I may have missed it, but I didnt see where it was an American, whether civilian or military. All I saw was that a worker on the base. (That suggests a civilian, to me) Now on a military base, most of the non military employees are made up of local civilians. I would like to see that cleared up.
Rich Griffith - 8 years ago
Absolutely not. Having U.S. forces in Okinawa has great strategic value and serves as a deterrent for aggressive nations in the Pacific.
B C - 8 years ago
I'm pretty sure Marines are not the only ones committing crimes like this. But of course Japan has never said sorry for their atrosities.
I may have missed it, but I didnt see where it was an American, whether civilian or military. All I saw was that a worker on the base. (That suggests a civilian, to me) Now on a military base, most of the non military employees are made up of local civilians. I would like to see that cleared up.
Absolutely not. Having U.S. forces in Okinawa has great strategic value and serves as a deterrent for aggressive nations in the Pacific.
I'm pretty sure Marines are not the only ones committing crimes like this. But of course Japan has never said sorry for their atrosities.