STATEMENT
We oppose construction of a new US
military base within Okinawa, and support the people of Okinawa in their
struggle for peace, dignity, human rights and protection of the
environment
We the
undersigned oppose the deal made at the end of 2013 between Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe and Governor of Okinawa Hirokazu Nakaima to deepen and extend the
military colonization of Okinawa at the expense of the people and the
environment. Using the lure of economic development, Mr. Abe has extracted
approval from Governor Nakaima to reclaim the water off Henoko, on the
northeastern shore of Okinawa, to build a massive new U.S. Marine air base with
a military port.
Plans to
build the base at Henoko have been on the drawing board since the 1960s. They were revitalized in 1996, when the
sentiments against US military bases peaked following the rape of a twelve
year-old Okinawan child by three U.S. servicemen. In order to pacify such
sentiments, the US and Japanese governments planned to close Futenma Marine Air
Base in the middle of Ginowan City and
move its functions to a new base to be constructed at Henoko, a site of
extraordinary bio-diversity and home to the endangered marine mammal dugong.
Governor
Nakaima’s reclamation approval does not reflect the popular will of the people
of Okinawa. Immediately before the
gubernatorial election of 2010, Mr. Nakaima, who had previously accepted the new
base construction plan, changed his position and called for relocation of the
Futenma base outside the prefecture. He won the election by defeating a
candidate who had consistently opposed the new base. Polls in recent years have
shown that 70 to 90 percent of the people of Okinawa opposed the Henoko base
plan. The poll conducted immediately after Nakaima’s recent reclamation approval
showed that 72.4 percent of the people of Okinawa saw the governor’s decision as
a “breach of his election pledge.” The reclamation approval was a betrayal of
the people of Okinawa.
73.8
percent of the US military bases (those for exclusive US use) in Japan are
concentrated in Okinawa, which is only .6 percent of the total land mass of
Japan. 18.3 percent of the Okinawa Island is occupied by the US military.
Futenma Air Base originally was built during the 1945 Battle of Okinawa by US
forces in order to prepare for battles on the mainland of Japan. They simply
usurped the land from local residents. The base should have been returned to its
owners after the war, but the US military has retained it even though now almost
seven decades have passed. Therefore, any conditional return of the base is
fundamentally unjustifiable.
The new
agreement would also perpetuate the long suffering of the people of Okinawa.
Invaded in the beginning of the 17th century by Japan and annexed
forcefully into the Japanese nation at the end of 19th century,
Okinawa was in 1944 transformed into a fortress to resist advancing US forces and thus to buy time to
protect the Emperor System. The Battle
of Okinawa killed more than 100,000 local residents, about a quarter of the
island’s population. After the war, more bases were built under the US military
occupation. Okinawa “reverted” to Japan in 1972, but the Okinawans’ hope for the
removal of the military bases was shattered. Today, people of Okinawa continue
to suffer from crimes and accidents, high decibel aircraft noise and
environmental pollution caused by the bases. Throughout these decades, they have
suffered what the U.S. Declaration of Independence denounces as “abuses and
usurpations,” including the presence of foreign “standing armies without the
consent of our legislatures.”
Not
unlike the 20th century U.S. Civil Rights struggle, Okinawans have
non-violently pressed for the end to their military colonization. They tried to
stop live-fire military drills that threatened their lives by entering the
exercise zone in protest; they formed human chains around military bases to
express their opposition; and about a hundred thousand people, one tenth of the
population have turned out periodically for massive demonstrations.
Octogenarians initiated the campaign to prevent the construction of the Henoko
base with a sit-in that has been continuing for years. The prefectural assembly
passed resolutions to oppose the Henoko base plan. In January 2013, leaders of
all the 41 municipalities of Okinawa signed the petition to the government to
remove the newly deployed MV-22 Osprey from Futenma base and to give up the plan
to build a replacement base in Okinawa.
We
support the people of Okinawa in their non-violent struggle for peace, dignity,
human rights and protection of the environment. The Henoko marine base project
must be canceled and Futenma returned forthwith to the people of
Okinawa.
January 2014
Norman
Birnbaum,
Professor Emeritus, Georgetown University
Herbert
Bix,
Emeritus Professor of History and Sociology, State University of New York at
Binghamton
Reiner
Braun,
Co-president International Peace
Bureau and Executive Director of International Association of Lawyers Against
Nuclear Arms
Noam
Chomsky,
Professor Emeritus of Linguistics, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
John W. Dower, Professor Emeritus of History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Alexis
Dudden,
Professor of History, University of Connecticut
Daniel
Ellsberg,
Senior Fellow at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, former Defense and State
Department official
John
Feffer,
Co-director of Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org) at the Institute for
Policy Studies
Bruce
Gagnon,
Coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in
Space
Joseph
Gerson
(PhD), Director, Peace & Economic Security Program, American Friends Service
Committee
Richard
Falk,
Milbank Professor of International law Emeritus, Princeton
University
Norma
Field,
Professor Emerita, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of
Chicago
Kate
Hudson
(PhD), General Secretary, Campaign for Nuclear
Disarmament.
Catherine
Lutz,
Professor of Anthropology and International Studies, Brown
University
Naomi
Klein,
Author and journalist
Joy
Kogawa,
Author of Obasan
Peter
Kuznick,
Professor of History, American University
Mairead
Maguire,
Nobel Peace laureate
Kevin
Martin,
Executive Director, Peace Action
Gavan
McCormack,
Professor Emeritus, Australian National University
Kyo
Maclear,
Writer and Children’s author
Michael
Moore,
Filmmaker
Steve
Rabson,
Professor Emeritus, Brown University/ Veteran, United States Army, Henoko,
Okinawa, 1967-68
Mark
Selden,
a Senior Research Associate in the East Asia Program at Cornell
University
Oliver
Stone,
Filmmaker
David
Vine,
Associate Professor of Anthropology, American University
The
Very Rev. the Hon. Lois Wilson,
Former President, World Council of Churches
Lawrence
Wittner,
Professor Emeritus of History, State University of New
York/Albany
Ann
Wright,
Retired US Army Colonel and former US diplomat
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