Kōji Yamazaki Explained

Kōji Yamazaki
Native Name Lang:ja
Office:Chief of Staff, Joint Staff
Primeminister:Shinzo Abe
Yoshihide Suga
Fumio Kishida
Term Start:April 1, 2019
Term End:March 30, 2023
Predecessor:Katsutoshi Kawano
Successor:Yoshihide Yoshida
Birth Date:16 January 1961
Office2:Chief of the Ground Staff
Primeminister2:Shinzo Abe
Term Start2:August 8, 2017
Term End2:March 31, 2019
Predecessor2:Toshiya Okabe
Successor2:Goro Yuasa
Birth Place:Nishikatsura, Yamanashi, Japan
Allegiance: Japan
Serviceyears:1983–2023
Rank: General
Commands:Chief of Staff, Joint Staff
Chief of the Ground Staff, JGSDF
Northern Army
Vice Chief of Staff, Joint Staff
9th Division
Director General, Personnel Department, Ground Staff Office
4th Engineer Brigade
Alma Mater:National Defense Academy of Japan

General is a Japanese retired general who served as the Chief of Staff, Joint Staff of the Japan Self-Defense Forces from April 2019 to March 2023. He previously served as the Chief of the Ground Staff at the JGSDF from August 2017 to March 2019.

Career

Yamazaki graduated from the 27th semester of the Civil Engineering Department of the National Defense Academy of Japan in March 1983, and started his career as a military engineer, and later held various key positions in the engineering field and staff positions. He also served as the Director of the Logistics Management Division, as commander of the 8th Facility Battalion while subsequently serving as the Facility Manager of the 8th Division (Japan) headquarters and as the Sendai garrison commander under the North Eastern Army in March 2001. Yamazaki was also the commanding General of the 4th Engineer Brigade, based in Camp Okubo in Uji, Kyoto Prefecture in 2008. In August 2002, he served at the Affairs Section of the Ground Staff Office, Human Resources Department; and was named as the chief executive of the 1st Personnel Division of the Personnel Division at the Ground Staff Office.

Yamazaki also attended various courses in the country and abroad, as he completed the Ranger Course of the JGSDF, where he is a qualified member of the Special Forces Group and was awarded the JGSDF Ranger Badge. He also completed the CO-OP program, a joint collaboration project of the JGSDF and the United States Army, Japan in 1995, where he was among the first students to complete the course.[1] Then-Colonel Yamazaki also studied at the National War College in Washington, D.C., where he graduated in April 2005. He served as a researcher at the Ground Self-Defense Force Research Division in August 2006, before being named as the Ground Planning Officer in the Equipment Planning Department 4 months later, in December 2006. He was named as the commander of Facility No. 4 and thereafter served as commander of the Okubo Garrison in Camp Okubo in August 2008, and was named as the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Western Army in June 2010. He became the Director General, Personnel Department of the Ground Staff Office in July 2012. Yamazaki was named as the commander of the 9th Division in August 2014 before becoming the Vice Chief of Staff, Joint Staff in March 2015; and became commander of the Northern Army, based at Sapporo in Hokkaidō in July 2016.

In August 2017, he was appointed 35th Chief of the Ground Staff of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force, the highest position in the JGSDF after the resignation of General Toshiya Okabe and former Defense Minister Tomomi Inada amidst claims over a cover up scandal within the Ministry of Defense, exposing the danger Japanese peacekeepers were facing in South Sudan.[2] As the Chief of the Ground Staff, he strengthened Japan's strategic partnerships and mutual defense policies in the Asia-Pacific Region, such as strengthening cooperation to the Philippines, where he met with then-Commanding General of the Philippine Army Lieutenant General Macairog Alberto,[3] and the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines General Benjamin Madrigal Jr.;[4] and the United States, where he met numerous US military generals and continued to enhance the US-Japan military relations.[1]

