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Indo-Pacific

US Marines drill in Japanese language for better teamwork with SDF

Ground troops eye joint operations on remote islands

The U.S. Marine Corps conducts military training while using the Japanese language on the Okinawa Prefecture island of Iejima, southern Japan, on April 29.    © Kyodo

NAHA, Japan (Kyodo) -- The U.S. Marine Corps have held a drill in Japan with orders given in Japanese for the first time, according to the troops, in a move aimed at enhancing their partnership with the Self-Defense Forces.

Although it remains unclear whether the Marines will interact in Japanese in actual operations, the use of the language in a Marine training suggests Washington is attempting to engage Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force in new operations involving remote islands, according to an SDF source.

In a Marine exercise disclosed to Kyodo News on April 29 at an airfield on Ie Island in the southern island prefecture of Okinawa, a reporter of the wire service confirmed that a Marine directed other members in Japanese to move a rocket and fire it while pointing at a spot in the map.

The exercise was part of the Marines' new Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations, or EABO, in which troops practice securing a base for an attack on an island.

"We would very much like to increase our partnership and interoperability," said Capt. Brett Hermanson of the U.S. Marine Corps.

The U.S. Marines said, "They are learning and practicing Japanese phrases that will help them share information at the tactical level on the battlefield with their Japanese counterparts to help us fight together as an integrated force."

Even though EABO does not specify any particular places, a U.S. military source said the EABO training "could be tied to the defense of the Senkaku" Islands in the East China Sea, uninhabited areas controlled by Tokyo but claimed by Beijing, who calls them Diaoyu.

The SDF source said whether Marine units deployed to battle areas can ensure a supply route is a key factor in EMBO drills, and the U.S. side wants Japan's GSDF to provide logistical support.

In May, the Marines held a symposium on EABO with the GSDF in Shizuoka Prefecture, central Japan. The U.S. military source expressed willingness to hold more drills in Okinawa with the GSDF.

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