US, Japanese Aegis Missile Defense Warships to Form Protective “Shield” Around Taiwan – Kris Osborn

The following piece first appeared on Warrior Maven, a Military Content Group member website.

A US-Japanese war preparation alliance is expanding its ability to track and counter Chinese ballistic missiles, anti-ship missiles, and even nuclear missiles with combined warship patrols armed with advanced Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) technology.

In a joint exercise called Resilient Shield 2024, the Japanese Self-Defense Forces merged BMD tactics with US Navy warships to refine targeting, networking, fire control, and intercept technologies, a US Navy essay stated. Although the exercise took place in a simulated computer-based environment, it was intended to assess US-Japanese threat detection, targeting and networking synergies with a mind to expanding a BMD envelope for both countries.

With technological advances, computer-based simulations are increasingly capable of closely replicating key performance parameters of weapons systems, along with actual simulated “live-fire” kinds of scenarios, data networking, and advanced targeting.

A US-Japanese BMD capability introduces extremely significant tactical dynamics as it could massively expand a missile-defense envelope throughout vulnerable parts of the Pacific theater. Both the US Navy and Japan operate Aegis-warships, as Japan is an Aegis partner. This is critical as it means both countries’ warships will operate with similar software, technological infrastructure, computing, and the ability to share target-track information.

The Aegis Combat System is an integrated suite of technologies engineered to use common computing standards, software, fire control, and highly sensitive radar detection to locate, track, and destroy incoming enemy ballistic missiles.

The most recent upgrades to Aegis, such as Baseline 10 and software-driven “tech-insertions,” enable a single system to perform both Ballistic Missile Defenses as well as Air-and-Cruise-Missile defense, meaning that anti-ship-missiles as well as ballistic missiles and even ICBMs can be tracked and intercepted.