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Viewing cable 07TOKYO5063, JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07TOKYO5063 2007-11-01 01:06 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO4799
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #5063/01 3050106
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 010106Z NOV 07
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 9093
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RHMFIUU/USFJ //J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/CTF 72
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 6503
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 4095
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 7760
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 2938
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 4780
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 9841
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 5899
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 6703
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 14 TOKYO 005063 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA; 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
 
SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
 
Index: 
 
1) Top headlines 
2) Editorials 
3) Prime Minister's daily schedule (Nikkei) 
 
4) Prime Minister Fukuda readies for a US visit filled with pending 
issues: MSDF refueling operations, USFJ realignment, North Korea 
(Nikkei) 
 
War on terror: 
5) MSDF refueling operations in the Indian Ocean end today after six 
years with services for 11 countries (Nikkei) 
6) Pentagon concerned that withdrawal of MSDF from Indian Ocean will 
affect warship refueling arrangements (Sankei) 
7) Fear that US-Japan relations will be strained due to ending of 
antiterrorism law and result may speed up Washington decision to 
remove DPRK from terror list (Tokyo Shimbun) 
8) US warship after MSDF refueling returned to port as is (Yomiuri) 
 
9) Chief Cabinet Secretary Machimura: No problem with MSDF refueling 
multipurpose warships in the Indian Ocean (Asahi) 
10) Defense Ministry division director to be summoned to testify at 
Lower House special committee on terrorism (Asahi) 
 
Defense scandals: 
11) Former Defense Minister Kyuma took money from Yamada Yoko Corp. 
billed as "carfare" (Mainichi) 
12) Former Vice Defense Minister Moriya knew in March about presence 
of Nihon Mirise defense contractor at ministry meeting but lied 
about it in Diet testimony (Nikkei) 
 
Defense issues: 
13) Prime minister, Okinawa governor agree to early relocation of 
Futenma Air Station (Yomiuri) 
14) Central government, local government representatives to meet on 
Futenma relocation issue on Nov. 7 (Sankei) 
15) USFJ realignment subsidies to 33 affected local communities, but 
Nago, Zama, which oppose the changes, are to get nothing (Asahi) 
16) Japan to provide Pakistan with 5 billion yen more in yen-loan 
aid in order to help it eliminate terrorism (Sankei) 
17) Study group on Yokota dual use goes into overtime (Yomiuri 
Online) 
 
Political scene: 
18) Mood of compromise between LDP, Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) 
continues to grow (Yomiuri) 
19) DPJ Diet Steering Committee Chairman Kenji Yamaoka used a 
historical slur about the Ainu (Mainichi) 
 
20) ROK Foreign Minister denies that "regret" for Kim Dae Jung 
abduction was an apology (Asahi) 
 
Articles: 
 
1) TOP HEADLINES 
 
Asahi & Yomiuri: 
Panel in final report: Successive heads of Social Insurance Agency 
most responsible for pension record fiasco 
 
Mainichi: 
 
TOKYO 00005063  002 OF 014 
 
SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
Prime minister admits state's responsibility for drug-induced 
hepatitis C infections 
 
Nikkei: 
BOJ report predicts 2.1 PERCENT  growth for FY2008 but warns of 
uncertainties 
 
Sankei & Tokyo Shimbun: 
Health panel in final report finds that identifying 40 PERCENT  of 
missing pension records will be hard 
 
Akahata: 
MSDF to withdraw from Indian Ocean today 
 
2) EDITORIALS 
 
Asahi: 
(1) Japan should rethink role in war on terrorism, taking 
opportunity of MSDF withdrawal from Indian Ocean 
 
Mainichi: 
(1) BOJ report: Aim at emerging from policy of ultra-low interest 
rates 
(2) Impermissible fabrication of performance of fire-resistant 
materials, making light of human lives 
 
Yomiuri: 
(1) Long way to go to restore public trust in pension system 
(2) Construction material maker Nichias fabricates performance of 
fire-resistant materials 
 
Nikkei: 
(1) BOJ decision to keep interest rate unchanged reflects 
consideration to growing uncertainties 
(2) Report reveals Social Insurance Agency tried to cover up bad 
news 
 
Sankei: 
(1) Fabricated performance of fire-resistant materials: Aware of 
high cost of illegalities 
(2) Reporting on teachers refusing to sing Kimigayo necessary 
 
Tokyo Shimbun: 
(1) Report unveils how sloppy Social Insurance Agency's 
recordkeeping was 
(2) No help for company that concealed falsified performance of 
fire-resistant performance 
 
Akahata: 
(1) Open questioning first step to preventing false charges 
 
3) Prime Minister's Official Residence (Kantei) 
 
Prime Minister's schedule, Oct. 31 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
10:40 
Met with Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Futahashi at Kantei. 
 
