Japan agrees to stationing of US nuclear-powered carrier (AFP) Updated: 2005-10-28 09:11
Japan has agreed to the stationing of a US nuclear-powered aircraft carrier
there in 2008 when the conventionally powered USS Kitty Hawk is brought home for
decomissioning, a navy official said Thursday.
The Japanese government notified the Diet of the move, according to the
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"We're taking a nuclear powered aircraft carrier and putting it in Japan, and
bringing back the Kitty Hawk in 2008 for decommissioning," said the official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"We wanted to put our best and most capable platform forward deployed to keep
the peace and security in the Asia Pacific region," he said.
It would be the first time that a nuclear powered carrier has been based in
Japan.
Japan's history as the only country to have been attacked with a nuclear
weapon -- it was bombed by US forces in World War II at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
-- has made the basing of nuclear powered warships there controversial.
The navy official said there have been 1,200 port visits over the years by
nuclear powered warships.
But in the past, the navy has home ported only conventionally powered
aircraft carriers in Japan because of Japanese sensitivities.
Japan has agreed to the stationing of a US
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier there in 2008 when the conventionally
powered USS Kitty Hawk, pictured July 2005, is brought home for
decomissioning, a navy official said Thursday.
[AFP/File] | The only other conventionally powered aircraft carrier in the US fleet, the
USS John F. Kennedy, was slated for elimination in the Pentagon's proposed 2006
budget but received a temporary reprieve from Congress.
The Kitty Hawk, the navy's oldest active ship, has had its home port in
Yokosuka, Japan since 1998.
No decision has been made on which Nimitz class nuclear powered aircraft
carrier will replace it, the navy official said.
The agreement comes ahead of a set of defense consultations on Saturday that
will bring top US and Japanese defense and foreign affairs officials together in
Washington.
The two sides were reported to have reached agreement earlier this week in
Tokyo on the relocation of a Marine Corps air base in Okinawa.
Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura said Tokyo also was seeking a
significant reductions in the number of marines on Okinawa. About 60 percent of
the 38,000 US troops in the country are based in Okinawa.
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