Japan said it will hold fresh talks next week with the United States on a
plan to realign US troops after negotiations stalled over Tokyo's objections to
paying 7.5 billion dollars.
US ambassador to
Japan, Thomas Schieffer, seen here in Tokyo, February 2006. Japan said it
will hold fresh talks next week with the United States on a plan to
realign US troops after negotiations stalled over Tokyo's objections to
paying 7.5 billion dollars[AFP/File] |
The two allies, which aim to finalize the deal by the end of the month,
failed to reach a consensus in a two-day session in Tokyo that ended Friday,
Foreign Minister Taro Aso said.
"I think we'll have another round of talks in the United States by the end of
this month," Aso told a session of the lower house of parliament's Foreign
Affairs Committee.
"We didn't necessarily come to a conclusion," he said. "We are building up
the details right now."
The plan drafted in October would see the pull out of 8,000 of the more than
40,000 US troops in Japan, easing the burden on the southern island chain of
Okinawa which hosts half of the soldiers.
Talks have focused on the US request for Japan to pay 75 percent of the 10
billion-dollar cost of shifting troops from Okinawa to the US territory of Guam,
which includes the cost of building new homes for soldiers and their families.
"We feel we may have to do something if necessary for the housing
expenditures for the 17,000 US troops and their family members, but to be honest
we still feel skeptical about the figure," Aso said.
The realignment was designed in part to ease concerns by communities hosting
US troops but local residents have strongly opposed the plan, pushing for a
greater pullout.
The Pentagon last week said it planned an 8,000-troop pullout from Okinawa,
some 1,000 soldiers more than originally agreed to last year.
The United States was represented at the closed-door talks by Richard
Lawless, deputy undersecretary of defense for Asia and the Pacific.
The Japanese delegation was led by Kazuyoshi Umemoto, deputy head of the
foreign ministry's North American affairs bureau, and Hironori Kanazawa, deputy
head of the Defense Agency's Bureau of Defense Policy.
US troops are stationed in Japan under a security alliance forged after Japan
was defeated in World War II and forced to renounce its right to a military.
Okinawa has frequently seen anti-US protests, particularly after the 1995
gang-rape of a 12-year-old girl by three US servicemen.
On Friday, a court in Okinawa sentenced an American civilian employee of the
US military to nine years in prison for rape.
US Ambassador Thomas Schieffer in a statement issued earlier this week by the
US military said the troops were committed to professionalism.
"The crime rate of US service members in Japan is very low by any objective
measure and has decreased significantly in recent years. However, that's not the
point," he said.
"A single criminal incident can undermine our relationship with our Japanese
neighbors and security partners," Schieffer said.