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Japan probes alleged secret military pacts with US

Russia dropped missile plan when US cancelled shield
Russia cancelled plans to deploy missiles in its enclave of Kaliningrad in response to the US decision not to base missile defence in Europe, President Dmitry Medvedev said Friday. "When I first mentioned this idea, I said we would site Iskander missiles in response to the decision to implement the missile shield," Medvedev told reporters after the G20 summit in the US city of Pittsburgh. "Since this decision has been cancelled, I naturally took the decision not to place Iskander missiles in the corresponding region of our country." Last week, Moscow confirmed that it had dropped a threat to site missile batteries in Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave on the Baltic coast entirely surrounded by NATO member states. Russia had fiercely opposed a US plan, promoted by President Barack Obama's predecessor George W. Bush, to build a missile shield by placing a radar facility in the Czech Republic and interceptor rockets in Poland. Obama's decision to drop the plan caused dismay in parts of Eastern Europe that still fear Russian interference, but was welcomed in Moscow.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 25, 2009
Japan on Friday launched a probe into alleged decades-old secret military pacts with the United States, including one allowing US nuclear-armed ships to visit despite Tokyo's ban on atomic weapons.

Any admission of their existence would mark a landmark reversal by Japan's new centre-left government of the stance of previous conservative administrations.

Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's government has instructed a team of 15 people to examine more than 3,200 files at Japan's foreign ministry as well as about 400 files at its embassy in the United States.

The team will report its findings to Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada by the end of November, his ministry said.

"I would like to reveal all the things" related to the issue, Okada told journalists Thursday during a visit to New York, Kyodo News reported.

Previous conservative administrations -- including the government of Hatoyama's predecessor Taro Aso -- have denied such pacts were struck, even though US documents and former Japanese diplomats have indicated they existed.

The issue is sensitive in Japan, the only country to have suffered nuclear attacks when bombed by the United States towards the end of World War II.

Since then it has relied heavily on its alliance with the United States for its defence, including nuclear deterrence.

In 1968 Japan adopted a "three non-nuclear principles" policy of not possessing or producing nuclear weapons or allowing them on its territory, and it regularly speaks out in favour of a nuclear weapons-free world.

In 1991 US president George H.W. Bush announced that US vessels would no longer carry tactical atomic arms, rendering any pact with Japan allowing US nuclear-armed ships to visit obsolete.

Other pacts allegedly relate to a possible contingency on the Korean peninsula, the transportation of nuclear weapons to southern Japan in the event of an emergency and an agreement for Japan to pay costs linked to returning southern Okinawa to Japan in 1972 after US military occupation.

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