In April 2019, Yamazaki was appointed by then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as the Chief of Staff, Joint Staff, the JSDF's highest position. As the Chief of the Joint Staff, he continued his approach on nourishing Japan's role in the Asia-Pacific and abroad, such as the United States, where he met with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark A. Milley; in Israel, where he met Lieutenant General Aviv Kochavi;[5] in South Korea, where he met two Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Park Han-ki and General Won In-choul,;[6] in India, where he met with General Bipin Rawat,[7] and other countries such as Brazil, where he met with the Commander of the Brazilian Army Army General Edson Leal Pujol.[8] General Yamazaki also vowed to strengthen Japan's military capabilities and ensuring that Japan can defend its sovereignty in the East China Sea, particularly in the Senkaku Islands, as the country faces territorial disputes and incursions from China's China Coast Guard, the People's Liberation Army Navy, and the People's Liberation Army Air Force.[9] Yamazaki also vowed to strengthen Japan's presence in the East China Sea and in the South China Sea, and maintain the status quo in securing the Taiwan Strait, as Taiwan and China continues to escalate its tensions amidst a possible invasion of Taiwan by the People's Liberation Army.[6]

On May 19, 2022, General Yamazaki was the first high ranked JSDF officer to attend a NATO Military Chiefs of Defense meeting in Brussels, Belgium, and expanded mutual cooperation efforts between the JSDF and NATO within the global scene.[10] This was also expanded during Yamazaki's meeting with the NATO Chair of the NATO Military Committee Lieutenant Admiral Rob Bauer, where the two leaders collaborated in enhancing Japan's partnership with the NATO alliance.[11] Yamazaki was initially set to retire on 16 January 2022, as he reached his mandatory military retirement age as Chief of Staff, Joint Staff, of 62 years old. Yamazaki's term as Chief of Staff, Joint Staff was extended for 6 months under an ordinance signed by the Ministry of Defense, and is set to last until 15 July 2023.[12] However, his extensions was cut short and he retired from the service on 30 March 2023, where he was replaced by General Yoshihide Yoshida.[13] On 12 July 2023, Yamazaki was appointed to serve as an advisor to the Ministry of Defense, where he replaced Kazuhisa Shimada.[14]

Biography

Dates of promotion

Insignia Rank Date
Second LieutenantMarch 1983
Lieutenant Colonel July 1997
ColonelJanuary 2002
Major GeneralAugust 2008
Lieutenant GeneralAugust 2014
GeneralAugust 2017

Awards

Defensive memorial cordons

Notes and References

  1. Web site: JGSDF members work with U.S. Soldiers, gain personal development skills through CO-OP program . www.army.mil . en.
  2. News: Japan's defense minister expected to resign on Friday, media say . 5 September 2020.
  3. News: JGSDF chief visits PH Army counterpart . www.pna.gov.ph . en.
  4. News: News . G. M. A. . Japan Ground Forces chief pays courtesy call on AFP's Madrigal . GMA News Online . en.
  5. News: Algemeiner . The . For First Time, Japanese Military Chief Visits Israel . Algemeiner.com.
  6. News: US, Japan, South Korea generals hold first meeting since outbreak . Nikkei Asia.
  7. News: P . Rajat . Apr 15 . it / TNN / Updated . LAC: China resorted to 'my way or no way' policies but India stood firm, says Gen Rawat India News - Times of India . The Times of India . en.
  8. Web site: DefesaNet - Brasil-Japão - Cooperação militar em diversas áreas na pauta de viagem oficial do Comandante do Exército ao Japão . DefesaNet . pt.
  9. Web site: Japanese Defense Head Warns of Chinese Intrusions Near Senkaku Islands . USNI News . 2 August 2019.
  10. Web site: nikkei . Japan's top uniformed officer to attend 1st NATO military chiefs meeting . May 17, 2022 . https://archive.today/20220516223851/https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/International-relations/Japan-s-top-uniformed-officer-to-attend-1st-NATO-military-chiefs-meeting . May 16, 2022.
  11. Web site: NATO and Japan are natural partners, says Chair of the NATO Military Committee . NATO . en.
  12. Web site: 防   衛   省   発   令 .
  13. News: Yoshida Tapped as Japan's Next Joint Staff Chief . 時事通信ニュース . ja.
  14. News: INC . SANKEI DIGITAL . 島田前防衛次官が顧問退任 防衛省 . 産経ニュース . 12 July 2023 . ja.
  15. https://www.mod.go.jp/j/press/jinji/2019/04/01a.pdf 防衛省発令(将人事)2019年4月1日
  16. News: Japan honors the fallen . www.army.mil . en.
  17. News: U.S. Indo-Pacific Commander Presents Gen. Yamazaki with Legion of Merit . U.S. Indo-Pacific Command.
  18. Web site: Australian Gazette.