Japan welcomes deal on US nuke carrier (AP) Updated: 2005-10-28 19:36
Basing a U.S. nuclear-powered warship in Japanese waters for the first time
will boost stability in East Asia, Japan's government said Friday, hailing an
agreement even as it drew protests from the community that will host the
aircraft carrier.
The U.S. Navy on Thursday announced the deal, under which Japan — which the
United States attacked with two nuclear bombs in World War II — dropped its
longtime opposition to hosting a nuclear-powered warship in its territory.
"Japan believes that the continued presence of the U.S. Navy will contribute
to safety and stability in Japan, the Far East and the world," Chief Cabinet
Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda said Friday.
He said the agreement would not threaten the safety of Japanese residents,
who have long been wary of a U.S. nuclear presence because of fears of radiation
leaks.
"The U.S. side has told us that it will continue taking strict safety
measures," he said, adding that the carrier — which has not been named — will
stop its nuclear reactor while anchored in Japan and conduct no repairs of the
reactor there.
The U.S. decided to deploy a Nimitz-class nuclear-powered carrier in Japan
because it has far greater capabilities than traditional warships, U.S.
Ambassador Thomas Schieffer said Friday at a news conference.
Schieffer said that Washington took into account the reluctance of the
Japanese to host a nuclear-powered ship, but such ships are faster and more
nimble than fossil-fuel powered ships.
"We want to assure all concerned that this carrier can and will be operated
safely in Japanese waters," he told reporters at the U.S. Embassy, adding that
nuclear-powered ships had made 1,200 visits to Japan over the past 40 years
without harming the environment.
The plan immediately met with opposition from local officials south of Tokyo
near the city of Yokosuka, home to the U.S. Seventh Fleet and the future base of
the new warship.
"No safety tests can be conducted on nuclear-powered ships because Japanese
law does not apply, and there is a great risk in the crowded area," said
Shigefumi Matsuzawa, the governor of Kanagawa prefecture, where the new warship
will be based.
Matsuzawa said he would urge the American and Japanese governments to
reconsider the plan.
The nuclear-powered carrier would replace the USS Kitty Hawk, a
diesel-powered carrier based in Yokosuka.
The Kitty Hawk, commissioned in 1961, is the Navy's oldest ship in full
active service and the only American aircraft carrier permanently deployed
abroad. The new carrier would arrive in Japan in 2008, when the Kitty Hawk is
scheduled to return to the United States and be decommissioned.
The U.S. Navy said the switch would boost the American military posture in
the region.
"Nimitz-class aircraft carriers are far more capable than fossil fuel
carriers ... possess superior endurance and sustained speed and can respond more
quickly to any crisis," said Rear Adm. James D. Kelly, commander of U.S. Navy
Forces Japan.
The announcement came as the United States and Japan worked out a plan for a
realignment of the 50,000 American troops based here — a presence that has
spurred sporadic protests over the years by residents angered by the crime,
crowding and noise associated with the bases.
Earlier this week the two sides struck a deal to close down a Marine Corps
air station in Okinawa and transfer its functions to an existing base on the
southern island, Camp Schwab. That plan, which calls for the building of a new
heliport, was also running into opposition by residents who are against any
fresh military construction.
The two sides are meeting for high-level talks in Washington on Saturday to
announce an interim plan for realignment. Schieffer on Friday said that the
final plan would call for the reduction of U.S. troops in Japan, but he did not
elaborate.
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