Six MQ-9 Reapers remain in Okinawa
The US Marine Corps has officially announced that six MQ-9 Reaper reconnaissance drones, which have been based at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa since August 2024, will remain in place — and not for a couple of weeks, but indefinitely. This is not another temporary deployment. This is a signal: the United States is strengthening its presence in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, and it is doing so with the help of drones that see everything.
These vehicles are assigned to the 3rd Squadron of unmanned aerial vehicles (VMU-1) of the 24th Marine Aviation Group, part of the 1st Aviation Wing.
Drones from Kadena — the eyes of Marines in the Pacific Ocean
The MQ-9 Reaper is not just a camera in the sky. It is a heavy reconnaissance drone with the possibility of round-the-clock patrolling, capable of staying in the air for up to 27 hours. It is equipped with powerful optics, radar systems and can carry weapons. From Okinawa, he controls not only the waters around Japan, but also the approaches to Taiwan, the East China Sea, and southern China.
From now on, these drones will operate from Kadena all the time, which dramatically increases operational readiness and reduces reaction time.
Typhon in Iwakuni is not just a launcher, but a signal
At the same time, in September, the Typhon missile system is being deployed at the Marine Corps Air Base in Iwakuni and in the surrounding areas. She will take part in the Resolute Dragon exercises (September 11-25). Typhon is not just a replacement for old systems: It is a mobile complex capable of launching both anti-ship missiles and long-range ballistic targets.
Its deployment in Japan — for the first time — shows that the United States is ready to act at a great distance from its bases. And they do it on the territory of an ally.
Agreement with Japan: now we fly together
The decision to abandon drones and deploy Typhon was made possible by an agreement reached in July 2024 between the United States and Japan at the level of defense and foreign ministers. The parties agreed to expand cooperation in the field of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR).
Data from the MQ-9 can now be shared with the Japanese Self-Defense Forces. It's not just coordination, it's a unified surveillance network that makes the region more transparent to allies and more dangerous to potential adversaries.
Sources
- Stars and Stripes — U.S. Marine Corps extends MQ-9 Reaper deployment at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa.
- Asianews.network — confirmation of up to six MQ-9s at Kadena to bolster surveillance over the Nansei Islands.
- Newsweek — U.S. lengthens Okinawa Reaper mission amid rising tensions and regular East China Sea patrols.
- USNI News — Typhon missile system deployed at MCAS Iwakuni for Resolute Dragon exercises (11–25 Sep), the first of its kind in Japan.