- The U.S. State Department approved a possible $340 million Foreign Military Sale to Japan for equipment and services supporting its upgraded Hyper Velocity Gliding Projectile program
- The package covers test preparation, range support, logistics, and transportation services aimed at strengthening Japan’s stand-off defense capability for remote island protection
The U.S. Department of State has approved a possible $340 million Foreign Military Sale to Japan for equipment and services supporting the country’s indigenous upgraded Hyper Velocity Gliding Projectile (HVGP) capability, according to a notification released on March 25, 2026.
The proposed package centers on test preparation, range support, transportation, and associated logistics services for Japan’s stand-off missile program.
The approval is directly tied to Japan’s effort to accelerate deployment and validation of its domestically developed long-range strike systems at a time of heightened focus on remote island defense and stand-off deterrence in the Indo-Pacific. Rather than supplying the missile itself, the package supports the infrastructure and technical services required to bring the upgraded HVGP capability into operational use.
According to the U.S. State Department, the Government of Japan requested equipment and services in support of its indigenous upgraded HVGP capability, including test preparation, test support, and transportation support.
The notification states that the package includes range support, test utility support including water, gas, and electricity, range surveillance, range safety including flight termination system reviews, radio frequency assignments, test plan generation, test data services, environmental and site approvals, office facilities, administrative services, transport of test equipment, procurement of measuring equipment, coordination meetings in the United States and Japan, and other related elements of logistics and program support.
The department said that equipment and services will be provided by the U.S. Government, with the total estimated cost set at $340 million.
According to the official statement, the proposed sale is intended to “support the foreign policy goals and national security objectives of the United States by improving the security of a major ally that is a force for political stability and economic progress in the Indo-Pacific.”
The statement further added that the proposed support package would improve Japan’s capability to meet current and future threats by providing defense for remote islands, noting that Japan would have no difficulty integrating the articles and services into its armed forces.
The HVGP is designed as a long-range stand-off strike weapon capable of traveling at very high speed on maneuvering flight paths. Such trajectories are intended to complicate interception by conventional missile defense systems and provide Japan with a survivable land-based strike option for defending remote islands and maritime approaches.
The approval comes just days before Japan’s Ground Self-Defense Force confirmed the first operational deployment of the Type-25 HVGP, formally fielding the system as part of its expanding stand-off defense architecture. That sequence underscores that the U.S. support package is part of a broader effort to sustain and refine the program as it moves from development into service.