12:22 
 
TOKYO 00005063  003 OF 014 
 
SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
Met with Futahashi. 
 
13:56 
Met with Vice Health and Labor Minister Erikawa and Social Insurance 
Agency Director-General Sakano. 
 
15:00 
Met with Vice Foreign Minster Yachi. Afterwards, met with LDP Osaka 
Chapter Chair Taro Nakayama. 
 
16:03 
Met with Minister of State for Economic and Fiscal Policy Ota and 
others. Later, met with Vice Environment Minister Tamura and Global 
Environment Bureau Director-General Minamikawa. 
 
17:08 
Met with Vice Minister of Finance for International Affairs 
Shinohara. Afterwards, met with Okinawa Gov. Nakaima. 
 
19:04 
Dined with his secretaries at "Les Saisons" at Imperial Hotel. 
 
21:48 
Arrived at his private residence in Nozawa. 
 
4) Prime Minister Fukuda to leave for US to meet President Bush on 
Nov. 16 with armful of pending issues 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The first meeting between Prime Minister Fukuda and United States 
President Bush is likely to take place in Washington on Nov. 16. 
There are no prospects in sight for an early passage of a new bill 
designed to resume the Maritime Self-Defense Force's (MSDF) 
refueling mission in the Indian Ocean. It is also speculated that 
the US might delist North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism in 
November. The two leaders will hold their meeting at such a 
sensitive time. Additionally, there are issues that have been 
smoldering between the two countries as the potential causes for 
bilateral friction, such as the pending US force realignment in 
Japan and possible cuts in Japan's host nation support. The prime 
minister will set out for the US with a heavy load on his 
shoulders. 
 
The prime minister is scheduled to leave for the US on Nov. 15 and 
meet with President Bush over lunch at the White House the following 
day. He is expected to explain the outlook for the fate of the new 
refueling legislation, hoping to obtain the understanding of the 
President. 
 
There are numerous pending issues between Japan and the US. Former 
Vice Defense Minister played a key role in dealing with the issue of 
US force realignment. Moriya, however, has since left the ministry, 
and a series of scandals involving him, including his cozy ties with 
a defense contractor, has been cropping up, increasing the 
confusion. 
 
Fukuda met Okinawa Governor Hirokazu Nakaima for the first time at 
his official residence (Kantei) yesterday, in which he said in 
response to a request by Nakaima for special consideration to the 
base issue: "I would like to make utmost efforts in that direction." 
 
TOKYO 00005063  004 OF 014 
 
SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
The government will resume talks on the Futenma relocation issue 
with local communities on Nov. 7, but dramatic progress cannot be 
expected under the current situation. 
 
On host nation support, the Finance Ministry has announced plans to 
cut the so-called sympathy budget by 10 billion yen when the current 
special agreement is renewed at the end of March 2008. But US 
Secretary of Defense Gates is expected to call on Japan to reduce 
 
SIPDIS 
the US burden when he visits Japan on the 7th. A conclusion is 
unlikely to be reached before the compilation later the year of the 
budget bill for next fiscal year. 
 
Beef remains as another thorny issue. The US is calling on Japan to 
abolish its import conditions. Japan has set the condition of 
importing only beef from cattle 20 months of age or younger, but the 
US has claimed that Japan should abide by the international 
standard. The government fears that if Japan makes a compromise on 
food safety, consumers might react strongly. 
 
Above all, issues with North Korea are lying as the main pending 
problem. The prime minister met Vice Foreign Minister Shotaro Yachi 
yesterday and listened to his briefing about the positions of the US 
government and Congress toward North Korea, based on the contents of 
talks he had held with US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher 
Hill during his recent visit to the US. The prime minister has 
emphasized a policy of dialogue toward Pyongyang, but should 
Washington delist the North at an early date, his policy switch 
might elicit an angry response from hard-liners toward North Korea. 
 
 
In the Diet, the opposition camp has control of the House of 
Councillors. Under this situation, Prime Minister Fukuda fears that 
if foreign countries judge Fukuda as lacking the competence required 
of a prime minister, he will lose international confidence. The 
first Japan-US summit will be a major challenge for the prime 
minister. 
 
