8/01/2017

                   

                I Like Soba !  そば、大好き!

 


暑い日が続き、食事を作るのも大変。今日はその苦労を少なくするため、外食にした。サンチカの正家まさやへ出かけた。そこで蕎麦屋の季刊誌を頂いたが、その本に懐かしいそば屋の名前が沢山載っていた。

そのうちで私が知っている美味しい店を紹介しよう。( 青字の店は特におすすめ )

 

                                                               Famous Soba Restaurants All Over Japan 

                                                                                  新そば会 有名店

 

北海道 札幌 東家寿楽、東家本店 小樽 藪半 釧路 竹老園東家総本店 帯広 丸福

東北  山形あつみ温泉 大清水 山形 そば処庄司屋 山形天童 やま竹 秋田能代 乃しろ庵 秋田鹿角 切田屋

    青森弘前 一力 高砂 青森八戸 番丁庵 盛岡 直利庵 仙台 さん竹 福島白河 藤駒本店 福島 峰亀 

    会津若松 桐屋

東京  かんだ やぶそば 室町 砂場 日本橋 やぶ久 並木 藪蕎麦 虎ノ門 砂場 芝大門 更科布屋 銀座 よし田

    茅場町 長寿庵 ぎんざ 田中屋 

横浜  更科一休 利休庵 

川崎 そばところ奈利川 川崎大師松月庵 鎌倉峰本 箱根湯本 はつ花 海老名 国分寺そば

千葉佐原 小堀屋本店 千葉松戸 関やど 埼玉 さいたま 土合やぶ 埼玉 ふじみ野 手打蕎麦ぐらの 

栃木出流町 元祖いづるや 栃木足利 相田みつをゆかりの店なか川 群馬前橋 そばひろ

甲信越 山梨甲府 奥村本店 松本 こばやし 長野木曽 越前屋 軽井沢 かぎもとや 戸隠高原 そばの実 

    新潟十日町 小嶋屋 新潟湯沢町 しんばし

北陸 富山 大黒や 金沢 大藪 石川宝達志水 蕎麦処上杉 福井 福そば

東海 名古屋 えびすや本店 安江 川井屋 丁字屋 松寿庵 紗羅餐 静岡 安田屋本店 三島 江戸変わりそば飯嶋

   岐阜 吉照庵 高山 恵比寿本店

大阪 麺房今井 民芸そばしのぶ庵 冨士屋 瓢亭 吉祥庵 手打そば喜庵 そばよし 

神戸 東京そば正家 信そば長野屋 

姫路 御座候 兵庫出石 さらそば甚兵衛 出石のさらそばそば庄 

大津 本家鶴喜そば 草津 宿場そば 近江八幡 日牟禮庵

京都 時庵河道屋 本家尾張屋 ゑびや にしんそば松葉 大黒屋 本家田毎 京都有喜屋 権太郎

四国 徳島 総本家橋本 

中国 島根安来 志ばらく 松江 八雲庵 出雲 荒木屋 羽根屋 福山 福山大市

九州 福岡 みすず庵 信濃庵 ひさや 手打蕎麦加辺屋 鹿児島 そば茶屋吹上庵

沖縄 美濃作

      



                 京都でお薦めのそばやは 本家尾張屋

                 大阪でお薦めのそばやは 夕霧そば瓢亭

                 神戸でお薦めのそばやは 東京そば正家

 

 

             加計問題

 


/

In Diet appearance, Abe tells panel he never rigged approval process for Kake Gakuen project

by Staff Writer     
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sought to quell burgeoning voter distrust Monday by reasserting his claim that he never rigged the decision-making process behind the opening of a rare, new veterinary department at a university run by his close friend Kotaro Kake.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    by Staff Writer    
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s struggles continued Tuesday at a special Diet session held to probe the Kake Gakuen scandal, as opposition lawmakers pointed out contradictions in his past remarks on when he learned about the school operator’s plan to apply for a special government deregulation project.

            Kake Gakuen questions still unanswered

                                                                                                                                                                                              

     Inada makes resignation official; Kishida to pick up defense portfolio

                                                                                                                                                                                                                        by Staff Writer    

Inada’s resignation will deliver another punch in the gut to the scandal-tainted administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has for several months and despite repeated lapses consistently stuck up for Inada, widely considered his protege.

