In a clear message to Beijing, Japan plans to station powerful anti-aircraft missiles on Yonaguni by 2031. Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi’s revelation highlights Tokyo’s pivot toward bolstering defenses near Taiwan, only 100 km away. The surface-to-air systems can neutralize planes and ballistic missiles, ramping up pressure on China.
Speaking to the press, Koizumi outlined the 2030-2031 timeline, a first for such specifics. This announcement unfolds amid frosty diplomatic ties, following PM Sane Takaiichi’s assertion that Taiwan contingencies directly imperil Japan. Her comments drew China’s ire, leading to travel advisories and export curbs on Japanese tech.
China insists Taiwan belongs to it unequivocally, decrying external commentary as interference. Japan’s military recalibration, announced in 2022, redirects resources from Russia to East China Sea hotspots, including repeated Chinese vessel intrusions near Senkaku—Diaoyu to Beijing, about 150 km from Yonaguni.
The island’s SDF base, operational since 2016, features constant surveillance of PLA Navy moves. Locals, who voted for it in 2015, now grapple with war jitters despite the island’s serene reputation for unique wildlife. Koizumi’s recent visit promised briefings to 1,500 residents on the missile plans.
As Tokyo fortifies its frontier, the move underscores a broader Indo-Pacific realignment. Allies watch closely, while Beijing’s response could dictate the pace of escalation. Japan’s strategy blends deterrence with readiness, potentially stabilizing or inflaming the volatile strait.