5) Six-year MSDF refueling mission to be halted 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) is to halt today its six-year 
refueling operation in support of the antiterrorism campaign in and 
around Afghanistan, which was Japan's international contribution, 
like its activities to support Iraqi reconstruction. With the halt 
of the MSDF refueling mission, Japan's fight against the war on 
terror will reach a major turning point. 
 
Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura expressed regret of the 
withdrawal of the MSDF in a press conference yesterday, saying: 
"Japan alone will drop out of the ongoing war on terror. This will 
leave a serious stain on Japan's future." Foreign Minister Masahiko 
Koumura also expressed his concern, noting, "The MSDF's activities 
are a significant basis for the maritime interdiction operation 
(MIO). The efficiency of the MIO will greatly drop." 
 
Following the terrorist attacks on the United States in September 
2001, then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi ordered the creation of 
the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law. The law was established to 
extend logistic support to foreign vessels engaging in the campaign 
to eliminate terrorist forces. Based on the law, Japan for the first 
 
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time dispatched the Self-Defense Forces overseas in a time of war. 
 
The MSDF in December 2001 began supplying fuel in the Indian Ocean. 
One year later, in the face of strong resistance, the government 
dispatched an Aegis destroyer, having the SDF carry out overseas 
operations for a long time. In the first two year of its operations 
in the Indian Ocean, the MSDF supplied 90 PERCENT  of its fuel to US 
ships, but it supplied more oil to French and Pakistani vessles 
after 2003, when the Iraq war started. The MSDF provided fuel to 
warships from as many as 11 countries. 
 
Among the countries taking part in the MIO, Japan is the only 
country that supplied fuel free of charge. Ambassadors to Japan from 
11 countries, including the US, Britain, and Afghanistan, yesterday 
held briefing to explain the importance of the MSDF operations to 
lawmakers of ruling and opposition parties. 
 
However, the fate of a new bill to continue the MSDF mission is 
uncertain at present. The opposition camp has strongly criticized 
the alleged diversion of fuel provided by the MSDF to a US supply 
ship in February 2003 for use in the Iraq war, as well as the 
government's correction of the cover-up of a data error the amount 
of fuel supplied to a US ship. A senior Defense Ministry official 
said dejectedly: "If deliberations on the new bill slip to next 
year's ordinary session, the MSDF refueling mission might be 
suspended for one year." 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda told the press last night: "I'm 
disappointed with the halt of the MSDF mission. I hope that the 
operation will be resumed as early as possible." The government is 
going to release a statement that says it aims to restart the 
activities as quickly as possible. 
 
6) Pentagon concerned about MSDF pullout, impact on operations 
 
SANKEI (Page 7) (Abridged) 
November 1, 2007 
 
WASHINGTON-Japan will shortly call off the Maritime Self-Defense 
Force's refueling activities in the Indian Ocean. In this regard, 
the US Department of Defense is concerned about potential 
repercussions on the war on terror, an official said on Oct. 30. 
This Pentagon official also indicated that the United States does 
not want to see its bilateral alliance with Japan worsen as a 
consequence of the MSDF's withdrawal. However, the Pentagon official 
implied the US government's dissatisfaction, since the MSDF is not 
expected to resume its refueling activities. The official was 
speaking to Japanese reporters, with Secretary of Defense Gates 
scheduled to visit Japan in early November. 
 
The Pentagon official noted that naval vessels from countries like 
Pakistan and Italy would have to make more port calls for fuel after 
the MSDF's withdrawal and would lose time for patrolling. 
Furthermore, the Pentagon official also said those vessels would be 
exposed to terrorist attacks or other eventualities should they make 
more port calls. This official likened such a case to the incident 
in October 2000, in which a small boat attacked the USS Cole, a US 
Navy destroyer, when she was anchored for fuel in the port of Aden, 
Yemen, and many were killed or wounded. 
 
7) Japan-US relations may be strained with antiterrorism law due to 
expire today 
 
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TOKYO SHIMBUN (Page 7) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
Yasuyuki Oguri, Washington 
 
With the expiration today of the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law, 
Japan will suspend the Maritime Self-Defense Force's (MSDF) 
refueling mission in the Indian Ocean. The US government takes this 
suspension as a matter Japan should handle and as an unavoidable 
case. However, the curtailment could rapidly strain Japan-US 
relations, and could affect the US decision on whether North Korea 
will be removed from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. 
 
