Tell the Biden administration: No New U.S. Military Base in Henoko, Okinawa!
As it escalates military aggression against China, the U.S., along with Japan, is currently building a dangerous, environmentally destructive Marine base in Henoko, Okinawa against the will of the Indigenous Luchuan (Okinawan) people. This new base will wreak havoc on the environment, violate human rights, oppress Indigenous Luchuans, and desecrate the dignity of war victims (including Indigenous Okinawan civilians and American, Okinawan, Japanese, and Korean soldiers) whose remains are believed to reside in the soil being used by the U.S. to fill the ancient coral reef of Henoko.
Send a letter or tweet to President Biden, Defense Secretary Austin, and Sec. of the Interior Deb Haaland demanding an immediate end to the construction of a new U.S. military base in Henoko, Okinawa! China Is Not Our Enemy. U.S. out of Asia!
Endorsed by: the Peace for Okinawa Coalition
Sample tweet — click to send:
Send a letter:
Dear President Biden, Secretary Austin, and Secretary Haaland:
The United States and Japan are currently building a dangerous and environmentally destructive new Marine base in Henoko, Okinawa against the will of the Indigenous Luchuan (Okinawan) people. While the U.S. criticizes China for its treatment of ethnic minorities, it continues its long legacy of colonial oppression of Indigenous Luchuans, who have been traded cruelly back and forth between the Japanese and American empires for over a century. In an escalation of military aggression in the Western Pacific against China, the U.S. Marine Corps has been conducting simulated military exercises, which endanger civilians and the environment, in Okinawa with increasing regularity; Beijing has previously condemned U.S. and Japanese drills in the region, naming them as provocations.
I am asking the Biden administration to halt the U.S.’s unjustified escalation of war in the Pacific against China by first ending the construction of a new military base in Henoko.
In December 2018, Luchuans started a petition obtaining over 212,000 signatures demanding an immediate stop to the construction of the base. In February 2019, Luchuans held a referendum in which the overwhelming majority of the population voted against the base. Both the U.S. and Japan are ignoring these demands, and are continuing with the reckless construction.
The base is ostensibly a relocation of the current Futenma Air Base also located in Okinawa in the heart of Ginowan City. However, the new base in Henoko significantly exceeds the functions of Futenma Air Base, causing Luchuans to believe that this is not a mere relocation, but an entirely new base altogether.
Not only is the base structurally unsound, it will also wreak havoc on the marine life and environment around it. In order to construct the base, the U.S. and Japan are filling in Oura Bay, which contains an ancient coral reef filled with hundreds of rare and endangered species (including the sacred Okinawan dugong), with concrete blocks. Luchuans have long cared for the environment in a sustainable way, though the ongoing U.S. and Japanese occupation of Luchu continues to cause tremendous environmental harm, including the poisoning of drinking water and environmental damage from U.S. chemical and biological weapons.
To make matters worse, the soil being used to build the base in Henoko is believed to contain the remains of Uchinaanchu (Indigenous Okinawan) civilians and Japanese, American, Uchinaanchu, and Korean soldiers (the latter two were forcibly conscripted to fight for imperial Japan), all of whom died in the 1945 Battle of Okinawa. The Battle of Okinawa was one of the bloodiest battles of the Pacific war that resulted in the death of more than a quarter of Okinawa’s civilian population. The remains of an estimated 2,800 victims still remain buried, according to the Okinawan prefectural government. Continuing with the construction of this base would be an affront to the dignity and memory of those who died in this battle.
Indigenous Luchuan sovereignty is continually violated by U.S. and Japanese military occupation, and Luchuans are treated as second-class citizens by both colonizing nations. Yet Luchuans are recognized by the United Nations and many other organizations and scholars as the Indigenous peoples of the Luchu Island; archeologists believe Luchuans have inhabited Luchu for at least 32,000 years. During the nineteenth century, Luchu became internationally recognized as an independent country by Western powers. In 1879, Japan illegally annexed Luchu against the will of Luchuans in its first colonial acquisition. After World War II, Japan's other colonies regained their independence while the U.S. military decided to keep Luchu for itself to use for military bases. During World War II Japan intentionally placed an inordinate amount of military presence on Uchinaa (Okinawa) Island with the intent of sacrificing Uchinaanchu (Indigenous Okinawans) in order to protect the Japanese homeland. At least one-fourth of the Uchinaanchu population was killed during the three-month Battle of Okinawa in 1945. In 1972, after 27 years of Luchuan protest against U.S. military rule, the U.S. "gave" Luchu to Japan without a vote from Luchuans, and today Luchu remains under de facto joint U.S. and Japanese control. The Native Luchuan people have never willingly agreed to join the U.S. or Japan, and are daily subject to major human rights violations.
Furthermore, the U.S. military presence in Luchu also directly harms Luchuans via accidents, economic deprivation, and violent military crime, particularly sexual abuses against women and children. Between 1972 and 2016 alone, there were 5,919 criminal arrests of U.S. military personnel in Okinawa, including 1,067 violent offenses and 576 felonious offenses. Many of these offenses include the murder, rape, abduction, and assault of local women and children by U.S. servicemen, and these crimes are often committed with impunity.
U.S.-led military aggression against China, including and especially the construction of the new military base in Henoko, damages the environment, violates human rights, oppresses Indigenous Luchuans, and desecrates the dignity of war victims. I am urging you to respect Indigenous Luchuan sovereignty, human rights, and the environment by immediately ending the construction of this new military base in Henoko, Okinawa!
Sincerely,