyang regime, which is also developing nuclear weapons.

It puts it one step closer to being able to lob a warhead that could plunge to its target at speeds of several kilometres a second, potentially too fast for the current PAC-3 batteries that are the last line of defence against missile strikes.

The upgraded PAC-3 is necessary to counter the Musudan
government source

South Korea’s military operates the older PAC-2 system and has a programme to replace it with the PAC-3 system by 2018, a South Korean defence ministry official said. US forces based in the country were also planning to upgrade their PAC-3 batteries covering the capital Seoul, the official added.

Along with North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests, tensions in Asia are being fuelled by ongoing territorial disputes between China and Japan in the East China Sea, and between China and several Southeast Asian nations in the South China Sea.

China is swiftly modernising its armed forces, in part to counter what it sees as a strategy of containment in the United States’ Asian “pivot”.

A spokesman for Japan’s Defence Ministry said “nothing has been decided” on the PAC-3 upgrade.

The International Olympic Committee’s decision to grant Tokyo the 2020 games will help unlock funding for the PAC-3 upgrade despite military budget constraints, the sources said.

A Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) interceptor is launched during a successful intercept test, in this undated handout photo provided by the US Department of Defence, Missile Defense Agency. Photo: Reuters

Around 100 billion yen (US$955 million) in funding would be requested in the next defence budget proposal for the year starting April 2017, one of the sources said. Funding will need cabinet approval before going into the national budget and additional funds would have to be approved for subsequent years.

Japan is also considering purchasing the advanced Terminal High Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, anti-missile system, which Washington and Seoul agreed to deploy in South Korea earlier this month. That decision sparked a complaint from China, which said it would destabilise the regional security balance.

The Patriot upgrade would likely be an enhancement to Japan’s ballistic missile defence, rather than an alternative to THAAD or a similar system.

Japan also has Aegis-equipped destroyers patrolling the Sea of Japan that are loaded with interceptor missiles designed to hit incoming projectiles. It is currently developing a new version dubbed the Standard Missile 3 (SM-3) with the United States designed to destroy ballistic warheads in space, although no decision on a roll out has yet been made.

The PAC-3 system was developed by Lockheed Martin Corp and Raytheon Co Japan’s biggest defence contractor, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI), will begin work on Japan’s systems under license after April next year, the sources said.

MHI will upgrade 12 batteries in the first year, another 12 the following year with four in the subsequent twelve months, the sources said. Those guarding the Tokyo area will take priority and some used for training will not be upgraded.

“The Ministry of Defence has not made any announcement regarding this, so as a commercial company we are not in a position to comment,” a MHI spokeswoman said.

Raytheon did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while a Lockheed spokeswoman said the company had “a long and successful history of working with Japanese industry in their production of the PAC-3 missile system under license”.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: UPGRADED DEFENCE INPLANS FOR OLYMPICS
Post