Crashes fuel uproar in Japan over US aircraft
Topics: From the Wires, News
U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (L) talks with his chief of staff Jeremy Bash after landing in an V-22 Osprey at Camp Pendleton after a trip
to visit the USS Peleliu off the coast of San Diego March 30, 2012. REUTERS/ Mike Blake (UNITED STATES - Tags: MILITARY POLITICS) (Credit: Mike Blake)TOKYO (AP) — Recent crashes involving the U.S. military’s latest transport aircraft are fueling an uproar in Japan that could threaten plans to deploy them to the southern island of Okinawa by the end of the year.
Following an uproar on Okinawa and in another city likely to host the Osprey aircraft, U.S. officials were to brief Japanese government representatives in Washington on Friday.
The Osprey craft can fly like a helicopter or an airplane and has been used in combat in Afghanistan and Iraq. But a crash in April killed two Marines and another last week injured five airmen.
Japan’s top government spokesman said last week the plan to deploy the aircraft to Japan this year couldn’t move forward until Tokyo received assurances of its safety.
While saying the U.S. takes Japan’s concerns seriously, a Pentagon spokesman on Thursday said the U.S. stands by the aircraft.
“The Osprey is a highly capable aircraft with an excellent operational safety record,” Pentagon press secretary George Little said.
But coming just as Washington and Tokyo were finalizing plans to send the first Ospreys to Okinawa — where the U.S. military footprint is always a sensitive political issue — the accidents could not have happened at a worse time.
In hopes of easing longstanding complaints that Okinawa bears too much of the burden of hosting the U.S. troops in Japan, the two governments in April announced that about 9,000 of the nearly 20,000 Marines there will be moved elsewhere.
Crowding around U.S. bases on Okinawa is particularly intense, and opponents of the bases often complain of the danger of accidents involving local residents, noise from training and base-related crime.
The dispute over the Ospreys has renewed those complaints.
“If the two governments force the deployment of these aircraft on Okinawa as scheduled, there will be an explosion of anger,” Kantoku Teraya, a national lawmaker from Okinawa, told reporters Wednesday after submitting a petition to Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda calling for the deployment to be scrapped.
Okinawa’s governor has also said he opposes the deployment, and Iwakuni’s city assembly on Friday was expected to pass a nonbinding motion saying the accidents have caused “great worry to citizens and great confusion in the city.”




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