No US base deal before Obama visit: Japan
Hatoyama’s centre-left government, which took power in September, has promised to review a pact under which a new US base would be built on southern Okinawa island, while Washington has insisted Tokyo stick to the agreement.
The issue has clouded ties ahead of Obama’s visit next Thursday and Friday.
“I don’t intend to make a decision before President Obama’s visit,” Hatoyama told a parliamentary committee when asked about the row.
Washington and Tokyo have been close allies in the post-war era, and the United States has about 47,000 troops based in Japan, more than half of them on Okinawa, where their presence has often rankled local residents.
The premier has suggested that a contentious military facility, the US Marine Corps Futenma Air Base, currently located in a crowded urban area, may have to be moved off Okinawa altogether, or even out of Japan. Hatoyama’s government has stressed that, while it values the US-Japan security alliance, it wants less subservient relations than those under conservative governments that ruled Japan for over half a century.
Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said a review of the bases pact was necessary “after the first genuine change of govt in Japan in 50 years.”—AFP
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