At a time when the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) suffered a 
devastating defeat in the Upper House election, the US government 
half-judged that it had become difficult for Japan to continue the 
refueling operation. While Washington is unhappy with the 
suspension, there is no mood to criticize Japan. 
 
Lying behind Washington's calm attitude is its judgment that 
although it expects Tokyo to resume the refueling mission as quickly 
as possible, if it puts strong pressure on Japan to do so, the 
result would simply create a strong impression that the US was 
forcing Japan to engage in the refueling mission and that could have 
an adverse effect on Diet deliberations on new antiterrorism special 
measures legislation. Out of consideration for Japan, Secretary of 
Defense Gates, who will visit Japan in early November, will not 
actively take up this matter. 
 
Speaking of this attitude of the US government, Bruce Klinger, a 
senior research fellow for Northeast Asia at the Heritage 
Foundation, said, "I think the US government, which is considering 
delisting North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism, does not 
reproach Japan regarding the refueling issue." He indicated that the 
US could not be hard on Japan over the refueling issue since the US 
envisions a possible delisting of North Korea, which Japan is 
opposing. 
 
In other words, it has become easy for the US now to delist North 
Korea because Japan has had to suspend the refueling mission. But if 
North Korea is delisted, Japan will be certain to raise an 
objection. 
 
In addition to these issues, Japan and the US have other issues that 
could trigger friction such as a cut in Japan's host-nation 
support. 
 
Should the refueling issue spark trouble over other issues, such as 
the delisting of North Korea and the reduction host-nation support, 
there is a good possibility that the currently solid Japan-US ties 
could worsen rapidly. 
 
8) MSDF-refueled US vessel may have returned straight home; Defense 
Ministry asking US for verification 
 
YOMIURI (Page 4) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
Defense Ministry Operations Planning Bureau Director-General 
Nobushige Takamizawa revealed in yesterday's meeting of the House of 
Representatives Special Committee on Prevention of Terrorism that 
 
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there is a possibility that a US vessel refueled by the Maritime 
Self-Defense Force in the Indian Ocean did not take action in line 
with the objectives of the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law and 
that the ministry has asked the US side for its confirmation. 
 
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ or Minshuto) lawmaker Yorihisa 
Matsuno, based on the US cruiser Antietam's website, pointed out the 
possibility that the US vessel refueled by the MSDF in waters off 
Mumbai, India, on December 18, 2001, returned straight to the United 
States via Singapore. Matsuno then asked, "Did it operate in line 
with the spirit of the Antiterrorism Law?" 
 
9) Chief Cabinet Secretary Machimura: No problem with MSDF supplying 
fuel to ship with more than one mission 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
In a Lower House Antiterrorism Committee session yesterday, Chief 
Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura took the view that there is no 
problem with the Maritime Self-Defense Force (MSDF) in the Indian 
Ocean providing fuel to a vessel engaged in more than one mission. 
The US Defense Department said in a statement released recently: "It 
is difficult to trace how the fuel Japan supplied was used, because 
US Navy vessels often engage in more than one mission." 
 
In response to a question by Seiken Akamine of the Japanese 
Communist Party, Machimura stated: 
 
"What is important is that a ship that Japan provides oil is engaged 
in the maritime interdiction operation. As long as that 
qualification is satisfied, there is no problem with whether a ship 
is engaged in another mission." 
 
Akamine questioned, "Don't you think that you means that the MSDF 
can supply oil to even a warship that is carrying out a large 
air-raid in the Iraq war?" Machimura answered: "I think (I) 
understand the law correctly." 
 
10) Ex-MSDF official to be called as unsworn witness 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The House of Representatives Special Committee on Antiterror 
Measures held a meeting of its directors yesterday on the Defense 
Ministry's cover-up of an error in the quantity of fuel supplied by 
the Maritime Self-Defense Force to a US Navy oiler. In the meeting, 
the committee directors agreed to summon Masayoshi Teraoka, a former 
director of the Plans and Programs Division at the MSDF Maritime 
Staff Office, to the committee on the morning of Nov. 5 as an 
unsworn witness as demanded by the opposition parties. The committee 
will also call in four academic experts on the afternoon of the same 
day to hear their views. They include Kazuhisa Ogawa, a military 
analyst, and Kenji Isezaki, a professor at the Tokyo University of 
Foreign Studies. 
 
