Hello my friends. Here is my latest story for Asia Times Online.
If you get time, please go over this. 
Good weekend!
Cheers,
Kosuke
Okinawans see duplicity in US withdrawal
By Kosuke Takahashi 
TOKYO - With the  United States shifting its axis of security toward the Asia-Pacific by expanding  its military footprint in Australia, the Philippines and Vietnam, it may be high  time for the United States Marine Corps to leave Japan's Okinawa. 
A  shifting security dynamic in the region, most notably due to China's enhanced  strike capabilities, will likely marginalize the marines' presence on the  island. 
Japan and the US this week agreed to move about 4,700 marines  from Okinawa to the US Pacific territory of Guam, while sticking to fiercely  opposed plans to move US Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Futenma to a new  offshore base to be built in a coastal area off Camp Schwab, another marine base in Nago City, northern Okinawa.  
The shift to Guam is a departure from a previous 2006 bilateral  agreement on the realignment of US forces in Japan. Until now, the US had  claimed that the transfer of about 8,000 Okinawa-based marines to Guam and the  completion of Henoko airbase in Nago were a package deal. It had also demanded  that Tokyo show "tangible progress" in the construction of a new heliport as a  prerequisite for the transfer of the marines to Guam. 
"The US has  conducted a strategic review of its defense posture in Asia," the US State  Department and the Japanese Foreign Ministry said in a joint statement on  February 8. "Japan welcomes this initiative."
Why did the US change course by delinking the transfer of marines to Guam with  the long-standing, thorny issue of the Futenma relocation? 
Okinawan  opposition 
Necessity knows no law. First of all, the Pentagon is  apparently impatient with the political impasse caused by Okinawans' opposition  to the new airbase in Nago. Although Tokyo supports the plan, it has been  strongly opposed by the Okinawa prefectural government and the vast majority of  Okinawa residents for years. 
"[I] expect both governments to have  consultations based on local opinions," Okinawa Governor Hirokazu Nakaima said  on February 8. "The relocation plan of Futenma base without local consent would  be impossible. [We have] no change in demanding the new facility to move out of  Okinawa." 
The planned transfer of thousands of marines to Guam without  progress on the Futenma relocation is also part of an ongoing US strategy to  counter China's military build-up, especially its growing naval power in the  West Pacific. 
The Pentagon is closely watching China's "anti-access/area  denial" strategy, which envisions blocking freedom of movement for US ships. By  creating two lines of coastal defenses in the region, military analysts believe  Beijing aims to nullify the capabilities of US aircraft carriers and air  defenses within the zone. 
The so-called AirSea battle concept combines  US air and naval strengths. It departs from the Cold War-era AirLand Battle  doctrine drafted to prepare for an invasion by the former Soviet Union.  
The AirSea battle concept meant to combat China's growing military might  doesn't fit with high troop levels on Okinawa, since the latter cannot be moved  swiftly and could be easily targeted by China's middle-range ballistic missiles  such as the DF-21. 
The new battle strategy forces the Pentagon to keep  key US forces out of China's strike range.
"It's better for US Marines  to keep at a safe distance from China," Japanese military analyst Toshiyuki  Shikata told Asia Times Online. "I expect the US to fortify Guam as a strong  military base from now on." 
Vague number of US Marines on  Okinawa
Japanese media have reported that apart from moving 4,700 marines  from Okinawa to Guam, the Pentagon is also considering rotating 3,300 to other  overseas bases in the Pacific such as Hawaii, Australia and the Philippines.  
Of the 3,300 marines, media have reported that 1,000 will be deployed to  Hawaii and 800 to the US mainland. Meanwhile, other media have said 2,300 will  go to Darwin in northern Australia and 1,000 to Hawaii. 
It's also been  reported that the US has sounded out Tokyo on transferring about 1,500 marines  to the Iwakuni marine base in Yamaguchi Prefecture - the only Marine Corps Air  Station on mainland Japan - with central and local governments flatly rejecting  the idea. 
Some US Marines stationed in Okinawa will likely move to South  Korea, Chosun Ilbo also has reported. Pentagon spokesperson Leslie Hull-Ryde on  Friday denied the South Korean newspaper's report by saying, "there has been no  discussion between the US and the Republic of Korea [South Korea] on this  issue". 