 

“Not only has the log controversy highlighted inappropriate handling of information disclosure, but the fact that there were numerous instances of what appeared to be information leakage from within our organization has risked eroding public trust in our governance system,” Inada told a packed news conference Friday.

“As someone who is in a position to oversee the Defense Ministry and the SDF, I feel a very deep sense of responsibility for all this. I have thus decided to step down as defense minister,” she said, adding that, as a gesture of contrition, she will voluntarily return one month’s salary.

That Inada bowed out voluntarily, rather than face outright dismissal, appears to be part of an effort by the administration to downplay the severity of the affair to minimize damage to the Cabinet, which is expected to be reshuffled next week.

On Friday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga sought to cast Inada’s resignation in a somewhat positive light, attributing it not to her blunders — which include politicizing the SDF during an election campaign — but solely to her voluntary desire to take responsibility for the log scandal.

Her resignation, however, by no means heralds an end to the political turmoil that has rocked Abe in recent days and weeks. The opposition is determined to convene an ad hoc session of the Diet where they can demand further explanations from Inada herself.

“I bear all the responsibility for giving her the portfolio in the first place,” Abe told reporters earlier in the day. “I believe I must humbly accept any criticism leveled at my Cabinet ministers.”

Regarding Inada’s replacement, Abe said he had asked Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida to temporarily step in as defense chief to avoid a vacuum in the critical post as tensions in the region build over North Korea’s provocative weapons tests.

Inada remained emphatic that she played no part in the alleged concealment of the logs, citing the conclusion of a months-long internal probe on Friday that found she never approved any wrongdoing.

The controversy dates back to March, when reports emerged that activity logs detailing the situation in South Sudan had been retained by the Ground Self-Defense Force despite an earlier assertion by the defense ministry that they had been discarded.

The logs are considered a barometer for determining whether the troops were in a combat situation. Any acknowledgement that they were facing combat would imply that Japan’s conditions for deploying troops overseas were being contravened — a particularly sensitive issue in light of Japan’s strictly pacifist stance on defense.In a Diet appearance in March, Inada originally said that she’d had no inkling of the apparent cover-up. But her earlier statements were questioned this month when fresh reports emerged that, during two closed-door meetings with top Self Defense Force officials in February, she consented to a plan to overlook the unexpected discovery of copies of the data.

On Friday, a report on the months-long internal investigation into the allegations concluded that, based on the officials and staff involved, Inada “made no decision” over whether to conceal the logs during the Feb. 13 and 15 meetings with SDF officials.

Isao Koba, an official involved in the probe, said all the interviewees denied at the hearings that Inada approved a cover-up.

The report acknowledged that it was “possible” GSDF officials had explained to Inada in the meetings that the logs existed, but it stopped short of drawing a clearer conclusion, based on the testimony given by Inada and others suggesting that such a conversation never took place.

“We could not corroborate” Inada’s involvement due to conflicting testimonies, Koba said.

Instead, the investigative body held Tetsuro Kuroe, administrative vice minister of the Defense Ministry, accountable for concealing the logs. It said that upon learning the logs had been retained by GSDF in February, the top bureaucrat decided not to disclose them on the basis that the same set of files had already been released by the SDF’s Joint Staff. Kuroe had resigned as of Friday.

Among others subject to disciplinary steps were the GSDF’s chief of staff, Toshiya Okabe, who faced a pay cut, and Masayoshi Tatsumi, administrative vice chief of staff for the SDF Joint Staff, who was suspended for two days.

Inada has carved out a colorful political career since being elected to the Diet in 2005. Her conservative ideology won her the tutelage of Abe, who assigned her to a series of important posts — including policy chief of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party — despite her inexperience. She had even been hailed as a potential future prime minister.