11) Yamada Yoko found to have given former Defense Minister Kyuma 
more than 100,000 yen from slush funds as transportation expenses in 
2005 
 
MAINICHI (Page 30) (Full) 
 
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SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
November 1, 2007 
 
It was found that Yamada Yoko, a trading company specializing in 
defense procurement, which had treated former Administrative Vice 
Defense Minister Takemasa Moriya (63) with free rounds of golf, had 
approximately 2 million yen as slush funds and gave portions of the 
funds to politicians as transportation expenses. According to an 
involved source, the company gave more than 100,000 yen to then 
Defense Minister Akio Kyuma of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in 
2005 as transportation expenses. The Tokyo District Public 
Prosecutors Office knows these facts and is pressing ahead with 
efforts to shed light on Yamada Yoko's payoffs to politicians and 
bureaucrats. 
 
The same source also said that Kyuma received more than 100,000 yen 
as transportation expenses when he attended a wedding reception for 
a family member of the owner of Yamada Yoko at the end of 2005. 
Yamada Yoko has accumulated slush funds worth about 2 million yen a 
year by cashing gift certificates purchased by its affiliate. The 
cash given to Kyuma was disbursed from these funds. 
 
Kyuma was on close terms with the family of the owner of Yamada 
Yoko. He knew Motonobu Miyazaki (69), former executive director of 
the company, who has repeatedly entertained Moriya, from about 10 
years ago. It has also been found that Kyuma had been invited for 
free meals by Miyazaki since last fall. 
 
Miyazaki is reportedly telling investigators about Yamada Yoko's 
slush funds on a voluntary basis. Investigators appear to be making 
efforts to get to the bottom of the matter. 
 
12) Attendance of Nihon Mirise employee at Defense Ministry meeting 
reported to Moriya in March; Moriya suspected of having made false 
testimony in Diet 
 
NIKKEI (Page 43) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
It was learned from a related source yesterday that an employee of 
Nihon Mirise, a company established by Motonobu Yamada (69), a 
former executive director of Yamada Yoko, was present at a meeting 
on the procurement of engines for the next-generation transport 
aircraft, codenamed CX, held in January at the ministry, causing a 
problem within the ministry, since Nihon Mirise was not a 
contractor. The matter was reported to then Administrative Vice 
Defense Minister Takemasa Moriya (63) in March. Regarding this 
issue, Moriya noted in his sworn testimony in the Diet, "I am not 
aware of that matter." There is a possibility of Moriya being 
charged with making false testimony. 
 
According to the same source, the objective of the meeting was to 
discuss the procurement of the CX engine. Representatives of 
Kawasaki Heavy Industries, the CX manufacturer, General Electric 
(GE) of the US, the engine manufacturer, and Yamada Yoko, GE's Japan 
agent, took part in it. The employee of Nihon Mirise was allegedly 
present at this meeting. 
 
Nihon Mirise replaced Yamada Yoko in late July as GE's Japan agent. 
However, since it had not yet signed an agent contract with GE as of 
January, the company was not a contracting company for the CX 
engine. 
 
 
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SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
As such, a question arose in the Defense Ministry, and the ministry 
approved his attendance as an interpreter for the GE 
representative. 
 
Nihon Mirise and Yamada Yoko were fighting in a civil suit over 
defense trade rights, such as an agent contract for GE, and the 
headhunting of Yamada Yoko employees by Nihon Mirise. 
 
Since there was fear that the attendance of a representative of 
Nihon Mirise, an outsider, at an important in-house meeting could 
draw fire outside the ministry, details of the matter were allegedly 
reported to top officials at the time, including then Defense 
Minister Akio Kyuma and Moriya. 
 
Taking up this matter during the Diet summoning of Moriya as a sworn 
witness, New Komeito lawmaker Shigeyuki Tomita questioned him, 
"Yamada Yoko was GE's agent at the time, and yet a representative of 
Nihon Mirise also took part in the meeting. Don't you think it is 
strange that an irrelevant person was present at the meeting, unless 
a very influential person approved his attendance?" 
 
Moriya replied, "I am not aware of that fact." His reply is 
inconsistent with the allegation given by the related source, who 
said that the matter was reported to Moriya in March. 
 
The Diet Testimony Law stipulates that if a sworn witness makes 
false testimony in Diet summoning, this person could be given a 
prison sentence up to 10 years. 
 
13) Fukuda, Nakaima reach agreement on early relocation of Futenma 
Air Station 
 
YOMIURI (Page 4) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda held talks yesterday with Okinawa 
Governor Hirokazu Nakaima for the first time after assuming office 
and reached an agreement to aim at the early relocation of the US 
Marine Corps' Futenma Air Station (in Ginowan) in the prefecture. 
Okinawa, which seeks changes to the government's plan to build a 
V-shaped pair of runways at Camp Schwab (in Nago), has been at 
loggerheads with Tokyo. An agreement was reached yesterday for the 
two sides to hold talks while making efforts to find common ground. 
 
