MISAWA, Japan
(Reuters) --- British fighter planes will take on Japanese
aircraft for the first time since World War Two in aerial combat
drills following the arrival in Japan on Saturday of four Royal Air
Force Typhoon Eurofighters.
The joint practice
at Japan's northern Misawa Air Base starts on Sunday and will be the
first time Japan’s air force train at home with a foreign force
other than that of the United States.
The jets along
with a C-17 support plane touched down early in the evening under
overcast skies, their high-pitched screams prompting some onlookers
to cover their ears.
The Typhoons will
face off against and fly with Japanese F-15s and domestically built
Mitsubishi F-2s in an exercise dubbed Guardian North 16.
"We will
learn from each other, and ultimately we will make friendships that
will tie us together more closely in the future," RAF
Lieutenant Colonel Roger Elliot, said in introductory remarks to 100
Japan Air Self Defence Force (JASDF) personnel.
Both countries
want to hone scramble techniques to counter foreign military
aircraft approaching their airspaces. Both regularly shadow Russian
planes and the JASDF scrambles when Chinese jets approaching its
southwestern border.
As China's control
of the neighboring South China Sea tightens, Japan worries that
Beijing's attention is turning toward the East China Sea where Japan
controls a chain of islands stretching 1,400 km (870 miles) towards
Taiwan.
In the six months
to the end of September, Japanese fighters took off to chase Chinese
planes 407 times compared with 231 times a year earlier, according
to the JASDF. Encounters with Russian bombers and surveillance
planes, which fly in from the north rose 67 percent to 180
incidents.
The Typhoon visit
is also an opportunity for Japan's air force see Europe's most
advanced jet as it looks at proposals for developing a new fighter
to replace its F-2s at a cost of as much as $40 billion.
In 2011 Japan
considered a bid by BAE Systems to sell it the Typhoon in a
competition ultimately won by Lockheed Martin Corp with its F-35
stealth fighter.
Japan has yet to
decide what kind of aircraft its new fighter, dubbed the F-3, will
be, but the choice is between a cheaper non-stealth superiority
fighter based on an existing design, such as the Eurofighter, or a
more expensive program to build a stealth fighter like the U.S. F-22
Raptor.
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