Surrounded by reporters, Defense Minister Tomomi Inada arrives at her ministry Thursday morning. Sources said Inada later expressed an intention to resign after allegations of a cover-up of logs recording the activities of Japanese troops serving as U.N. peacekeepers in South Sudan. | KYODO

/

Defense Minister Inada to resign amid allegations of a cover-up of SDF’s South Sudan mission logs

                                                                                                                                             Kyodo   

Defense Minister Tomomi Inada decided Thursday to resign following allegations of a cover-up of logs detailing the activities of Japanese troops serving as U.N. peacekeepers in South Sudan, government sources said.

Her decision was intended to take responsibility for the confusion surrounding the allegation, according to media reports.

This is the fourth minister to step down in the current Cabinet, following reconstruction minister Masahiro Imamura’s resignation in April.

Earlier in the day, a government source said the Ground Self-Defense Force’s chief of staff, Gen. Toshiya Okabe, will resign following the allegations.

The resignations as well as that of Tetsuro Kuroe, the ministry’s top bureaucrat, are expected to deliver a fresh blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government, already struggling due to plunging approval ratings.

According to the sources, Kuroe is likely to be replaced by Katashi Toyota, director general of the ministry’s secretariat.

Okabe declined to comment Thursday morning on whether he intends to step down.

Other government sources said he was among top officials who had decided not to reveal the existence of the logs, which the Defense Ministry once claimed had been discarded.

Amid increasing criticism against the ministry, Abe had already been considering replacing the beleaguered defense minister in the upcoming Cabinet reshuffle early next month

Opposition parties are likely to view Inada’s move as a belated gesture reacting only after they questioned her competence for some time.

When she was tapped as defense minister in the previous Cabinet reshuffle on Aug. 3 last year — the second woman to serve in the post — some saw the promise in the 58-year-old lawyer-turned-politician as potentially Japan’s first female prime minister. But her one-year stint had been marred by gaffes and missteps.

Inada faced tough questions about her competence, including allegations she tried to hide an inconvenient development in the handling of the controversial data that documented GSDF activities in the U.N. mission. She has strongly denied the accusation.

The former defense ministers thought to be possible picks to replace Inada are Itsunori Onodera, Yoshimasa Hayashi, Yasukazu Hamada and Gen Nakatani, all lawmakers of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Other sources suggest LDP policy chief Toshimitsu Motegi could be a suitable choice. He has not held the defense portfolio before but has experience as trade minister and in positions of responsibility within the party.

There are also suggestions Abe should give several other ministerial posts to lawmakers with previous Cabinet experience to reduce the likelihood of further scandals or verbal gaffes.

Approval ratings for the Abe Cabinet have plummeted in recent weeks amid claims the prime minister influenced a government decision to benefit a close friend.

Inada’s perceived incompetence has engendered distrust and criticism from both ruling and opposition parties.

The logs recording the activities of the Japanese troops described particularly tense situations in the fledgling African country, and their disclosure last year could have adversely affected the government’s push to continue the troop deployment and assign it a new — and possibly riskier — security role during the U.N. mission.

The ministry has conducted an internal probe into the scandal and is preparing to announce the outcome Friday.

The issue dates back to December, when the ministry said it could not fulfill a disclosure request for logs covering the GSDF’s activities in July last year — when the security situation in South Sudan was sharply deteriorating — because the logs had been discarded.

In early February the ministry said the information had been found on a computer at the Self-Defense Forces Joint Staff Office and disclosed part of it.

But top SDF officials reportedly knew that the GSDF had the data all along.

Japan withdrew its GSDF troops from the U.N. mission at the end of May, saying the decision had been made not because of deteriorating security conditions but because the GSDF participation over the past five years had produced significant results.

Inada also came under fire from both ruling

and opposition party members for making political use of the SDF to attract support for a candidate in the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election on July 2.

She apologized for her remarks, but the furor over the issue is believed to have contributed to the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s humiliating defeat in the Tokyo election.

Inada is known for her nationalistic views and regular visits to Yasukuni Shrine, a Shinto shrine in Tokyo seen overseas by some as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism.

As defense chief, she visited the war-linked shrine once late last year, prompting criticism from China and South Korea, both of which suffered under Japan’s wartime aggression.

U.S. officials also reacted negatively to the visit that took place immediately after she accompanied Abe to Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, where the Japanese leader and then U.S. President Barack Obama sought to show the power of reconciliation that has turned former adversaries into close allies.