14) Government to hold consultations on Nov. 7 with Okinawa on 
relocation of US Futenma Air Station 
 
SANKEI (Page 5) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The government decided yesterday to hold a discussion on Nov. 7 with 
Okinawan municipalities on its plan to relocate US Marine Corps' 
Futenma Air Station. Consultations on the relocation of the Futenma 
Air Station to off Camp Schwab (Nago City, Okinawa) have been 
suspended since January due to the clashes of opinions over a plan 
to build a V-shaped pair of runways. 
 
Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura stated yesterday in a 
Lower House Antiterrorism Special Committee session: "The Futenma 
relocation plan is important for the realignment of US forces in 
Japan, as well as for Japan's security. I want to do my best so that 
the relocation plan will be implemented as early as possible." 
 
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The government aims to break the impasse by letting the Prime 
Minister's Official Residence (Kantei) take the initiative in 
coordinating views, having Machimura take charge of the relocation 
issue. However, there is a big gap in views between the GOJ and the 
local government, which wants the V-shaped pair of runways built 
offshore as far as possible. It will be difficult to find common 
ground. 
 
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda met with Okinawa Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima 
yesterday evening for the first time in the Kantei. Fukuda showed 
his understanding for Nakaima's request that the government should 
respect the views of local governments.  After the meeting, Fukuda 
told the press: "I want to carry out negotiations in a serious 
manner in consideration of Okinawa's heavy burden." 
 
15) Nago, Zama off the list for USFJ realignment incentives 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The Defense Ministry yesterday designated 33 municipalities to be 
subsidized in compensation for their base-hosting burden along with 
the realignment of US forces in Japan. In May this year, the Diet 
enacted a law for special measures to implement the US military's 
realignment. The special measures law provides plans to subsidize 
base-hosting localities. This is the first time for the Defense 
Ministry to designate municipalities for its subsidization under the 
law. 
 
Specifically, the Defense Ministry has designated Yokosuka, Kanagawa 
Prefecture, for the city's agreement to host the USS George 
Washington, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. However, the Defense 
Ministry did not designate Nago, Okinawa Prefecture, for its 
objection to the planned relocation of Futenma airfield. In its 
decision this time, the Defense Ministry clearly segregates 
localities with carrots and sticks according to the degree of their 
cooperation in the process of realigning the US military presence in 
Japan. 
 
According to the Defense Ministry, each designated municipality will 
be notified of subsidies in November. In the current fiscal year, 
the government will start to subsidize those designated 
municipalities. The Defense Ministry, according to its Local 
Cooperation Bureau, will additionally designate other municipalities 
if they accept realignment plans. 
 
The Defense Ministry-designated municipalities include the city of 
Tsugaru in Aomori Prefecture and the city of Chitose in Hokkaido. 
 
SIPDIS 
Tsugaru has accepted the installation of advanced early warning 
 
SIPDIS 
radar for intercepting intercontinental ballistic missiles. Chitose 
has accepted the dispersive relocation of F-15 fighters from US 
military bases to Chitose base for training purposes. 
 
Meanwhile, the Defense Ministry precluded six municipalities that 
are opposed to relocation plans for US forces. Those deselected 
municipalities include the city of Iwakuni in Yamaguchi Prefecture. 
Iwakuni is against the planned relocation of carrier-borne aircraft 
to Iwakuni Air Station. The US Army plans to locate the 1st Corps' 
command functions to Camp Zama in Kanagawa Prefecture. Along with 
this command relocation, Camp Zama will reorganize its headquarters. 
Sagamihara City-one of Camp Zama's local hosts-is on the list of 
 
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designated municipalities for its acceptance of the plan. However, 
another local host, Zama City, is off the list for its objection to 
the plan. 
 
16) Yen loans to Pakistan to be boosted by 5 billion yen: New 
contribution intended to help root out terrorism 
 
SANKEI (Page 1) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
Following the expiration of the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law 
expires on Nov. 1, Maritime Self-Defense Force's vessels will pull 
out of the Indian Ocean on the 2nd. With this in mind, the 
government yesterday decided to substantially boost economic 
assistance to Pakistan for this fiscal year. Though assistance to 
that country has thus far been restricted to oil and water supplies, 
the government will increase yen loans from 25 billion yen last year 
to 30 billion yen starting this fiscal year. The increased amount 
will be used for assistance for the development of the tribal areas 
located in the border area near Afghanistan. 
 
