Japan said it may end an air force mission that flies supplies
into Iraq in support of US-led forces, despite a plea from
Washington for the Japanese to stay on.
The government is considering halting the mission and withdrawing
roughly 210 air force personnel from their base in Kuwait by the
end of the year, Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura told reporters,
ending Japanese military involvement in Iraq.
"The purpose, which was to rehabilitate Iraq, is about to be
achieved, and the security situation is getting better," Komura
said.
News of Japan's possible withdrawal came days after a senior
American official said the number of US allies involved in the Iraq
war would be reduced to a handful before the end of the year.
Parliamentary permission for Japan's Iraqi mission runs out next
year, and the Japanese government has had trouble getting such
overseas military missions extended in the face of an upper house
controlled by opposition parties.
Japanese media say the ruling coalition's junior partner, the
Buddhist-backed New Komeito party, has advocated ending the
operation.
Defence Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi said he would concentrate his
efforts on extending a marine refuelling mission in the Indian
Ocean in support of US-led operations in Afghanistan, parliamentary
permission for which expires in January.
"I want to tell the public about the importance of this mission,
and do everything I can to continue it," Hayashi told
reporters.
Washington's ambassador to Tokyo urged Japan in July to continue
both the Iraqi and Afghan missions but they are controversial in
Japan, which has developed a strong pacifist tradition since World
War Two.
People opposed to the Iraq mission won a non-binding court ruling
in April that the operation breached Japan's constitution, but the
view was dismissed by government and military officials.
The opposition parties last year forced a three month break in the
Indian Ocean mission that supplies free fuel to the US navy and its
allies, until the government forced renewal legislation through
parliament.
Passing a further extension could be even more difficult, as the
government's large majority in parliament's lower house, which
allows it to overrule the upper chamber, is likely to be cut in an
election expected by media to be held in November.
Japan began the air force flights in 2004 and also had around 600
ground troops in southern Iraq until it withdrew them in
2006.
A spokesman for the US Embassy in Tokyo declined to comment on
Japan's review of its air force mission.
President George W. Bush said this week he planned to cut US troop
levels modestly, pulling 8,000 troops out by February, saying this
was made possible by a drop in violence.
Japan may end Iraq air force mission
Published: 7:18PM Thursday September 11, 2008 Source: Reuters
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