v 6A -- Tuesday, January 17, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com s PU.S., Japan agree to move troops. Thousands of forces will move to Guam, 10,000 will stay in Okinawa TOKYO (AP ) - Japan and the United States agreed yesterday to proceed with plans to trans- fer thousands of U.S. troops out of the southern Japanese island of Okinawa, leaving behind the stalled discussion about closinga major U.S. Marine base there. The transfer, a key to U.S. troop restructuring in the Pacific, has been in limbo for years because it was linked to the closure and replacement of the strategically important base that Okinawans fiercely oppose. The announcement Wednes- day follows high-level talks to rework a 2006 agreement for 8,000 Marines to transfer to the U.S. territory of Guam by 2014 ifsa replacement for Marine Corps Air Station Futenma could be built elsewhere on Okinawa. That agreement has been effec- tively scuttled by opposition on Okinawa, where many residents believe the base should simply be closed and moved overseas or elsewhere in Japan. More than half of the 50,000 U.S. troops in Japan, including 18,000 Marines, are stationed on Okinawa, taking up around 10 percent of the island with nearly 40 bases and facilities. The two governments said in a joint statement that the trans- fer of thousands of U.S. Marines to Guam would not require the prior closure of Futenma, as the original pact required. Details of the realignment will be discussed further, but about 10,000 troops will remain on Okinawa, as in the original agreement. Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba told a news conference that he hoped the progress on the realignment plan would help the two countries step up deterrence in the Asia-Pacific region. He also said Tokyo and Washington would continue efforts to eventu- ally close Futenma. Progress on the issue is impor- tant to the United States, which is revising its military and diplo- matic posture in Asia - in what is being called the "Pacific Pivot" - to reflect the rising power of China and increasing tensions over territorial disputes through- out the region. Washington is also under pressure to make the most of its resources as budget cuts loom in Congress with combat operations are ending in Iraq and Afghani- stan. Wednesday's statement was vague on specifics of what lies ahead. But senior Japanese offi- cials have said 4,700 Marines will be transferred to Guam. The remaining 3,300 would reported- ly rotate among Australia, Hawaii and the Philippines. Pentagon press secretary George Little said from Washing- ton that talks would continue with both sides working on mitigating the impact on Okinawa, develop- ing Guam as a strategic hub and maintaining an effective U.S. mili- tary presence in the region. He also said discussing troop num- bers and locations was premature as the bilateral talks continue. Tokyo is hoping the reduction of troops on Okinawa will ease opposition and demonstrate its desire to stand by promises to reduce the island's share of the troop-hosting burden. Officials say they remain committed to closing Futenma, which the U.S. and Japan agreed to do after the 1995 rape of.a schoolgirl by three American servicemen led to mass protests. ELAIN E THOMPSON/AP Pastor Craig Houston, of Bremerton, Wash., holds up his hands as he leads a prayer in the Capitol rotunda for conserva- tive Christians yesterday in Olympia, Wash. while lawmakers voted on a law that woul d legalize gay marriage. Washington state legislators vote to legalize gay marralge Gov to s OLY Washi votedt yesterd the sta in the coupler The a feder Califor uncons violati and les The' the bill ers in t ies stoo the Dei floor hu The measur now g ChrisC to signi Greg after tl major a long to end sexual Dem sen, a g who h bills it years, ship lav years, a substitt Pede on the ernor expected Tuesday's ruling by the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit ign bill into law Court of Appeals, citing a section that stated "marriage is the name next week that society gives to the relation- ship that matters most between two adults." MPIA, Wash. (AP) - Several Republicans argued ngton state lawmakers against the bill, saying that it to approve gay marriage goes against the tradition of lay, setting the stage for marriage. Rep. Jay Rodne said te to become the seventh the measure "severs the cul- nation to allow same-sex tural, historical and legal under- s to wed. pinnings of the institution of action comes a day after marriage." al appeals court declared Despite the action, gaycouples nia's ban on gay marriage can't begin walking down the titutional, saying it was a aisle just yet. onofthe civil rights of gay The proposal would take bian couples effect 90 days after the session Washington House passed ends next month but opponents on a 55-43 vote. Support- have promised to fight gay mar- he public viewing galler- riage with a ballot measure that d and cheered as many on would allow voters to overturn mocratic side of the House the legislative approval. igged after the vote. If opponents gather enough state ate approved the signatures to take their fight to re last week, and the bill the ballot box, the law would be oes to Democratic Gov. put on hold pending the outcome Gregoire, who is expected of a November election. Oppo- it into law next week. nents must turn in more than loire issued a statement 120,000 signatures by June 6 if he vote, saying it was "a they want to challenge the pro- step toward completing posed law. Otherwise gay cou- and important journey pIes could wed starting in June. discrimination based on . Two Republicans crossed the orientation." aisle and voted in favor of the bill. ocratic Rep. Jamie Peder- Three Democrats voted against ay lawmaker from Seattle it. Democrats hold a 56-42 as sponsored gay rights majority in the House. the House for several Washington state, has had saying domestic partner- domestic partnership laws since ws as the state has had for 2007, and more than a dozen ire "a pale and inadequate other states have provisions, ute for marriage." ranging from civil unions to gay, rsen, during his remarks marriage, supporting same-sex House floor, read from couples. Gay marriage is legal in New York, Connecticut, Iowa, Massa- chusetts, New Hampshire, Ver- mont and Washington D.C. Lawmakers in New Jersey are expected to vote ongay marriage next week, and Maine could see a gay marriage proposal on the November ballot. Proposed amendments to ban gay marriage will be on the bal- lots in North Carolina in May and in Minnesota in November. A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit ruled Tuesday against California's voter-approved same-sex marriage ban, known as Proposition 8. The panel gave gay marriage opponents time to appeal the 2-1 decision before ordering the state to allow same-sex weddings to resume. The judges also said the decision only applies to California, even though the court has juris- diction in nine western states. Lawyers for the coalition of conservative religious groups that sponsored Proposition 8 said they have not decided if they will seek a new 9th Circuit hear- ing or file an appeal directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Washington state's momen- tum for same-sex marriage has been building and the debate has changed significantly since 1998, when lawmakers passed Washington's Defense of Mar- riage Act banning gay marriage. The constitutionality of that law ultimately was upheld by the state Supreme Court in 2006. But earlier that year, a gay civil rights measure passed after nearly 30 years of failure, signaling a change in the Legislature. NYPD boss' son not charged with rape Kf to NEW commis the pro of rapin drink, host of TV talk tion saic Greg absence Day Ne tions si The sto WNYW day he Pross they ha( Kelly w then th: to getti say whe The that Ke Manhat out for d her wh consent iar wit She tol, pregnai had an law enf the per ellyto rturn was authorized to speak publicly, and they spoke to The Associated TV anchor job Press on the condition of anonym- TV ancor job ity. tomorrowThe New York Police Depart- ment turned the matter over to the district attorney's office when sYORK (AP) - The poce the woman walked into a police ssioner's son, cleared of station Jan. 24, citing the poten- spect of criminal charges tial conflict of interest in investi- ig a woman he met for a gating a son of the commissioner, will return to his job as Raymond Kelly. a popular local morning Prosecutors interviewed show this week, his sta- "numerous relevant fact and d. expert witnesses," analyzed Kelly took a leave of receipts, security logs, text from his job at "Good messages and telephone records w York" after the allega- and interviewed the woman urfaced late last month. and Kelly, the chief of the Man- ation, local Fox affiliate hattan district attorney's office V-TV, confirmed Wednes- sex crimes unit, