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Japan Sends Troops to NATO Ukraine Mission in Historic First
(MENAFN) Japan is set to deploy military personnel to a NATO mission supporting Ukraine on German soil for the first time in the country's postwar history, local media reported Friday.
The Defense Ministry confirmed that four members of its Self-Defense Forces will be stationed at the NATO Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine headquarters in Wiesbaden, western Germany, beginning Monday on one-year assignments, media reported.
The contingent comprises two members of the Ground Self-Defense Force, one from the Maritime Self-Defense Force, and one from the Air Self-Defense Force. Their duties will primarily involve coordination and liaison work tied to military support and training activities for Ukraine.
Officials were careful to emphasize that the deployed personnel will not participate in combat operations and face no direct prospect of battlefield involvement.
Tokyo framed the deployment as a strategic learning opportunity, stating the mission will help sharpen Japan's own defense capabilities by drawing lessons from the evolving forms of modern warfare on display in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict.
The Defense Ministry also positioned the move as part of a broader push to deepen Japan-NATO cooperation, amid rising concern that security threats in Europe and the Indo-Pacific are growing increasingly intertwined — a convergence that has drawn Tokyo closer to the Western alliance in recent years.
The Defense Ministry confirmed that four members of its Self-Defense Forces will be stationed at the NATO Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine headquarters in Wiesbaden, western Germany, beginning Monday on one-year assignments, media reported.
The contingent comprises two members of the Ground Self-Defense Force, one from the Maritime Self-Defense Force, and one from the Air Self-Defense Force. Their duties will primarily involve coordination and liaison work tied to military support and training activities for Ukraine.
Officials were careful to emphasize that the deployed personnel will not participate in combat operations and face no direct prospect of battlefield involvement.
Tokyo framed the deployment as a strategic learning opportunity, stating the mission will help sharpen Japan's own defense capabilities by drawing lessons from the evolving forms of modern warfare on display in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict.
The Defense Ministry also positioned the move as part of a broader push to deepen Japan-NATO cooperation, amid rising concern that security threats in Europe and the Indo-Pacific are growing increasingly intertwined — a convergence that has drawn Tokyo closer to the Western alliance in recent years.
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