The area for the envisaged development is called the Federally 
Administered Tribal Area (FATA), located in northwestern Pakistan. 
FATA, which stretches along the border near Afghanistan, is a 
stronghold of the Taliban. The aim of assisting the development of 
the area is to eliminate the influence of the Taliban. 
 
Japan's credibility in the international community is bound to 
decline because of its pullout from the maritime interdiction 
operations in the Indian Ocean. The government has characterized the 
assistance as a new contribution to the fight against terrorism. 
 
FATA has remained an autonomous area outside the reach of the 
central government since 1947, when Pakistan was founded. A delay in 
development has made the area a center for drug smugglers. Taliban 
remnants that fled from Afghanistan are active there, making fierce 
terrorist attacks on North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) 
troops in the border area. The US government has sounded out the 
possibility of Japan's cooperation for the development of the area, 
noting that in order to prevent terrorist attacks in Afghanistan, it 
is essential to develop FATA and make it self-sufficient. 
 
An MSDF supply vessel has assisted operations to prevent moves of 
terrorists and the transportation of arms and ammunition by 
supplying fuel and water to vessels of 11 countries. Its operations 
have been highly appreciated by many countries, including Pakistan. 
Japan has supplied the second-largest amount of fuel to Pakistani 
vessels, following the amount supplied to US oilers. 
 
17) Negotiations to continue on joint use of Yokota Air Base: 
Japanese, US governments unable to reach agreement by end of month 
 
YOMIURI ONLINE (Tama edition) (Full) 
October 31, 2007 
 
The Japanese and US governments, unable to reach an agreement on the 
joint use of Yokota Air Base by the deadline set for the end of 
October, have decided to continue negotiations into November. 
 
A passage was included on joint use in the final report on US force 
realignment in Japan, announced in May last year, that went: " The 
USG and GOJ will conduct a study of the specific conditions and 
 
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modalities for possible civilian-military dual-use of Yokota Air 
Base, to be completed within 12 months from commencement." 
 
Based on this agreement, both governments established a study group 
on joint military-civilian use of Yokota Air Base consisting of 
responsible foreign and defense affairs officials. The study 
commenced last year in October. The aim was to complete the study by 
the end of this October, and until now, the group has met a total of 
eight times. 
 
A source in Foreign Ministry's Status of Forces Agreement Office 
said, "The study effort on such matters as the specific conditions 
is still not ended." Recognizing that agreement could not be reached 
by the end of October, the official added, "We would like to 
conclude the study as early as possible." 
 
Both governments have decided to make a judgment in the end on 
whether joint use is feasible or not based on the results of the 
study group's report. 
 
18) LDP, DPJ moving closer; Shift from confrontation to coordination 
evident after party-head session 
 
YOMIURI (Page 4) (Excerpts) 
November 1, 2007 
 
The first party-head meeting between Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and 
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ or Minshuto) President Ichiro Ozawa 
continued to rock the ruling and opposition blocs yesterday. Ozawa's 
meeting with Fukuda drew fire from all opposition parties but the 
DPJ, sparking a sense of alarm against a possible grand coalition by 
the LDP and DPJ. At the same time, the two parties reached an 
agreement on new Diet personnel appointments rules and decided to 
hold prior consultations on Political Funds Control Law revision and 
begin talks on the integration of the ruling coalition's and the 
DPJ's plans for revising the Natural Disaster Victims Relief Law. 
The Diet has now begun moving away from confrontation to 
coordination. 
 
Given the schedule for Fukuda and Ozawa to meet again on Nov. 2, the 
DPJ has confirmed the policy course to postpone producing a 
counterproposal to the Antiterrorism Special Measures Law until 
after their meeting. A senior DPJ lawmaker explained: "In the 
upcoming party-head session, there is a possibility that the LDP 
will support the DPJ's civilian-assistance-oriented plan. We should 
not demonstrate an adversarial stand by presenting a counterproposal 
at this point." 
 
Meanwhile, Japanese Communist Party Chairman Kazuo Shii in a press 
conference yesterday criticized Ozawa, saying: "It is like the LDP 
and DPJ are hijacking the Diet. Mr. Ozawa is repeating closed-door 
sessions against his own words that he would discuss matters openly 
before the public. There is no way to explain his behavior." 
 
