this post was submitted on 14 Apr 2026
127 points (94.4% liked)
Memes of Production
1590 readers
773 users here now
Seize the Memes of Production
An international (English speaking) socialist Lemmy community free of the “ML” influence of instances like lemmy.ml and lemmygrad. This is a place for undogmatic shitposting and memes from a progressive, anti-capitalist and truly anti-imperialist perspective, regardless of specific ideology.
Rules:
Be a decent person.
No racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, zionism/nazism, and so on.
Other Great Communities:
founded 4 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Literally not true 🧐
Just Google: "Is the Japanese military under US command when there is a national emergency?".
"No, the Japanese military—officially known as the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF)—is not automatically under United States command during a national emergency.
Under the current security framework and Japanese law, the JSDF is controlled by the Japanese Ministry of Defense, with the Prime Minister as the commander-in-chief.
Here is the breakdown of the command structure during emergencies:
Independent Command Chains: In an emergency, Japanese and U.S. forces operate under their respective chains of command, cooperating closely as allies rather than as a single integrated force.
Operational Coordination: While not technically under U.S. command, the JSDF is designed for extreme interoperability with the U.S. military. They use a "Joint Operations Command" (established in March 2025) and an "Alliance Coordination Mechanism" to synchronize efforts.
"Rear Support" Role: Japanese law allows the JSDF to provide "rear support" to U.S. forces in regional contingencies, but this is a coordinated activity rather than a command transfer.
Historical Context/Debate: The idea that Japan's forces would fall under a U.S. commander in a crisis is a subject of political debate within Japan, stemming from an unofficial "secret pact" in the 1950s. However, modern Japanese officials have explicitly stated they are not considering transferring command authority to the U.S.
Key 2025/2026 Shift:Japan has established a permanent Joint Operations Command (JJOC) to unify its own branches, allowing it to act more independently, while the U.S. is elevating its own forces in Japan (USFJ) to a "Joint Force Headquarters" to facilitate smoother peer-to-peer cooperation rather than unilateral command.
LLM slop is not welcome here.
What a weird conversation terminating comment. All the information is referenced. Are you suggesting we should disregard Google results even if the references confirm the information? The Japanese military IS NOT under US command in emergency situations. If you believe otherwise I look forward to your evidence to the contrary.
No, I'm saying you should link to actual sources instead of whatever an LLM decided to barf out (which may or may not be rife with inaccuracies).
Posting garbage like that is both a recipe for spreading misinformation (and we have strong evidence that LLMs greatly increase the potency and spread of misinformation), as well as devolving intellectual discourse into users just tossing slop back and get forth at each other. It would be trivial to make an LLM say the opposite of what you claim. So why should one trust the text spewed out by your LLM vs the text spewed out by someone else's? Regardless if what you say is true, giving us the garbage from an LLM as "supporting evidence" completely undermines what you are trying to say.
Find real sources and link them. It raises the quality of discussion and makes the internet an ever so slightly better place.
You've already been told by someone else that this is not inaccurate and you are fully able to research it yourself. If you want to "raise the quality of discussion" please do so. So far I see very little evidence of that.
The slop may happen to mostly be correct this time. Did you actually follow it up and verify it was true before you posted it?
Or did you post a question to Google and copy out the LLM response as if it said something true?
"The slop may happen to mostly be correct this time." I'm glad you understand that now. There really isn't anything else to discuss. This was never about AI Slop. That's just a distraction.
No, this was about AI slop. People shouldn't post AI slop.
That's all it's about. I was never disputing your claim, but your methods.