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Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces |  | Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces: Encyclopedia II - Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces |  | Following Japan's surrender to the United States at the conclusion of World War II, and Japan's subsequent occupation, Japan's entire imperial military was dissolved in the new 1947 constitution which states, "The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes." Japan's current navy falls under the umbrella of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) as the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF).
The Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) ...
See also:Naval history of Japan, Naval history of Japan - Prehistory, Naval history of Japan - Early historical period, Naval history of Japan - Yayoi Period, Naval history of Japan - Yamato Period, Naval history of Japan - Medieval period, Naval history of Japan - Mongol invasions 1274–1281, Naval history of Japan - Wakou piracy 13th–16th century, Naval history of Japan - Warring States period 15th–16th century, Naval history of Japan - European contacts, Naval history of Japan - Invasion of Korea and the Ryukyus, Naval history of Japan - Oceanic trade 16th–17th century, Naval history of Japan - Invasion project of the Philippines, Naval history of Japan - Seclusion 1640–1840, Naval history of Japan - Modernization: Bakumatsu period 1853-1868, Naval history of Japan - Birth of a modern Navy, Naval history of Japan - Meiji restoration and creation of the Imperial Japanese Navy, Naval history of Japan - Sino-Japanese War, Naval history of Japan - Russo-Japanese War, Naval history of Japan - World War II, Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces, Naval history of Japan - Notes |  | | Naval history of Japan, Naval history of Japan - Birth of a modern Navy, Naval history of Japan - Early historical period, Naval history of Japan - European contacts, Naval history of Japan - Invasion of Korea and the Ryukyus, Naval history of Japan - Invasion project of the Philippines, Naval history of Japan - Medieval period, Naval history of Japan - Meiji restoration and creation of the Imperial Japanese Navy, Naval history of Japan - Modernization: Bakumatsu period 1853-1868, Naval history of Japan - Mongol invasions 1274–1281, Naval history of Japan - Notes, Naval history of Japan - Oceanic trade 16th–17th century, Naval history of Japan - Prehistory, Naval history of Japan - Russo-Japanese War, Naval history of Japan - Seclusion 1640–1840, Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces, Naval history of Japan - Sino-Japanese War, Naval history of Japan - Wakou piracy 13th–16th century, Naval history of Japan - Warring States period 15th–16th century, Naval history of Japan - World War II, Naval history of Japan - Yamato Period, Naval history of Japan - Yayoi Period, "Strike South" Group, Fleet Faction - Navy political group, Treaty Faction - Navy political group, May 15 Incident - coup d'etat with Navy support, Imperial Way Faction, Japanese nationalism, The Japanese Navy Taiwan and South Pacific Mandate political project |  | |
|  |  | Naval history of Japan: Encyclopedia II - Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces
Naval history of Japan - Self-Defense Forces
Main article: Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Following Japan's surrender to the United States at the conclusion of World War II, and Japan's subsequent occupation, Japan's entire imperial military was dissolved in the new 1947 constitution which states, "The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as a means of settling international disputes." Japan's current navy falls under the umbrella of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) as the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF).
The Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) had an authorized strength in 1992 of 46,000 and maintained some 44,400 personnel and operated 155 major combatants, including thirteen submarines, sixty-four destroyers and frigates, forty-three mine warfare ships and boats, eleven patrol craft, and six amphibious ships. It also flew some 205 fixed-wing aircraft and 134 helicopters. Most of these aircraft were used in antisubmarine and mine warfare operations.
