
U.S. military, Okinawa hold 1st safety forum after sex assault cases
Representatives of U.S. forces in Japan and Okinawa authorities held their first meeting Friday under a new forum to discuss joint safety measures, following alleged sexual assault cases involving American service members in the southern island prefecture.
In closed-door talks at the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Foster, the U.S. military outlined its existing preventive measures, while both sides agreed to work toward holding a regular joint community patrol, like the one conducted in April in the city of Okinawa, and expanding it to other parts of the prefecture, according to a local government official.
The launch of the new dialogue venue, named "Okinawa Community Partnership Forum," was announced in July last year by U.S. Forces Japan, after revelations of alleged sexual assault cases in June sparked renewed safety concerns among locals.
Okinawa Prefecture hosts the bulk of U.S. military installations in Japan, and anti-base sentiment runs deep due to aircraft noise, pollution and crimes committed by American service members.
The participants of the first meeting of the new forum included representatives from the Okinawa prefectural government, the city of Okinawa, local police, the U.S. forces on Okinawa and the U.S. Consulate General Naha. Officials from Japan's foreign and defense ministries also took part.
The meeting is expected to be held about once a year going forward.
Specific assault cases were not discussed in the meeting, according to the local government official.
"Establishing an avenue for each organization to propose measures to prevent incidents involving U.S. military is of great significance," Masahito Tamari, director general of the Okinawa governor's office, told reporters after the meeting.
The U.S. military said in its statement that the talks "highlighted the importance of ongoing communication and collaboration between USFJ and the Okinawa community."
"Both sides reaffirmed their dedication to fostering a positive and mutually beneficial relationship based on trust and respect," it added.
Related coverage:
U.S. Marine in Okinawa indicted over rape, injury
U.S. Marines from Okinawa to start moving to Guam barracks in June
U.S. Marine suspected of raping woman at Okinawa base
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Japan Times
24 minutes ago
- Japan Times
Japan and U.S. both claim win in surprise 11th-hour tariff deal
Japan and the United States reached a surprise trade deal on Tuesday in Washington after months of fruitless negotiations and some tense moments, with both sides taking victory laps and Japanese markets cheering the news. The United States is promoting it as the deal of the century. For Japan, it was a mission-accomplished moment. The agreement, the details of which are still being ironed out, includes a 15% "reciprocal" tariff on most Japanese goods and 12.5% on cars, with 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum remaining unchanged. Japan has agreed to buy more rice, improve market access and invest in a $550 billion fund that will support strategic industries and technologies in the United States. 'There has never been anything like it,' U.S. President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social. The reciprocal tariff is 10 percentage points lower than the rate that had been scheduled to kick in on Aug. 1, while the auto tariff has been cut by half from 25%. The total for autos will now be 15%, including 2.5% duty on autos charged independent of Trump tariffs. 'I firmly believe we have achieved an agreement that protects what needs to be protected, while aligning with the national interests of both Japan and the United States,' Ryosei Akazawa, Japan's chief tariff negotiator, said Tuesday in Washington. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba noted that the 15% reciprocal tariff is the best rate achieved by a trade surplus country. The Nikkei 225 stock index rose 3.51% in trading Wednesday, with Toyota up 14.35% and Honda 11.15%. The yen traded steady in the ¥146 to the dollar range. Washington assured Tokyo that for strategically important goods, such as semiconductors and pharmaceutical products, tariffs for Japan will always match the best rate charged to other countries, Akazawa told reporters. He also said that Japan will increase American rice imports under the current minimum access framework, which has allowed roughly 770,000 metric tons of foreign rice to enter Japan annually tariff free. Japan and the United States will make efforts to strengthen supply chains through Japanese investment in the U.S., with a focus on semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, steel, shipbuilding, critical minerals, aerospace, energy, automobiles, artificial intelligence and quantum technology. Japanese government-affiliated financial institutions will provide up to $550 billion in equity investments, loans and loan guarantees, Akazawa said. He noted that defense spending targets were not included in the deal, and that Japan made no commitments to lower tariffs on U.S. products, as they are already very low. Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato said on Wednesday that the deal does not include any agreements on the yen-dollar exchange rate. 'I'm kind of surprised," said William Chou, deputy director of Hudson Institute's Japan Chair, in discussing the auto tariffs. The fact that Japan was able to cut the rate by 12.5 percentage points is a huge accomplishment, he said. Chou added that Japan has promised access and reforms that in the eyes of the U.S. administration "create a long-term pathway towards trade balance.' But Ryo Sahashi, a professor at the University of Tokyo's Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, called the deal "an extremely limited win." 'What we've achieved is merely a reasonably decent result compared to the worst-case scenario,' he said. 'Japan has simply escaped the worst possible situation, nothing more.' The U.S. president announced the deal after a 70-minute meeting at the White House with Akazawa, who arrived in Washington on Monday for an eighth round of negotiations with the Trump administration. Prior to the meeting at the White House, Akazawa met with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick for more than two hours Monday evening and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent for about 30 minutes Tuesday afternoon. 'It was a tense and high-stakes negotiation,' Akazawa said of his meeting with Trump. 'Both sides were fully serious and operating at the limit.' On X, Akazawa posted a photo in the White House with a hashtag that translates to #MissionComplete. People react as they read a newspaper special edition reporting on the U.S.-Japan tariff deal, in Tokyo on Wednesday. | REUTERS Ishiba — who has come under immense pressure to resign after the ruling coalition suffered a defeat in an Upper House election and lost its majority in the chamber — took credit Wednesday morning in Tokyo, saying the deal is a result of efforts made by his administration since February. 'This is precisely about prioritizing investment over tariffs,' Ishiba said. 'Since I proposed this idea to President Trump during the summit at the White House in February, I have consistently advocated for it and strongly pushed the U.S. side, and this agreement is the result of those efforts. 'I believe this will contribute to Japan and the United States working together to create jobs and promote high-quality manufacturing, thereby fulfilling various roles on the global stage moving forward,' he told reporters. News reports on Wednesday in Tokyo indicated Ishiba might resign by the end of August, though the prime minister denied this later in the day. 'Ironically, the Ishiba administration appears destined to be driven from office, with this tariff negotiation success potentially becoming its greatest — and final — achievement,' said Sahashi. But even if the leadership changes, Japan is likely to stick to the deal as part of Ishiba's legacy, said Hudson Institute's Chou. "I don't think a different leader would have necessarily been able to find a different path,' Chou said. The surprise breakthrough comes just ahead of an Aug. 1 deadline set by Trump in which the reciprocal rate for Japan was set to rise to 25%, up from the baseline 10%. Japan had previously eyed a meeting between Ishiba and Trump at the Group of Seven summit in June to reach a framework agreement, but auto tariffs had been a major sticking point. In the recent weeks leading up to Tuesday's agreement, Trump had expressed frustration with Japan and the pace of negotiations with the country, at one point threatening to take the reciprocal rate as high as 35%. 'I think both sides can claim that they got parts of what they wanted,' Chou said, while adding that the question now is whether Japan can carry out the pledges it has made. 'We'll have to see how that is carried out. I'm sure the Trump administration will also be paying very close attention."