/

Kagoikes arrested over alleged subsidy fraud involving Moritomo Gakuen schools plugged by Abe’s wife

Moritomo Gakuen pair targeted over money for nationalist schools plugged by Abe's wife

                                                                                                                                     Kyodo     

The arrest of Yasunori Kagoike, 64, former chief of Moritomo Gakuen, and wife, Junko, 60, follows the scandal over a sweetheart land deal allegedly linked to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

 Abe’s wife, Akie, was honorary principal of an elementary school Moritomo Gakuen intended to open in April.

Before their arrests, prosecutors had questioned the Kagoikes on Monday afternoon after quizzing them for the first time last Thursday. Junko Kagoike served as a senior official at the schools.

Yasunori Kagoike told reporters after the first round of questioning that he had “remained mostly silent.”

He drew attention for securing a huge discount on a parcel of state-owned land in Osaka Prefecture where he wanted to build an elementary school.

Moritomo Gakuen was found to have acquired the 8,770-sq.-meter plot in June last year for just ¥134 million, or roughly 14 percent of its appraisal value, after holding negotiations with the Finance Ministry’s local bureau in the area.

Abe’s wife resigned her honorary post at the school after the deal came to light, but the possibility that she and the prime minister were linked to it came under scrutiny in the Diet. Abe denied that he or his wife played any role in the real estate deal, which some dubbed the “Akheed scandal,” playing on the infamous 1976 Lockheed scandal and the first name of Abe’s wife.

The Osaka District Public Prosecutor’s Office’s special investigation squad opened an investigation into the Kagoikes after receiving a complaint in March that the school entity unlawfully claimed state subsidies worth about ¥56 million ($505,000) related to the construction of the elementary school in Toyonaka.

Moritomo Gakuen gave up on opening the school as the scandal grew, and Yasunori Kagoike stepped down as its head in March.

He also faces a criminal complaint filed in May accusing him of swindling Osaka Prefecture out of about ¥62 million in subsidies between fiscal 2011 and 2016 for a kindergarten in the city of Osaka.

In June, the prosecutors raided sites linked to Moritomo Gakuen.

In applying for the state subsidies, Moritomo Gakuen submitted a document listing around ¥2.38 billion in constructin costs. But the operator is suspected of padding the costs to obtain higher subsidies, investigative sources said.

The office intends to build cases on the two allegations in the belief that Yasunori Kagoike initiated the actions, the sources said.

 

                北朝鮮がまたミサイル 発射、ICBM

 

Ability to strike more of U.S. feared as North Korean ICBM test splashes down off Hokkaido

                         by and Staff Writers Jul 29,2017
 North Korea test-fired its second intercontinental ballistic missile in less than a month late Friday, with experts concluding that the launch flew higher and longer than the first and now puts a large chunk of the United States — including Chicago and Los Angeles — within range of Pyongyang’s ever-improving weapons systems.

Japan’s Defense Ministry said the missile, launched at 11:42 p.m. Friday from Mupyong-ni, around 60 kilometers (37 miles) from North Korea’s border with China, reached an estimated height of more than 3,500 km and traveled about 1,000 km, landing inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone, some 150 km northwest of Okushiri Island, a tiny islet about 18 km off the coast of Hokkaido.

 

The rare nighttime launch was fired on a very high or “lofted” trajectory, which limited the distance it traveled.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the missile flew for about 45 minutes, a flight that would put it about five minutes longer than the North’s first test of its ICBM, known as the Hwasong-14, on July 4.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un observed the second test, which he said had shown the country now had the ability to launch a surprise attack on the entire United States, state media reported.

“The test-fire reconfirmed the reliability of ICBM system, demonstrated the capability of making surprise launch of ICBM in any region and place any time, and clearly proved that the whole U.S. mainland is in the firing range of the DPRK missiles,” the official Korean Central News Agency quoted Kim as saying in a dispatch.

The report said that Kim had expressed “great satisfaction” after the missile hit a maximum height of 3,725 km and traveled 998 km before accurately landing in waters off Japan. KCNA said the test was aimed at confirming the maximum range and other technical aspects of the missile it claimed was capable of delivering a “large-sized, heavy nuclear warhead.”

