Japanese island could become an unsinkable US aircraft carrier

In this aerial image, Mageshima Island is seen on July 26, 2018.
Hong Kong (CNN)Three
square miles of volcanic rock on the edge of the East China Sea may one
day be used as an unsinkable aircraft carrier for the United States Navy in the event of war in Asia.
Japan's
government announced this week that it's buying Mageshima Island, an
uninhabited outcrop 21 miles (34 kilometers) from the southernmost
Japanese main island of Kyushu.
The island, most of which is owned by a privately held Tokyo development company, is uninhabited and hosts two intersecting unpaved runways that were abandoned under a previous development project.
The
Japanese government said the runways will be paved and used for US Navy
and Marine Corps planes to simulate aircraft carrier landings, though
it did not give a time frame in which that could be accomplished as the
deal still needs to be finalized.
But
once suitable facilities are constructed, the island could also become a
permanent base for Japan's Self Defense Forces as Tokyo looks to
strengthen its position along the East China Sea, where it faces
competing claims from China over the Japanese-administered Senkaku islands, known as the Diaoyu islands in Chinese.
The
"purchase of Mageshima Island is extremely important and serves for
strengthening deterrence by the Japan-US alliance as well as Japan's
defense capability," Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga
said in announcing the deal.
US military officials in Japan said they could not comment on the purchase.
Buying
Mageshima has been the subject of talks for years. Tasuton Airport, the
company that owns most of the island, finally reached agreement with
the government in late November.
The
island was identified as a suitable site for use by the US as a
permanent base for field carrier landing practice under a 2011 agreement
outlining the realignment of US forces in Japan.
Spreading out US forces
The
$146 million deal also comes as the US military is hearing calls to
increase the number of its strategic bases in East Asia in the face of a
growing Chinese missile arsenal.
The majority of US combat air forces in Japan are concentrated in just six bases.
Recent studies, including one from the United States Study Center at the University of Sydney published in August, say with their current resources the US forces would be vulnerable to Chinese missile strikes early in any conflict.
One way to mitigate that is to spread US troops and assets out among more bases.
"Over
time, the diversification of Japanese and American bases (individual or
joint) will be a trend," said Corey Wallace, an Asia security analyst
at Freie University in Berlin. "The alliance would be more resilient if
bases and hardware were more dispersed."
The
theory goes, the more bases you have, the more missiles an adversary
would need to fire to overwhelm its target and gain an advantage in a
combat scenario.
Permanent land
bases are considered more valuable than aircraft carriers, because they
can withstand a great number of munitions. In theory, a carrier can be
taken out with a single missile or torpedo.
Battle damage to land bases can also be repaired much more quickly than a complex war machine like an aircraft carrier.
"When
you target and sink an aircraft carrier it is irreversible," said
Collin Koh, research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies in Singapore.
As for an
island? "At the very least it doesn't sink.... You can take the time and
effort to bring it back to operation again," Koh said.

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