Japan to launch military space force: report
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View photo
A Japanese H-IIA rocket with the
NASA-Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Global Precipitation Measurement
(GPM) Core Observatory onboard blasts off from the launching pad at Tanegashima
Space Center on the Japanese southwestern island of Tanegashima, about 1,000km
(621 miles) southwest of Tokyo, in this photo taken by Kyodo early February 28,
2014. (REUTERS/Kyodo)
Tokyo (AFP) - Japan is planning to
launch a military space force by 2019 that would initially be tasked with
protecting satellites from dangerous debris orbiting the Earth, a report said.
The move is aimed at strengthening
Japan-US cooperation in space, and comes after the countries pledged to boost
joint work on monitoring space debris, Kyodo news agency said Sunday.
Japan would provide the US military
with information obtained by the force as part of the joint bid to strengthen
ties in space, the so-called "fourth battlefield", Kyodo said, citing
unnamed sources.
Japan's defence ministry is looking
at creating the new force using personnel from the Air Self-Defence Force, the
country's air force, it added.
The unit would acquire radar and
telescope facilities, jointly with the science ministry and the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency, to run its observatory operations, Kyodo said.
Thousands of pieces of debris --
including old satellites as well as pieces of rockets and other space equipment
-- are orbiting the Earth and threaten to collide with functioning
communications and reconnaissance satellites.
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