DPRK is the acronym for the North’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

KCNA quoted Kim as saying Friday’s test was meant “to send a grave warning to the U.S. making senseless remarks, being lost to reason,” with the North Korean leader adding that “this would make the policymakers of the U.S. properly understand that the U.S., an aggression-minded state, would not go scot-free if it dares provoke the DPRK.

“If the Yankees brandish the nuclear stick on this land again despite our repeated warnings, we will clearly teach them manners with the nuclear strategic force,” Kim said.

In a statement, the Pentagon assessed that the missile was an ICBM — “as had been expected.”

While analysts had said the July 4 ICBM test could have struck parts of Alaska, some experts said the latest launch had significantly expanded the range.

David Wright, co-director of the U.S.-based Union of Concerned Scientists, said that based on the current information, the missile “could easily reach the U.S. West Coast and a number of major U.S. cities.”

Assuming the height and distance traveled are correct, he said, the missile would have a maximum range of about 10,400 km if flown on a standard trajectory.

“Los Angeles, Denver, and Chicago appear to be well within range of this missile, and Boston and New York may be just within range,” Wright said. “Washington, D.C., may be just out of range.”

However, he cautioned that this was dependent on a number of variables, including the size and weight of the warhead that would be carried atop the missile.

A senior Japanese defense official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, echoed this sentiment, telling The Japan Times that a number of variables at play — including thrust, speed and payload — made it a challenge to determine not only the potential range of the missile, but also if missile defense systems could intercept one headed for Japanese territory.

The North has unleashed a spate of missile tests in recent years, including 13 this year, according to a database compiled by the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in California.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has characterized Pyongyang’s frequent missile tests as “a new level of threat” and vowed Saturday to tackle the issue.

“In defiance of the international community’s strong protest and warning, North Korea again launched a ballistic missile,” Abe said after convening a National Security Council meeting. “We strongly protest against North Korea and condemn this in the harshest words.

“As long as North Korea continues with this kind of provocative action, there is no other choice than to work closely with the United States and South Korea, as well as with countries including China and Russia, and the international community, while further bolstering pressure” on the reclusive country.

Suga said Tokyo had immediately filed a protest with Pyongyang, denouncing the firing as a “clear violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions.”

The test also came at an uncertain time for the Abe administration as it reels from the resignation a day earlier of defense chief Tomomi Inada, who had been ensnared in an alleged cover-up of daily activity reports from Ground Self-Defense Force troops on a peacekeeping mission in South Sudan.

Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida has been asked by Abe to temporarily assume the defense portfolio in addition to his other duties.

He said later Saturday that the missile “appeared similar” to the model fired on July 4, lending credence to the possibility that it was one and the same.

In Washington, U.S. President Donald Trump blasted the Kim regime for its “latest reckless and dangerous action.”

Trump condemned the test and said that the North’s weapons and tests “further isolate North Korea, weaken its economy, and deprive its people.”

The United States, he said “will take all necessary steps” to ensure the security of the U.S. and its allies.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson also lambasted the test as “a blatant violation of multiple United Nations Security Council resolutions” and urged all nations to “take a strong public stance against North Korea.”

Tillerson had especially strong words for Beijing and Moscow, singling the two out as “enablers” of the Kim regime.

“As the principal economic enablers of North Korea’s nuclear weapon and ballistic missile development program, China and Russia bear unique and special responsibility for this growing threat to regional and global stability,” he said.

China is the North’s sole ally and economic lifeline, while Russian trade with the poverty-stricken country has soared amid rising tensions.

“As we and others have made clear, we will never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea nor abandon our commitment to our allies and partners in the region,” Tillerson added.

Friday’s test also prompted U.S. and South Korean military officials to discuss military response options, with the two countries’ later in the morning conducting a joint live-fire ballistic missile exercise. South Korea’s joint chiefs said the display of firepower showed their capabilities for a “precise strike on the enemy’s leadership,” the South’s Yonhap news agency reported.

In a statement, South Korean Defense Minister Song Young-moo also said the U.S. military would deploy “strategic assets” to the Korean Peninsula in response to the ICBM test.

