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TOKYO, Nov. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- A review of the bilateral
security treaty between Japan and the United States may become necessary
in light of Japan's growing role in contributing to international
security, a senior US defense official said Monday.
Under Secretary of Defense for
Policy Douglas Feith made the remark amid arguments over the need to redefine
the treaty, given the reported US plan to transfer the US Army First Corps
headquarters from the state of Washington to Camp Zama in Kanagawa Prefecture,
southwest of Tokyo.
On the need to redefine the treaty, Feith said, "There
may be a decision that we want to do something more formal."
"There's an argument that it may be a good thing and there
is an argument that it may not be necessary," he said in an interview with
local and foreign reporters in Tokyo.
But he did not specify how such a redefinition might
be achieved.
The envisaged transfer of the US Army First Corps headquarters
raises the question of compliance with the Japan-US security treaty,
which limits US forces stationed in Japan "to contributing to the
security of Japan and the maintenance of international peace and security in the
Far East."
But the US command is actually believed to oversee
operations across a broader area, including the Middle East, it is said.
"I think the treaty is a good treaty and provides a
reasonable degree of flexibility," Feith said.
He suggested that discussions about redefining the
1960 treaty should go beyond its scope of Japan and the Far East clause and
encompass global security issues.
On the US plan to realign its forces around the
world, Feith said the goal of Japan and the United States is to work on
developing doctrine together and carry out combined operations in the hope of
serving the broader purpose of working together effectively with all types of
military forces. Enditem
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