The Diplomat
3 hours ago
- The Diplomat
Trump Announces Trade Deal With Philippines, Small Reduction in Tariff Rate
The U.S. leader said that Washington would apply a 19 percent tariff on Philippine imports, while Manila has agreed to remove all of its tariffs on American goods. U.S. President Donald Trump has announced a new 19 percent tariff rate for imports from the Philippines, after a meeting with visiting President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. at the White House. Trump made the announcement in a post on his Truth Social media platform after the meeting with Marcos, calling the Philippine leader a 'very good and tough negotiator.' 'It was a beautiful visit, and we concluded our Trade Deal, whereby The Philippines is going OPEN MARKET with the United States, and ZERO Tariffs. The Philippines will pay a 19% Tariff,' Trump wrote. 'In addition, we will work together Militarily.' Marcos arrived in Washington on Sunday for a three-day trip during which he also met with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as with U.S. business leaders investing in the Philippines. Speaking to reporters with Marcos, the U.S. leader announced that the two countries were 'very close to finishing a trade deal – a big trade deal, actually.' Trump's announcement comes after he claimed to have finalized similar deals with Vietnam, which negotiated a rate of 20 percent, and Indonesia, whose tariff is now set at 19 percent. (The White House yesterday released more details on the Indonesia agreement, although elements of the agreement with Vietnam have reportedly yet to be finalized.) According to an undated draft of the Philippines-U.S. Agreement on Reciprocal Trade obtained by The Diplomat, the Philippines has agreed to remove nearly all of its tariffs and non-tariff barriers on U.S. imports, including quotas and import licensing requirements, and to bolster intellectual property protections. 'These commitments,' the draft agreement states, 'are intended to enhance reciprocity between the Parties by reducing tariff and non-tariff barriers in the territory of the Philippines and increasing alignment between the United States and the Philippines on economic and national security matters.' The U.S. had a goods trade deficit of $4.9 billion with the Philippines last year, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. As with the two previous agreements with Indonesia and Vietnam, a higher tariff rate will apply to any goods that are deemed to have been transshipped to the U.S. via the Philippines from any third country (i.e. China). The draft agreement states that the 19 percent rate will not apply in the event that a certain percentage of a good 'originates from certain countries not party to this Agreement.' Neither the exact local content threshold nor the tariff on transshipped goods were finalized in the draft, although Trump announced that the rate for Vietnam has been set at 40 percent. (How transshipped goods are to be identified and verified, and by whom, is yet to be determined in any of these cases.) The draft agreement also contains a number of provisions relating to economics and national security. It states that the Philippines will cooperate with Washington 'to regulate the trade in national security sensitive technologies and goods through existing multilateral export control regimes, align with all unilateral export controls in force by the United States, and ensure that its companies do not backfill or undermine these controls.' The agreement also states that the Philippines 'shall adopt and effectively enforce provisions to combat transshipment and other practices to evade or circumvent duties' and that the U.S. 'shall work with the Philippines to streamline and enhance defense trade.' Most notably, the draft states that the U.S. has the right to terminate the agreement if the Philippines 'enters into a new bilateral free trade agreement or preferential economic agreement' with any 'country of concern.' In light of all of these concessions, and its status as a longstanding and 'ironclad' U.S. security ally, it is surprising that the Philippines was unable to secure a greater reduction in the tariff rate. The 19 percent tariff was marginally lower than the 20 percent threatened by Trump in a letter to Marcos earlier this month, but higher than the 17 percent announced in Trump's 'liberation day' tariff announcement in April. It is also notably worse than the 15 percent rate that Trump announced today with Japan, another U.S. ally. The response on Philippine social media has reportedly been unfavorable to Marcos, with many users calling the Philippine leader 'weak' and stating that the risks of the U.S.-Philippine alliance have not been properly counterbalanced by greater U.S. concessions. In a post on X, Renato Reyes Jr., a member of the left-wing Makabayan political coalition, described the agreement as 'a grossly lopsided 'deal' which is really more of an imposition rather than the outcome of any negotiations' and called on the Marcos administration to 'fully disclose' its terms. The national security analyst Justin Baquisal wrote on X that while it remains to be seen whether these political talking points hurt Marcos' political prospects, 'the lack of better treatment for US allies vs non-aligners (esp compared to the original Liberation Day margins) is not doing anybody favors.' 