Japan’s Defence Minister, Gen Nakatani, has issued an uncharacteristically blunt assessment of the nation’s strategic posture. Speaking at a press conference in Tokyo, he warned that without a “critical” and immediate military expansion, a conflict with regional adversaries is not a possibility but an inevitability. This is not alarmism. This is a threat vector analysis from a man who sees the chessboard clearly.
The specific thrust of Nakatani’s warning centres on Japan’s current defence spending, which at 1.2% of GDP lags far behind the 2% NATO benchmark. He explicitly stated that the country must “achieve a fundamental strengthening of its defence capabilities within the next five years”. This is a strategic pivot away from the post-war pacifist constitution, a move that has been building momentum since the 2022 National Security Strategy. The question is not whether Japan will rearm, but whether it can do so in time.
Let us parse the hardware realities. Japan’s Maritime Self-Defence Force, once a formidable blue-water fleet, is now stretched thin against a Chinese navy that outnumbers it in every class of vessel. The Aegis Ashore missile defence systems, intended to counter North Korean and Chinese ballistic missiles, have been plagued by cost overruns and technical delays. The F-35 procurement has been hampered by supply chain issues and integration complexities. Meanwhile, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy has added more than 30 major surface combatants in the last five years alone. The numbers are not in Japan’s favour.
The intelligence community has long warned that the Taiwan Strait is a potential flashpoint. Nakatani’s comments directly tie Japanese security to the stability of that region. If the PLA launches an amphibious invasion, the US Seventh Fleet would likely respond. Japan’s bases in Okinawa and the straits of the Ryukyu Islands would become critical chokepoints. Without adequate anti-ship missile batteries, layered air defence, and a robust logistics network, Japan cannot support a prolonged engagement. The current stockpiles of precision-guided munitions are reportedly insufficient for more than two weeks of high-intensity conflict.
Cyber warfare is another vector. Japan’s Ministry of Defence has acknowledged a dramatic increase in state-sponsored cyber intrusions targeting defence contractors and critical infrastructure. These are not random acts of vandalism. They are reconnaissance for future kinetic operations. Disruption of Japan’s power grid or communications networks during a crisis would paralyse command and control. The new Defence Minister has called for a dedicated cyber command, but funding and personnel recruitment remain slow.
Nakatani’s warning also implicitly highlights a fundamental intelligence failure: the overreliance on US assurances. For decades, Japan deferred its defence to the American security umbrella. That umbrella is now fraying. The US defence industrial base is struggling to replenish ammunition stocks after Ukraine. The political will in Washington to defend Japanese territory against a nuclear-armed China is not guaranteed. This strategic dependence is a vulnerability that adversaries are actively probing.
The timeline is critical. Five years is a blink of an eye in military procurement. Building a single Arleigh Burke-class destroyer takes four years. Training a qualified F-35 pilot takes two years. Establishing a new garrison with hardened shelters, underground fuel depots, and redundant communications requires a decade. Nakatani is essentially admitting that Japan is in a race against time, and the current pace guarantees defeat.
What must happen now? The Defence Minister’s list is clear: increase defence spending to 2% of GDP immediately, accelerate F-35 and missile defence procurement, invest in long-range strike capabilities (including hypersonic weapons), and expand the size of the Ground Self-Defence Force for littoral operations. But these are paper solutions. The real test will be logistics, human capital, and political will. The Japanese public, long accustomed to peace dividends, must accept higher taxes and conscription debates.
If Japan does not ramp up now, the consequence is not a diplomatic failure but a national security catastrophe. The strategic pivot is unmistakeable. The only question is whether the rest of the world, particularly the United States, understands the gravity of this moment. Prepare for the worst. The warning has been given.









