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US poised to withdraw 4,700 Marines from Japan
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 7, 2012


The United States is ready to move 4,700 Marines from the Japanese island of Okinawa to Guam even without progress on plans to relocate a US base in Japan, officials said Tuesday.

The decision is expected to be announced by Tokyo and Washington within days following talks on Monday in Washington between senior representatives from each government, two US officials told AFP.

In 2006, the United States and Japan agreed to the transfer of around 8,000 Marines from Okinawa to the American territory of Guam and the relocation of the Marine Corps Air Station Futenma on Okinawa.

The transfer of the American forces had always been linked to relocating the Marine air base, but the plan has been bogged down as Tokyo has faced strong opposition from Okinawans over the deal.

In a policy shift, Washington is now prepared to pull out more than half the troops to Guam while awaiting progress on the base relocation, officials said.

"What we're looking to do is de-link the movement of forces to Guam and the Futenma replacement facility," one defense official said.

By scaling back the US military footprint, "it will reduce some of the stress" on Okinawa, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The earlier transfer to Guam was first reported in Japanese media. But US defense officials and military officers could not confirm reports in Japan saying the remaining 3,300 Marines in Japan would be redeployed to other countries in Asia.

A Pentagon spokeswoman, Commander Leslie Hullryde, declined to confirm if an announcement on a troop transfer was imminent but said the United States and Japan are "continuously looking for more efficient and effective ways to achieve the goals of the Realignment Road Map."

She said the US government "remains committed to enhancing the US-Japan Alliance and strengthening operational capabilities while significantly reducing the impact of US bases on the Okinawan people."

Many Okinawans, angry at having for decades shouldered the burden of hosting more than half of the 50,000 US troops stationed in Japan, oppose the plan which would relocate the US base to another part of the island.

According to Japanese media, the possible transfer of Marines to Guam may compromise Tokyo's position because Japanese government officials had used it as leverage to convince Okinawa to accept the base relocation.

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US to downsize Iraq embassy
Washington (AFP) Feb 7, 2012 - The United States said Tuesday that it planned to downsize its embassy in Iraq, the largest US diplomatic mission in the world, in hopes of saving money after the end of the war.

The New York Times, quoting unnamed officials, said the United States would slash the 16,000-strong staff by up to half in a sign of declining influence and quality of life after US troops left in late 2011.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland declined comment on the article's specifics but confirmed that the United States was looking to "right-size" the enormous embassy in Baghdad.

"I think what we have here is an embassy structure that was built for a different time and that relied a lot on extensive contracting for a whole range of reasons, some of them historic, some of them security-related," Nuland told reporters.

"Our judgment now is that we can adapt that for today's Iraq, do our diplomatic business just as well and just as rigorously, but far more efficiently," she said.

Nuland said the United States would look at hiring more Iraqi employees at the embassy and using fewer contractors, who can be "very expensive."

The move marks a major change in planning for the State Department. US Ambassador James Jeffrey less than a year ago outlined plans to boost the size of the embassy in preparation for the departure of troops and the expected growing influence of neighboring Iran.

President Barack Obama, an opponent of the controversial 2003 invasion that ousted strongman Saddam Hussein, removed the last US troops after Iraq did not agree to plans to keep a residual force.

The New York Times said US diplomats have since been facing lengthy delays in approval for visas and have been struggling to arrange appointments with officials in Iraq, which has been mired in political crisis.

The newspaper also said that diplomats' living conditions had deteriorated without the troops, with the embassy running short of sugar for coffee and being forced to ration chicken wings enjoyed by some staff.

Asked about the newspaper's account of food conditions, Nuland criticized "whinging that was inappropriate" by some diplomats posted in Baghdad.



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