Base relocation plan off
JAPAN and the United States have given up on a plan to relocate by 2014 an American airbase on the southern island of Okinawa which has angered local residents and soured bilateral ties, the Yomiuri reported yesterday.
The ongoing debate over where to relocate the US Marines' Futenma airbase has long been a thorn in relations between the two allies and prompted Prime Minister Naoto Kan's predecessor to resign last year.
Kan had promised to implement a 2006 agreement to shift the airbase in Okinawa to a less populated part of island, but this is also resisted by residents, who associate US bases with crime, accidents and noise.
Japan and the United States will discuss setting a new time frame for the relocation going forward, although dropping the 2014 target may mean the airbase may stay in its current location, the Yomiuri said.
Ties with Washington were frayed after the ruling Democratic Party took power for the first time in 2009 and then-prime minister Yukio Hatoyama tried to keep a campaign pledge to move the airbase off the island altogether. Kan, who took over last June after Hatoyama failed to keep that pledge and suddenly quit, promised to revert back to the 2006 deal.
The issue of the bases in Okinawa has long rattled relations, with many resentful of what they see as an unfair share of the burden of the US-Japan security alliance.
The ongoing debate over where to relocate the US Marines' Futenma airbase has long been a thorn in relations between the two allies and prompted Prime Minister Naoto Kan's predecessor to resign last year.
Kan had promised to implement a 2006 agreement to shift the airbase in Okinawa to a less populated part of island, but this is also resisted by residents, who associate US bases with crime, accidents and noise.
Japan and the United States will discuss setting a new time frame for the relocation going forward, although dropping the 2014 target may mean the airbase may stay in its current location, the Yomiuri said.
Ties with Washington were frayed after the ruling Democratic Party took power for the first time in 2009 and then-prime minister Yukio Hatoyama tried to keep a campaign pledge to move the airbase off the island altogether. Kan, who took over last June after Hatoyama failed to keep that pledge and suddenly quit, promised to revert back to the 2006 deal.
The issue of the bases in Okinawa has long rattled relations, with many resentful of what they see as an unfair share of the burden of the US-Japan security alliance.
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