“South Korea and the U.S. jointly fired surface-to-surface missiles, and will have strategic assets deployed (on the peninsula),” Yonhap quoted Song as saying. He did not elaborate on what assets would be deployed.

Strategic assets generally refer to high-profile weapons systems, including stealth bombers and aircraft carriers.

Shortly after the launch, South Korean President Moon Jae-in ordered an “alliance move” for the installation of four more Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) launchers stored at a southern U.S. military compound in the country, the presidential Blue House said.

This represented a sharp reversal of Moon’s earlier stance that U.S. Forces Korea must wait until the completion of an environmental impact assessment that was not expected to wrap up for several months.

Yonhap quoted South Korean officials as saying it would be a temporary or “field” deployment.

As for Japan, Euan Graham, director of the International Security Program at the Lowy Institute in Australia, said the Abe administration’s current political situation had left Tokyo in a poor position to effectively respond to North Korean provocations.

“Inada’s departure and Abe’s broader political difficulties … leaves Japan ill-equipped to react,” said Graham, who also served as a British diplomat in Pyongyang.

Beyond Inada’s resignation and a number of gaffes by a handful of Cabinet members, the prime minister himself is also grappling with his own favoritism scandals that have seen his support rate plummet.

But despite the inopportune timing, Graham said the launch had highlighted an increasingly clear reality for Tokyo.

“Japan is a front-line state — perhaps the front-line missile target for the DPRK in a war,” Graham said.

“People in the Japanese system already understand this,” Graham said. “They will be worried how the Japanese public reacts, especially as the missile re-entry was visible from Hokkaido.”

Graham was referring to a report earlier Saturday by public broadcaster NHK that several cameras in western Hokkaido had spotted a ball of light descending from the sky at 12:28 a.m., around the time when the missile was believed to be splashing down into the Sea of Japan.

The report could not be independently verified.

According to Graham, Abe could use the looming threat to seek a so-called conventional strike capability for Japan, something that could include the acquisition of cruise missiles and precision munitions for its new F-35 fighter jets — or at least stoke debate about the issue.

“It’s tricky for him, as the electorate will suspect … Abe of using North Korea to distract from scandal and rally support behind a security ‘crisis,’ ” Graham said, noting that the ICBM test could make the North Korean missile threat less abstract to the Japanese public “once (the missiles are) literally in plain view.”

North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un looks on during the test-fire of the Hwasong-14 intercontinental ballistic missile on July 4. | REUTERS

Image analysis reveals North Korea may have planned to send first ICBM test much closer to Japan

                                                                                           by Staff Writer   

A lot, it turns out.

 A new imagery analysis obtained exclusively by The Japan Times sheds some light on how the North views Japan and Tokyo’s American protector as it seeks to master the technology needed to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range missile capable of striking anywhere in the United States, a goal it inched closer to Friday with a second successful intercontinental ballistic missile test.

One image, taken from the North’s July 4 launch of the Hwasong-14 (HS-14) — its first ICBM — shows Kim observing the test through binoculars, his elbows planted firmly on a wooden desk with a virtually unreadable map of the missile’s trajectory spread across it.

Indecipherable to some, the photo languished as just one of scores of propaganda shots dispersed by the regime. That was until Nathan Hunt, an open-source intelligence analyst with the Washington-based Strategic Sentinel defense contractor, had a go at making the unreadable readable.

Through a complicated process using forensic image processing techniques to unskew and de-blur the photo, Hunt was able to craft a reproduction of how it might look to Kim as he sat at his observation desk.

Comparing the reassembled and readable map to a similar one seen in photos released by the North from its May 14 launch of an intermediate-range Hwasong-12 (HS-12) missile, Hunt was able to glean potentially key insights into the country’s missile-testing doctrine, and how neighboring Japan fits into the process.

On the map was something not seen before — a projected trajectory that “could have potentially put the missile inside Japan’s territorial waters,” the imagery analysis report prepared by the defense contractor said.

Territorial waters, as defined by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, are coastal waters extending at most 12 nautical miles (22 km) from a country’s coastline.

Despite lobbing a number of missiles into the Sea of Japan, including within Japan’s exclusive economic zone, which extends 200 nautical miles (370 km) from its coast, the North has yet to fling one so dangerously close to Japanese territory as seen in the reproduced image.