Unclear figures on how many US Marines are actually on Okinawa -  due to expeditions and rotating shifts - has also aggravated the Japanese  public. While both the US and Japanese governments claim 18,000 marines are  normally based on Okinawa, the Okinawa prefectural government says only 14,958  marines were based on the island as of September 2009. 
Military experts  estimate the number at 12,000-14,000 at best in recent years because of  deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Then Japanese defense minister Toshimi  Kitazawa said in February 2010 that there were only 4,000 to 5,000 marines  stationed on Okinawa due to Iraqi and Afghanistan deployments. 
The US  and Japanese governments say there will be 10,000 marines in Okinawa even after  shifting 8,000 marines around the island. But the claim could be just a pretext  to avoid military budget cuts. 
Plans for deep US defense cuts are another  major likely reason why moving the marines out of Okinawa has been disconnected  from the relocation of the Futenma airbase. 
With the national budget  deficit expected to exceed $1 trillion in 2012 for the fourth consecutive year,  President Barack Obama on January 5 unveiled a new defense strategy that aims at  significantly reducing the country's defense expenditure. It calls for a  downsizing of the US military and for priority deployment of troops in the  Asia-Pacific region. 
The Pentagon is looking to cut defense spending by  $487 billion over the next 10 years by eliminating almost 100,000 US ground  troops as part of plans for a "smaller, leaner" military. Specifically, it plans  to reduce the marine corps by 20,000 to 182,000 active-duty members.  
Another reason for the realignment of US forces in Japan could be a  change of Washington's top Asia officials. Wallace Gregson, a former US  assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific security affairs, and James  Steinberg, a former duty Secretary of State, both resigned last year. The  Pentagon on Monday also announced that Michael Schiffer, deputy assistant  secretary of defense, Asian and Pacific Security Affairs, East Asia, will step  down soon. 
The shake-up of top policymakers who've been engaged in past  negotiations with Japan might have brought about a policy change this time  around. This is simply be down to bureaucrats' unshakeable belief in in their  own infallibility. 
Henoko plan is impossible
Almost all  analysts agree that the transfer of the US Futenma air station to an off-shore  location in Henoko Bay Nago would be impossible due to the strong opposition  from Okinawans. But abolishing this unrealistic plan still seems a taboo among  US and Japanese policy makers. 
"My point is that we do not have to be  paralyzed between the existing Futenma facility and the Henoko option that  doesn't seem realistic," US Senator Jim Webb, Democrat of Virginia, said in a  recent interview with Dispatch Japan. 
"The Henoko plan is impossible,"  Ukeru Magosaki, the former chief of the Japanese Foreign Ministry's  international intelligence bureau, told Asia Times Online. "But Japan cannot  say, 'we cannot do it' to the US." Magosaki said. 
As Tokyo sits on the  fence, resentment towards the US military bases on Okinawa is rising, especially  as official campaigning for the mayoral election in Ginowan City kicked off in  February - the planned relocation of the Futenma airbase is the top issue. Both  of the poll's two candidates want the Futenma air station, which occupies a  quarter of the city's total land area, moved out of the prefecture. 
With  both Tokyo and Washington struggling to win the consent of Okinawans to the  relocation plan, there are worries in Japan over the Futenma air station  becoming fixed in its present location in Ginowan City. 
The US also  seems to have used this logic to advance the relocation plan. In the late 1990s,  there were plans to just close the Futenma airbase, not relocate it, after three  marines raped a 12-year-old schoolgirl; but in 2006, the US administration  managed to make the closing of Futenma a package deal linked to the building of  a new heliport in Henoko. 
One fatal military accident at Futenma  airbase, which is surrounded by more than 100 schools, hospitals and shops,  could trigger very strong anti-US sentiment. This could severely damage the  presence of the island's Kadena airbase, the largest and strongest US military  base in the Far East. 
To avoid such an aggravating situation just in  case, the closing of the contentious Futenma air station without a new facility  is the best way forward for both governments, as was once agreed in the late  1990s. 
Kosuke Takahashi is a Tokyo-based Japanese journalist.  His twitter is @TakahashiKosuke 
(Copyright 2012 Asia Times Online  (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication  and republishing.)

