American and Japanese officials have announced that the United States will relocate a little less than half of the nineteen thousand Marines currently stationed in Okinawa to other bases in the surrounding region, in a bid to ease tensions with locals, who see the base as too noisy and the soldiers as potentially violent, the Washington Post reports.Rico says we should've annexed Okinawa in 1945, when we had the chance...
The Marines will be moved to bases in Hawai'i, the US territory of Guam, and other locations in the Pacific. The Associated Press explains that roughly ten thousand Marines will remain stationed in Okinawa, which is seen as crucial to the American military strategy in the region. The estimated cost of relocation is $8.6 billion, of which Japan will pay $3.1 billion. No time table has been announced for the move. The New York Times notes that the American presence in the Asia-Pacific region will not decrease because of the agreement.
The Japanese foreign minister, Koichiro Genba, called the agreement a "forward-looking and concrete one that prioritizes reducing the burden on Okinawa, including the return of land." Japan is also pushing the United States to shift their military base in Okinawa from its current location in an urban area to a less populated one.
27 April 2012
Jarheads, raus!
Ankita Rao has a Slate article about Okinawa:
No comments:
Post a Comment
No more Anonymous comments, sorry.