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MISSILE DEFENSE
US to send two more missile defence ships to Japan: Hagel
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 06, 2014


Japan to strike incoming N.Korean missiles: report
Tokyo (AFP) April 06, 2014 - Japan's defence chief has ordered the armed forces to shoot down any North Korean ballistic missiles that threaten to hit the country, according to media reports.

Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera issued the order on Thursday -- without publicly announcing it -- after North Korea launched two medium-range ballistic missiles on March 26 towards the Sea of Japan (East Sea), Kyodo News and other media said on Saturday, quoting a government source.

A mid-range missile fired from North Korea would be capable of reaching Japan.

Under the order, the country's so-called Self-Defence Forces will destroy North Korean ballistic missiles "if any are launched and threaten to fall within Japanese territory", Kyodo said.

Defence ministry officials could not confirm the reports Sunday. Japan has issued similar orders in the past before the North launched long-range missiles.

In response to the order, an Aegis-equipped destroyer carrying interceptor missiles has been deployed to the Sea of Japan (East Sea), Kyodo's source was quoted as saying.

The Aegis has sophisticated computer and radar technology to guide weapons to destroy enemy missiles in flight.

On Sunday US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said in Tokyo that his country planned to send two more Aegis-equipped destroyers to counter the threat posed by North Korea's "provocative" actions including recent missile launches.

The two ships would join five US Aegis vessels already stationed in Japan.

The latest shoot-down order brings to five the number of similar directives issued since 2009, the reports said, when North Korea fired a missile which it described at the time as part of a satellite launch.

The United States plans to send two more missile defence warships to Japan to counter the threat posed by North Korea's "provocative" actions, Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel said Sunday.

"In response to Pyongyang�s pattern of provocative and destabilizing actions, including recent missile launches in violation of UN Security Council resolutions, I can announce today that the United States is planning to forward-deploy two additional AEGIS ballistic missile defence ships to Japan by 2017," Hagel told a joint news conference in Tokyo after talks with his Japanese counterpart, Itsunori Onodera.

The US ships would join five missile defence vessels already stationed in Japan.

North Korea last month test fired two medium-range ballistic missiles capable of hitting Japan. Tokyo has reportedly ordered its forces to destroy any North Korean ballistic missiles that pass through its airspace, and has deployed its own Aegis vessel to the Sea of Japan.

A mid-range missile fired from North Korea would be capable of reaching Japan.

The move by Washington is "driven by North Korea's continued aggressive and provocative actions and our commitment to the defence of Japan and to our treaty commitments," said a senior US defence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

It served "our national security interests as well," as it would contribute to missile defences, the official said, given North Korea's threats against US interests.

The US announcement followed a move in October to deploy a second early warning American radar to Japan, stationed in Kyoto, and a decision to increase the number of ground-based missile interceptors in Alaska.

"These steps will greatly enhance our ability to defend both Japan and the US homeland from North Korean ballistic missile threats," Hagel said.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un warned this week that the situation on the peninsula was "very grave" and vowed to "thoroughly crush" what he called a US-orchestrated policy of hostility.

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