The Yomiuri newspaper reported on Sunday that Japan is considering the deployment of 1,000 long-range cruise missiles to boost its counterattack capability against China. The missiles would be existing arms that are modified to extend their range from 100 km (62 miles) to 1,000 km, government sources cited.
The arms would be launched by ships or aircraft, and would be stationed mainly around the southern Nansei islands, capable of reaching the coastal areas of North Korea and China, the Yomiuri said.
Representatives from Japan’s foreign ministry, however, did not immediately respond to the development.
Japan, which interprets its war-renouncing postwar constitution, which means it may use its military only for self-defense, has stepped up its military spending and taken a more assertive strategy in recent years. But it has refrained from deploying long-range missiles, among its limits on weapons that can strike targets on foreign soil.
Regional tensions ratcheted up this month after a visit by Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, to Taiwan, which is self-ruled but claimed by China. Beijing launched missiles near Taiwan and into Japan’s exclusive economic zone.