The continued U.S. military presence in Japan has been a growing concern for the Japanese public, and last week it became a lever to pry Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama from office. The first Democratic Party prime minister in a half century may have brought that fate upon himself, by promising on last fall's election campaign trail to move a key U.S. air base off Okinawa, and perhaps out of Japan entirely. That would have broken his predecessors' tradition of treating the U.S. presence in Japan as an American birthright, but what proved to be Hatoyama's undoing was his failure to deliver.
Despite the new Japanese government's intentions, Washington refused to back down from a 2006 pact between the two nations permitting its continued basing rights on Okinawa, nearly 1,000 miles south of Tokyo. A legacy of World War II, 47,000 U.S. troops are based in Japan within two or three days' sail of potential hotspots on the Korean peninsula and the Taiwan Strait. Hatoyama's fall suggests that despite the Japanese people's desire for a reduced U.S. military presence, they aren't ready to give up the protection it offers. "Hatoyama got into difficulty with the Japanese people because it was perceived that he was weakening the security of Japan," says Tom Schieffer, U.S. ambassador to Japan from 2005 to 2009. "The security of Japan is tied to the U.S.-Japanese alliance, and it has been that way since the end of the war."
Japan's new prime minister, Naoto Kan, confirmed his nation's inherent conservatism on Sunday. In a 15-minute phone call with President Obama, the new Japanese leader pledged he would work to fulfill the 2006 deal under which the U.S. Marines' Futenma air base on Okinawa would be relocated from its current cramped quarters to a more remote part of the island. And two days later, Kan honored the agreement by confirming on Tuesday that he'll move the base to a less crowded part of Okinawa, as well as trying to reduce the burden on the island for hosting the many U.S. military bases that are part of this joint security pact.
With the region increasingly jittery following North Korea's alleged sinking, in March, of the South Korean warship Cheonan — and amid increased Chinese muscle-flexing — Hatoyama ultimately acceded to Washington's demands. "[Removing the U.S. base from Okinawa] has proved impossible in my time," Hatoyama said as he announced his decision to step down. Not since 1960 — when Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi resigned after pushing through an unpopular U.S.-Japanese security treaty — has a Japanese leader been forced from power over the country's military ties with U.S. "Someday," Hatoyama said, "the time will come when Japan's peace will have to be ensured by the Japanese people themselves."
That's not going to happen any time soon, in part because both sides benefit from the current agreements. The U.S. gets to station a potent punch amid one of the world's most dynamic but unsettled regions, while Japan is relieved of an additional defense-spending burden that would do little to help revive its flagging economy.
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