In March, rocketry experts with the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California used a method of map-analyzation similar to Hunt’s to determine that a military drill that fired four extended-range (ER) Scud missiles into waters off the coasts of Aomori and Akita prefectures had been intended to simulate the range needed to conduct a nuclear attack on U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni in Yamaguchi Prefecture.

That was the first time the North Koreans had been specific about plans for attacking U.S. forces in Japan with nuclear weapons, which they said would be used to “repel” a potential invasion.

But a test-firing by the North into or near Japan’s territorial waters would have “damaging consequences … even if they never intended the missile to fly that far and impact at that point,” the report said.

“Such a move would be dangerous on the part of North Korea and could have resulted in a military response from Japan to safeguard its territory,” it said.

Likely, said John Schilling, a North Korea expert and aerospace engineer, the map was purposely displayed by the regime in Pyongyang as an indication of its newfound capabilities.

“I think it is very likely that North Korea either intended to signal that the ICBM test could have reached the edge of Japanese territorial waters, or intended the missile to actually reach Japanese waters and fell short, but there is no way to know which,” Schilling said.

This sentiment was echoed by Ryan Barenklau, author of the image analysis report and CEO of Strategic Sentinel. “North Korea is becoming more bold as it gains experience with its arsenal and is progressing with its technology, inching itself along, testing the waters, seeing what the reactions are from their nudges against the status quo,” he said.

About Kim’s map display in the photo, Barenklau was clear: “I believe this was strategic signaling to the West more so than anything else.”

The North’s signaling, experts say, goes far beyond merely the July 4 and Iwakuni maps. It has long been a part of Pyongyang’s modus operandi. From its state-run propaganda machine, the North often releases tantalizing tidbits of information that analysts pore over to glean whatever information they can about the isolated and opaque regime.

Sometimes, this can lead to overthinking on the part of analysts, cautioned Joshua Pollack, editor of the U.S.-based Nonproliferation Review and a leading expert on nuclear and missile proliferation.

While Pollack called the new imagery analysis “very interesting,” he does not believe the map was an intentional signal in this instance.

“They didn’t make it especially easy to read this time,” he said. “Not everything is a prop.”

Instead, he suggested that the North had either “decided at the last minute to give themselves a greater margin of comfort, and the map didn’t reflect that” or simply missed their target.

“Either is possible,” Pollack added. “It’s a new missile and they’re flirting with the edge here.”

Still, the displays have grown increasingly worrisome for Japan, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Saturday labeling the North Korean threat to the country “grave and real.”

Japan, which hosts a large number of U.S. military bases, would be the staging point from which U.S. troops and materiel flowed through in the event of any conflict on the Korean Peninsula.

North Korea, by showing again that U.S. outposts — and Japanese cities — faced the risk of retaliation under such a scenario, has offered a clear warning to Tokyo: remain allied with the United States at your own peril.

“On the military front, Japan plays a critical role in U.S. strategy for defending South Korea, or attacking North Korea if it comes to that,” Schilling said.

The U.S. military has long known that its bases in South Korea would be the first to be attacked in any conflict, and so has maintained major logistics facilities, airfields, as well as the home port of the U.S. Navy’s 7th fleet, in Japan. U.S. forces there were, until recently, widely seen as immune to any North Korean strike.

But if the North, through its bluster and threats could persuade Japan to close its bases and its airspace to the U.S. in wartime, that would be a major blow in any conflict, Schilling said.

“The primary target of any North Korean ICBM is almost certainly the United States, but if having Kim pose in front of a map lets them also send a ‘we can kill you too, and we’re thinking about it’ message to Japan on the side, it would not be out of character for them to send that message,” he added.

“They can kill plenty of Japanese with proven Scud-ER and Nodong missiles, so this would just be a reminder.”

/

Japan, South Korea and U.S. plan international push to denuclearize North

Foreign ministers seek global push to condemn weapons programs

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Kyodo      

 

 

                                 夏 真っ盛り ! ブーゲンビリア が咲いた

 







                                                                                                                                                                                      Back to Page of Contents