The Arizona Republic

50 years on, frustratio­n lingers in Okinawa

Resentment over heavy presence of US troops on island still runs deep

- Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO – Okinawa on Sunday marks the 50th anniversar­y of its return to Japan on May 15, 1972, which ended 27 years of U.S. rule after one of the bloodiest battles of World War II was fought on the southern Japanese island.

The day is being marked with more bitterness than joy in Okinawa, which is still burdened with a heavy U.S. military presence and is now seeing Japanese troops increasing­ly deployed amid rising China tensions.

The Associated Press takes a look at the frustratio­n that still lingers in Okinawa, 50 years after it returned to Japan:

What happened at the end of World War II?

U.S. troops, in their push for mainland Japan, landed on Okinawa’s main island on April 1, 1945.

The battle lasted until late June, killing about 200,000 people, nearly half of them Okinawan residents, including students and victims of mass suicides ordered by the Japanese military.

Okinawa was sacrificed by Japan’s imperial army to defend the mainland, historians say. The island group remained under U.S. occupation for 20 years longer than most of Japan, until 1972.

Why was Okinawa occupied?

The U.S. military recognized Okinawa’s strategic importance for Pacific security and planned to maintain its troop presence to deter Russia and communism in the region.

A 1946 decision by the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, separated Okinawa and several other southweste­rn remote islands from the rest of Japan, paving the way for U.S. rule beyond April 28, 1952, when the San Francisco treaty took effect, ending the seven-year U.S. occupation in the rest of Japan.

According to the Okinawa Prefectura­l Archives, imperial advisor Hidenari Terasaki told MacArthur of Emperor Hirohito’s “opinion” that the U.S. military occupation of Okinawa should continue to address worries about Russia.

Economic, educationa­l and social developmen­t in Okinawa lagged behind as Japan enjoyed a postwar economic surge that was helped by lower defense spending because of the U.S. military presence in Okinawa.

How do Okinawans remember US rule?

During U.S. rule, Okinawans used the dollar and followed American traffic laws, and any trips between Okinawa and mainland Japan required passports.

The base-dependent economy hampered the growth of local industry. The local Okinawan government had little decision-making power, and authoritie­s had no access to the criminal investigat­ion of U.S. military personnel.

Demands for reversion to Japan rose in the late 1950s across Okinawa over the confiscati­on of local land for U.S. bases.

Many Okinawans demanded tax reform, wage increases and better social welfare systems to correct disparitie­s between Okinawa and the rest of Japan.

But the delayed reversion, the heavy U.S. military presence and mismanaged developmen­t funds from the central government have hampered the island’s economic developmen­t, experts say.

What are Okinawa’s main problems today?

Many on Okinawa had hoped that the island’s return to Japan would improve the economy and human rights situation. A year before the reversion, then-Okinawa leader Chobyo Yara submitted a petition asking Japan’s central government to make the island free of military bases.

Today, however, a majority of the 50,000 U.S. troops based in Japan under a bilateral security pact and 70% of military facilities are on Okinawa, which accounts for only 0.6% of Japanese land. The burden has increased from less than 60% in 1972 because unwelcomed U.S. bases were moved from the mainland.

Okinawa’s average household income is the lowest and its unemployme­nt is the highest of Japan’s 47 prefecture­s. If land taken by the U.S. military is returned to the prefecture for other use, it would produce three times more income for Okinawa than the island now makes from bases, Okinawa Gov. Denny Tamaki said.

Because of the U.S. bases, Okinawa faces noise, pollution, aircraft accidents and crime related to American troops, Tamaki said. A recent NHK television survey showed 82% of respondent­s in Okinawa expressed fear of being the victim of base-related crime or accidents.

The biggest sticking point between Okinawa and Tokyo is the central government’s insistence that a U.S. marine base in a crowded neighborho­od, the Futenma air station, should be moved within Okinawa instead of moving it elsewhere as demanded by many Okinawans. Tokyo and Washington initially agreed in 1996 to close the station after the 1995 rape of a schoolgirl by three U.S. military personnel led to a massive anti-base movement.

Despite 72% opposition in Okinawa’s 2019 referendum, Tokyo has forced the constructi­on of a new runway at Henoko Bay off Okinawa’s eastern coast. Opponents have cited environmen­tal destructio­n, structural problems and soaring costs. But the prospects for completion remain uncertain.

Tamaki earlier in May adopted a new petition demanding from Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government a significan­t reduction of the U.S. military on Okinawa, the immediate closure of the Futenma base and the scrapping of the Henoko base constructi­on.

Adding to Okinawa’s fears is the rapid deployment of Japanese missile defense and amphibious capabiliti­es on Okinawa’s outer islands.

 ?? HIROKO HARIMA/KYODO NEWS VIA AP, FILE ?? A woman prays in front of a memorial to those who lost their lives during the Battle of Okinawa. The island on Sunday marks the 50th anniversar­y of its return to Japan, which ended 27 years of U.S. rule after one of the bloodiest battles of World War II was fought on the southern Japanese island.
HIROKO HARIMA/KYODO NEWS VIA AP, FILE A woman prays in front of a memorial to those who lost their lives during the Battle of Okinawa. The island on Sunday marks the 50th anniversar­y of its return to Japan, which ended 27 years of U.S. rule after one of the bloodiest battles of World War II was fought on the southern Japanese island.

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