Other related archives"Strike South" Group, 1185, 1223, 1281, 1341, 1350, 1376, 1385, 14, 1543, 1557, 1578, 1580s, 1592, 1598, 1600, 1604, 1605, 1606, 1609, 1610, 1613, 1638, 16th, 16th century, 1787, 1797, 17th century, 1809, 1837, 1840s, 1844, 1846, 1848, 1849, 1852, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1857, 1858, 1863, 1864, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1882, 1884, 1886, 1894, 1895, 1905, 1920, 1945, 1947, 3rd century BCE, 3rd century CE, 5th century BCE, 663, Asahi Maru, Chiyodagata, Date Maru, Hou-Ou Maru, Kaiyou Maru, Mississippi, Plymouth, San Buena Ventura, Saratoga, Shouhei Maru, Susquehanna, ?, Aberdeen, April 28, Asuka period, August 1, Austronesian, Azuchi-Momoyama period, Baekje, Bakufu, Battle of Hakusukinoe, Battle of Myeongnyang, Battle of Tsushima, Battle of Yalu River, Bombardment of Kagoshima, Bombardment of Shimonoseki, Boshin war, Boxer Rebellion, Britain, British Navy, Canton, Charles W. King, Chen-Yuan, China, Chinese Empire, Christianity, Closed Country, Commodore Perry, Convention of Kanagawa, Cornelis Matelief, Daimyo, Dan-no-ura, Dejima, Dutch, Dutch Admiral, Dutch East India Company, Economic history, Edo, Edo period, Educational history, Emile Bertin, Enomoto, Fleet Faction, French Navy, Genpei War, Gloire, Glossary, Goa, Goryeo, HMS Mariner, Harris Treaty, Heian period, Heisei, Hokkaido, Holland, Honshu, Ice Age, Iki, Imperial Japanese Navy, Imperial Japanese Navy of World War Two, Imperial Way Faction, Ishikawajima, Ito, Izu Peninsula, James Biddle, James Glynn, Japan, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, Japan Self-Defense Forces, Japan in WWI, Japanese, Japanese expansionism, Japanese nationalism, Jho Sho Maru, Jin, Jingu, Jomon, July 29, July 8, Kamakura period, Kamikaze, Kankō Maru, Kanrin Maru, Kemmu restoration, Kofun period, Korea, Korean peninsula, Kotetsu, Kubilai Khan, Kure, Kyushu, La Gloire, La Perouse, Late Tokugawa shogunate, Liaotung peninsula, Lisbon, Léonce Verny, Macao, Malacca, Manila, March 31, Matthew Perry, May 15 Incident, Meiji Emperor, Meiji Restoration, Meiji period, Military history, Minamoto, Mongol invasions of Japan, Mori, Muromachi period, Nagasaki, Nagasaki Naval Training Center, Nakahama Manjiro, Nanban trade period, Napoleonic Wars, Nara period, Naval Battle of Hakodate, Netherlands, North-South Court, Occupied Japan, Oda Nobunaga, Odaiba, Okinawa, Oregon, Osaka, Otokichi, Pacific Ocean, Paixhans, Paleolithic, Pattani, Philippines, Portuguese, Post-Occupation Japan, Rangaku, Red Seal Ships, Red seal ships, Russian, Russo-Japanese War, Ryukyu, Sakhalin, Sakoku, Samguk Sagi, Sasebo, Satsuma, Satsuma Rebellion, Second Sino-Japanese war, Sendai, September 17, Seven-Year War, Shimabara Rebellion, Shimazu Tadatsune, Shogun, Shōwa period, Siam, Silla, Sino-French War, Sino-Japanese war, Southeast Asian, Taira, Taishō period, Tang Dynasty, The Japanese Navy Taiwan and South Pacific Mandate political project, Thomas Blake Glover, Ting Yuan, Togo, Tokugawa, Tokugawa Ieyasu, Tokugawa shogunate, Tokyo, Tokyo Bay, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Treaty Faction, Triple Intervention, Tsushima, Turtle ships, U.S. Navy, United States, United States Congress, United States Navy, Uraga Channel, Wa, Wakou, Wakō, Warring States period, Washington Naval Treaty, Wei, William Adams, World War II, Wu, Yalu River, Yamada Nagamasa, Yamamoto, Yamato period, Yayoi, Yayoi period, Yi Sun-sin, Yi Sunsin, Yokosuka, anti-submarine, atakebune, carrack, constitution, constitutional, cotton, cruisers, daimyo, escort aircraft carriers, extraterritoriality, galleon, galleons, gunboat, gunboat diplomacy, guns, imperialism, ironclad, junk, junks, metallurgy, militaristic, navy, samurai, seclusion policy, shipbuilding, shogun, shoguns, silver, spices, submarine, suzerainty, the Black Ships, topographical, torpedo boats, warships, whaling
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Self-Defense Forces", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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