Social Democratic Party head Mizuho Fukushima, too, complained in a 
press conference: "Even former Prime Minister Koizumi held talks 
with all opposition party heads. An attempt to decide on matters by 
just two party heads by suspending the Diet is unheard of. I cannot 
understand at all the significance of the largest opposition party 
acceding to a request and its advantage. I am against a thing like a 
grand coalition." 
 
 
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SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 11//07 
 
A variety of reactions also came from within the ruling parties. 
 
There have been voices of concern in the New Komeito about the LDP 
and DPJ moving closer to each other. Despite that, Secretary General 
Kazuo Kitagawa in a press meeting yesterday underlined the party's 
"cool-headedness," saying: "The political situation is clearly such 
that opposition party policy has to be reflected in decision-making 
at times. (The prime minister and LDP executives) have informed us 
of (the party-head talks) in advance. There is no concern." 
 
19) DPJ's Diet Affairs Committee Chair Yamaoka says in meeting with 
LDP counterpart: "We are barbarian tribes of Ainu origin" 
 
MAINICHI (Page 2) (Full) 
November 1, 2007 
 
So Watanabe 
 
At the beginning of a session of Diet affairs policy chiefs between 
the major opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) and the ruling 
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), DPJ Diet Affairs Committee Chairman 
Kenji Yamaoka said: "(Of the four attendees), you two are peers. We 
are barbarian tribes of Ainu origin." Yamaoka retracted these 
remarks at a press briefing held immediately after the meeting, but 
his gaffe is likely to create a stir, as the DPJ supported Kaori 
Tahara, an Ainu who ran as an independent in the Hokkaido 
constituency in this summer's Upper House election. 
 
Meeting the press, Yamaoka said, "I take back any expression leading 
to discrimination. If I caused any misunderstanding, I feel sorry 
for that," and retracted his controversial remarks. He added: "I 
used that expression to mean sturdiness and that I represent working 
people. I don't agree with those who think the use of that 
expression in itself is discrimination. I don't look down on people 
of Ainu origin. I mentioned it, but I did so because I respect the 
Ainu." 
 
Susumu Emori, professor (of Japanese history) at Tohoku Gakuin 
University and an expert on the Ainu problem, said: 
 
"Assuming that the Ainu are barbarians, he apparently made those 
remarks. He may be unaware of that, but that is a problem. I 
question his qualifications as a responsible legislator." 
 
20) ROK foreign minister says, "Regret means regret," in response to 
ROK ambassador's remarks on "abduction of Kim Dae Jung" 
 
ASAHI (Page 7) (Abridged) 
November 1, 2007 
 
Tadahisa Takatsuki, Seoul 
 
South Korean Ambassador to Japan Yu Myung Hwan on Oct. 30 conveyed 
"regret" to Foreign Minister Koumura regarding the 1973 abduction of 
Kim Dae Jung. In this regard, South Korea Foreign Affairs & Trade 
Minister Song Min Soon yesterday noted, "Regret means regret," and 
steered clear of mentioning that the word "regret" means "apology" 
by the South Korean government. Japan has taken the ambassador's 
mention of "regret" as meaning an "apology." According to several 
informed sources, South Korea, which, out of consideration for 
public opinion, wanted not to give a strong impression that it 
offered an apology to Japan, and Japan, which thought it was 
 
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necessary for South Korea to declare an apology in some form, tried 
to settle the abduction case by interpreting "regret" in ways to 
meet their respective convenience. 
 
Song was replying to a question by a South Korean reporter asking, 
"Did the ambassador's remark mean regret or apology?" 
 
According to an informed source, soon after a report acknowledging 
the then intelligence agency's involvement in the abduction of Kim 
was released on Oct. 24, the South Korean government decided to 
express "regret" to Japan and conveyed this decision to Japan. Out 
of consideration for public backlash, South Korea found it necessary 
to avoid using direct words expressing apology to Japan with one 
South Korean government official noting, "Regret also means 
apology." Japan therefore decided to take "regret" as an apology. 
Both sides thus reached tacit consent. 
 
In a meeting with South Korean Ambassador Yu on Oct. 30, Foreign 
Minister Koumura said "I take regret as 'apology.'" Speaking of the 
description mentioning "Japan's responsibility," Koumura asked the 
ambassador to make sure that "that is not the view of the South 
Korean government." Ambassador Yu said, "In my view, I think it is 
not." Thus both sides settled the abduction case. 
 
SCHIEFFER