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Japan, Indonesia Launch Talks on Warship Transfer Deal
(MENAFN) Japan and Indonesia have launched working-level discussions on the potential transfer of a Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) naval vessel to Jakarta, in a move that underscores the accelerating pace of defense cooperation between the two nations.
The agreement emerged from a bilateral meeting in Tokyo between Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi and Indonesian Defense Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, Japan's Defense Ministry confirmed.
During the talks, Sjafrie signaled Jakarta's appetite for deeper collaboration on defense equipment and technology — specifically flagging interest in Asagiri-class destroyers, aging but capable general-purpose warships that have served as a backbone of Japan's naval operations since their commissioning in the late 1980s. The vessels are engineered for anti-submarine and surface warfare missions.
Both ministers endorsed a working-level framework, established just last month, to examine the specifics of potential equipment transfers and broader defense collaboration.
The development follows Tokyo's landmark decision in April to ease long-standing restrictions on exporting lethal military hardware — a policy shift that has rapidly unlocked new defense-industrial partnerships across the Asia-Pacific. Japan has since accelerated security cooperation with the Philippines and New Zealand as part of a wider regional strategy.
For Indonesia, securing the destroyers could meaningfully bolster its naval modernization drive as maritime security pressures intensify across the region.
No formal transfer agreement has been announced, but the opening of structured talks marks a consequential milestone — and a clear reflection of Japan's increasingly assertive posture in regional security affairs.
The agreement emerged from a bilateral meeting in Tokyo between Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi and Indonesian Defense Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, Japan's Defense Ministry confirmed.
During the talks, Sjafrie signaled Jakarta's appetite for deeper collaboration on defense equipment and technology — specifically flagging interest in Asagiri-class destroyers, aging but capable general-purpose warships that have served as a backbone of Japan's naval operations since their commissioning in the late 1980s. The vessels are engineered for anti-submarine and surface warfare missions.
Both ministers endorsed a working-level framework, established just last month, to examine the specifics of potential equipment transfers and broader defense collaboration.
The development follows Tokyo's landmark decision in April to ease long-standing restrictions on exporting lethal military hardware — a policy shift that has rapidly unlocked new defense-industrial partnerships across the Asia-Pacific. Japan has since accelerated security cooperation with the Philippines and New Zealand as part of a wider regional strategy.
For Indonesia, securing the destroyers could meaningfully bolster its naval modernization drive as maritime security pressures intensify across the region.
No formal transfer agreement has been announced, but the opening of structured talks marks a consequential milestone — and a clear reflection of Japan's increasingly assertive posture in regional security affairs.
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