In the year ending
March 31, Japanese fighters scrambled 944 times, 16 percent more than the same
period the previous year, the country's Self Defence Force said.
That is the second
highest number of encounters ever recorded over the 12-month period since
records began in 1958 and only one less than a record 944 scrambles in 1984.
"It represents
a sharp increase," an SDF spokesman said at a press briefing. While not a
direct measure of Russian and Chinese military activity, the numbers
nonetheless point to an increase in operations by Japan 's two big neighbors.
While coping with
the growing military might of a more assertive China which is increasing
defense outlays by more than 10 percent a year, Japan is also contending with a
military resurgence of a Cold War foe that has gathered pace since Moscow
annexed the Crimean peninsula from the Ukraine last year.
A non-fiscal boost
to military capability will also come from plans by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
to loosen constitutional constraints on his nation's defense forces that will
allow them to operate more freely overseas and to deepen cooperation with U.S. forces.
Russian bombers and
patrol planes often enter Japan 's
air space close to Japan 's
northern Hokkaido island and close to four
smaller islands which are claimed both by Japan
and Russia .
That territorial
dispute has prevented Japan
and Russia
from concluding a formal peace treaty. The Russian aircraft commonly fly
circuitous routes around the Japanese archipelago.
Chinese fighter
incursions are concentrated in the East China Sea, close to disputed
uninhabited islets near Taiwan
that Tokyo claims as the Senkaku islands and Beijing dubs the Diaoyu
islands.
In the past year,
an increased number of Chinese planes have flown through Japanese air space
into the Western Pacific, the SDF spokesman said.
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