Posted on 12/04/2008 9:22:15 AM PST by GATOR NAVY
NAHA, Okinawa The Okinawa Assembly is counting on President-elect Barack Obamas promise of change.
The change the assembly wants is the scuttling of plans to move U.S. Marine air operations on Okinawa to a new air facility to be built on Camp Schwab.
After winning control of the prefectural assembly in June, opposition parties to Japans ruling Liberal Democratic Party passed a resolution against the project, which is part of broad realignment plans for U.S. troops in Japan.
We hope that the new U.S. administration will give a full consideration to the voices of Okinawa, who do not want a replacement airport for Marine Corps Air Station on the island, Zenshin Takamine, speaker of the Okinawa Prefectural Assembly, said Wednesday.
Takamine, a Social Democratic Party member from Ishigaki Island, said Seiji Maehara, the deputy head of Democratic Party Japan and part of the national opposition coalition, visited members of Obamas foreign affairs staff in June during the presidential campaign.
They reached an understanding that it would be difficult to realize the relocation plan, Takamine said.
The assemblys stance is not to allow any new military base, he added, saying it would be a further burden on people on Okinawa.
In 2006, the U.S. and Japan agreed to close Marine Corps Air Station Futenma once a new air facility is built on the lower part of Camp Schwab and landfill in Oura Bay, in rural northeast Okinawa.
Once that is done, some 8,000 Marines and their families are to move to Guam as part of a major drawdown of the Marine presence on Okinawa.
That is supposed be completed in 2014. In addition, camps Kinser and Lester and part of Camp Foster are slated to be closed.
Japans defense and foreign affairs ministers have stated the Futenma relocation project will proceed despite the assemblys opposition.
U.S. officials also say the realignment plan is on track.
But the assembly hopes Obamas new administration will turn the tide against the project. They want MCAS Futenma and the other camps closed, but not on the condition a new airport be built on Camp Schwab.
About 75 percent of the U.S. military facilities in Japan are concentrated on Okinawa, which consists of only 0.6 percent of the national land, Takamine said.
Along with crime and accidents involving servicemembers, he said, the Okinawan people have long suffered from aircraft noise and various environmental pollution caused by military activities.
The assembly also objects to the new airport plan because its members say it could harm sea life, from an endangered saltwater manatee called a dugong to plants, algae and blue coral.
I believe that the idea of reclaiming such a bountiful ocean into land to build a replacement military facility would not be internationally accepted, Takamine said.
Personally, I have a high expectation for the new (U.S.) administration, he said. I hope that many issues involving military bases on Okinawa that have been stalled in the past will find solutions under the new administration.
Interesting.
They’re gonna love Guam.
Obama has broken just about all of his campaign promises already, and he hasn't even been sworn yet.
The pile of people under the Obama bus has set a new outdoor record.
Gosh what will Murtha do with the troops he was going to deploy to Okinawa? has he been informed?
On another note.. I lived on Guam for three years, while spouse was in military, it was great...
Move ‘em to Pennsylvania. That way Murtha will know where they are.
The US military is still in Okinawa!!! OMG, we need to pull out now. It is a quagmire!!!
Having spent many years there I can attest that Okinawa is an ass wart on the butt of Japan.
I was never stationed in Okinawa but I spent a lot of time there. When I was on the Sasebo amphibs Okinawa was our first and last stop nearly every time we got underway because that was where we picked up and dropped off the Marines we carried.
I much preferred Okinawa to Guam. I’ll never forget (or forgive) the Guam police’s attitude when one of my seamen was badly injured by a hit and run local-”he’s just a sailor, not a big deal”.
The Okinawa Assembly... wants... the scuttling of plans to move U.S. Marine air operations on Okinawa to a new air facility to be built on Camp Schwab.
I spent 4 hours total on that rock. Two hours going and two coming (refueling). That was too long.
>>some 8,000 Marines and their families are to move to Guam as part of a major drawdown of the Marine presence on Okinawa.
And what exactly will keep the Okinawans from worse poverty than they already have? Pull that many Marines out and you have a vacuum. What takes its place? Certainly not tourism! Been there on liberty. Trust me; there ain’t many worse places.
Sure, everyone can count on Obama to want to weaken America’s military — the only question is which steps he will take right away and which ones he will postpone until later in his term.
Are they planning a coup to put Obama in as Emperor of Japan?
TO my Japanese FReepers, please do not take offense.
It’ll probably be like when we left Subic. Once the locals realized how much money we spent, they wanted us back.
can u say vieques, puerto rico?
Ah Subic - the times we had there! As a young Marine, it was a never-ending Marine Corps Birthday bash.
I was stationed on the Princeton and we barely moved in six months - twice to Hong Kong and twice to Vietnam in 1962.
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