Japan’s Type 88 launch in the northern Philippines was not just a dramatic live-fire event. It marked a more operational phase in allied deterrence near the South China Sea: Japanese anti-ship capability, Philippine territory and U.S.-led exercise infrastructure coming together in a real maritime-strike drill.
What happened at Balikatan 2026
On May 6, 2026, Japan’s Self-Defense Forces fired a Type 88 anti-ship missile during a joint maritime exercise with U.S., Australian and Philippine forces, according to Reuters reporting carried by Internazionale [7]. The missile hit a decommissioned Philippine Navy ship in waters facing the South China Sea [
7].
Stars and Stripes reported that Japanese troops launched the Type 88 surface-to-ship missile from Culili Point in Paoay, Philippines, and described it as the first time Japan fired an anti-ship missile outside its own territory [8]. A pre-exercise report also said Philippine officials expected the event to likely mark Japan’s first missile launch on foreign soil since World War II [
5].
The wording matters. Chinese sources and officials framed the event as an “offensive missile” launch . The weapon identified in multiple reports, however, was a Type 88 anti-ship or surface-to-ship missile used in a maritime-strike exercise .