'Most Reliable Ally' Marcos is the first Southeast Asian leader to visit the White House since the beginning of Trump's second term, a reflection of the warmth of the relationship between the two allies. Speaking to reporters at the start of the meeting in the Oval Office, Marcos described the U.S. as his country's 'strongest, closest, most reliable ally,' while Trump praised the Philippine leader, describing him as coming from a 'great family' with a 'great family legacy.' (Marcos' father, Ferdinand E. Marcos, ruled the Philippines through fear and force for more than two decades, including 14 years under Martial Law.) Aside from the trade issue, security and defense were also on the agenda during the Marcos-Trump meeting. Security cooperation between the two nations has increased markedly in recent years as a result of China's growing maritime power and ambition. During Marcos' three years in office, Beijing has increased the frequency and intensity of its incursions into Philippine-claimed waters, which it claims under its expansive 'nine-dash line' claim, resulting in a string of dangerous encounters between the two nations' coast guards. Under Marcos, the Philippines has opened more of its military facilities to a rotational U.S. presence under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, and increased military exercises and joint patrols. The visit did not witness the signing of any new defense cooperation initiatives, but in their meetings with Marcos, both Hegseth and Rubio reaffirmed that the U.S. will come to the Philippines' defense under the Mutual Defense Treaty if its forces, ships and aircraft come under an armed attack, including in the South China Sea – an assurance that has been consistently made since the first Trump administration. Marcos told Hegseth that the assurance of mutual defense 'continues to be the cornerstone' of the U.S.-Philippines relationship and thanked the U.S. for support 'that we need in the face of the threats that we, our country, is facing.' Speaking alongside Trump, Marcos said that 'we are essentially concerned with the defense of our territory and the exercise of our sovereign rights,' adding, 'Our strongest, closest, most reliable ally has always been the United States.' As the AFP news agency reported, Trump 'devoted much of the appearance to attacks on his Democratic predecessors Biden and Barack Obama.' In a possibly significant aside, Trump address relations with China, saying that he would 'probably' visit the country 'in the not-too-distant future.' While taking credit for 'untilt[ing]' the Philippines away from China (the shift in Manila's policy took place under the Biden administration), he said that the Philippines was independent in its dealings with Beijing. 'Do whatever you need to do,' Trump told Marcos, the Associated Press reported. 'But your dealing with China wouldn't bother me at all.'


Japan Today
5 hours ago
- Japan Today
US Olympic policy change bans transgender women in women's events
US Olympic and Paralympic Committee chief executive officer Sarah Hirshland was among those who sent a letter to national governing bodies indicating US transgender women could no longer compete in women's Olympic and Paralympic events American transgender women will no longer be able to compete in women's events at the Olympics and Paralympics after a recent policy change by the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC). A new note on the USOPC website regarding the participation of transgender athletes in sports says: "As of July 21, 2025, please refer to the USOPC athlete safety policy." The policy update, following US President Donald Trump's "Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports" executive order, was added to the USOPC Athlete Safety Policy on its website as a new subsection entitled "Additional Requirements." "The USOPC is committed to protecting opportunities for athletes participating in sport," the addition reads. "The USOPC will continue to collaborate with various stakeholders with oversight responsibilities... to ensure that women have a fair and safe competition environment consistent with Executive Order 14201 (Trump's order) and the Ted Stevens Olympic & Amateur Sports Act." The Stevens Act, adopted in 1988, provides a means of handling eligibility disputes for Olympic sports and other amateur events. A memo to Team USA from USOPC chief executive Sarah Hirshland and president Gene Sykes on Tuesday obtained by ABC News and ESPN made reference to Trump's February executive order, saying: "As a federally chartered organization, we have an obligation to comply with federal expectations." Trump's executive order threatens to remove federal funds from any school or institution allowing transgender girls to play on girls' teams, claiming that would violate Title IX rules giving US women equal sport opportunities. The order requires immediate enforcement against institutions that deny women single-sex sports and single-sex locker rooms. "Our revised policy emphasizes the importance of ensuring fair and safe competition environments for women," ESPN quoted the USOPC letter to governing bodies as saying. "All National Governing Bodies are required to update their applicable policies in alignment." ESPN also said the officials noted the USOPC "has engaged in a series of respectful and constructive conversations with federal officials" in the wake of Trump's executive order. The move comes as Los Angeles awaits a host role for the 2028 Summer Olympics. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) also altered its policy for transgender athlete participation to limit women's sports competitors to athletes assigned female at birth after Trump's executive order. © 2025 AFP