Special Features

The Reg in Space

Japan's revised space security plan reportedly considers counterstrike capability

What happened to 'for all mankind'? Fear of Russia and China, for starters


On Tuesday, the government of Japan adopted its first official plan for space security – and it will likely include counterstrike capabilities.

"The new Basic Plan for Space Policy presents a vision of the future of security, disaster prevention and mitigation, innovation, civil sectors such as space science and exploration, and rockets that support these space activities, and sets out a plan to accomplish it over the next ten years,” declared prime minister Fumio Kishida in Japanese.

The PM's overview of Japan's next space plan (old ones can be found here) notes "the use of outer space is accelerating as the security environment becomes more complex and severe."

His vision is based on last December's National Security Strategy. PM Kishida said it will include a host of space-related endeavors – such as boosting missile detection and tracking technology, AI to improve satellite image analysis, faster information transmission between satellites, use of the private sector to further space technology, and better collaboration between the space agency, JAXA, and the Defense Ministry.

It also allows for the war-renouncing island nation to develop counterstrike capability, according to The Japan Times and other local media.

Japan's blueprint reflects the geopolitical reality that terrestrial conflicts involve space-based assets.

The US-led Combined Space Operations Center cites Ukraine's defensive operations against Russia as one area in which commercial satellite data can provide a military advantage.

Japan has already made space defence part of its plans.

In January, the US and Japan announced they would strengthen defence cooperation across land, sea, and space – with the Americans even committing to defend Japanese space assets in certain situations. The agreement was made amid talks that touched on perceived aggression from China and deepening ties between Russia and the Middle Kingdom.

Chinese state-sponsored media at that time ran headlines demeaning Japan's space endeavors, calling the country's desire to be the second to ever put a human on the Moon "a joke."

China has recently been expanding its own space-based information tracking satellite systems and offensive space capabilities. NASA administrator Bill Nelson declared, also in January, that the space race between the US and China had reached a critical moment and warned that the next two years will be crucial for gaining a foothold on the Moon.

An article in state-controlled China Military Online on Monday observed "Japan's ambition to militarize space deserves vigilance." Which is a typical reaction from China, even as it massively expands its military and conducts aggressive exercises in its region. ®

Send us news
10 Comments

Report reveals US Space Force unprepared to counter orbital threats

20 years of searching for spider holes has given Russia, China lots of time to secure the skies for themselves

Chinese balloon that US shot down was 'crammed' with American hardware

Blasted from the sky in February, device never transmitted photos, videos, or radar data it collected, officials say

Foxconn hedges its bets: US and China will make up, but diversify just in case

Geopolitics keeps CEO up at night, cashing on on EVs gets him up in the morning

US cyber ambassador says China knows how to steal its way to dominance of cloud and AI

Calls on governments to combat 'playbook' that propelled Huawei to prominence

Micron, Applied Materials make big investments in India

Not building fabs, but fabulous for India – as is GE coming to build jet engines

Virgin Galactic finally gets its first paying customers to edge of space

It only took nearly 20 years and one death to get there

Japan kind-of nationalizes key chipmaking material-maker JSR

If the US or Europe dare criticize this deal, it would be rank hypocrisy

Micron warns China's ban could cost it $4 billion annual revenue

PLUS: Crypto just isn't cricket in India; China's budget smartphone surge; Jack Ma is back, again; and more

Fujitsu admits it fluffed the fix for Japan’s flaky ID card scheme

Yet another snafu for digital services push

NASA and miners face off over lithium deposits at satellite calibration site

There's smartphone batteries to be mined, but at what cost?

Japan's digital ID card gets emergency review amid data leaks

PM wants response as urgent as that mustered for COVID-19

After scaring the world, China shows off 'chute that can aim Long March rockets' descents

Tech shrinks landing zones by 80 percent