SEOUL, April 23 (AJP) - Pyongyang slammed on Thursday Japan’s move to establish dedicated drone units within its Ground Self-Defense Force, calling the restructuring a "reckless" step toward reviving the country’s past imperial ambitions. State media reported that the modernization of Tokyo’s unmanned capabilities, paired with its recent acquisition of long-range strike weapons, has pushed the region into a dangerous new phase of military escalation.
The criticism comes as the Japanese Ministry of Defense prepares to launch specialized departments this month focused on the research and deployment of combat drones, according to reporting by the Yomiuri Shimbun. For Pyongyang, these technical upgrades are not merely defensive adjustments but are evidence that Japan is abandoning its post-war pacifist stance in favor of a "pre-emptive strike" doctrine aimed at its neighbors, including South Korea and the broader region.
The commentary released by the Korean Central News Agency pointed to a string of recent Japanese military expansions, including the procurement of American Tomahawk cruise missiles. It specifically highlighted the deployment of Type 12 surface-to-ship missiles in Kumamoto and high-speed glide weapons in Shizuoka. These systems, which allow Japan to strike targets from outside an enemy’s firing range, are being characterized by North Korean officials as the tools of a "war chariot" accelerating toward overseas aggression.
While Tokyo has maintained that its military buildup is a necessary response to the shifting security landscape in East Asia, North Korea argued that the 1,000-kilometer range of Japan’s new missile variants far exceeds what is required for "minimum necessary" self-defense. The state media report urged the international community to stay alert, claiming that the integration of these high-tech offensive assets is stoking the "war fever" of Japanese militarism.
Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi has stated that the lessons from the war in Ukraine, where drone technology has rapidly evolved, make it essential for Japan to adopt new methods of combat.
Japan currently plans to spend roughly 5 trillion yen (approximately 33 billion dollars) on standoff defense capabilities through 2027, according to the Japanese government’s 2022 Defense Buildup Program.
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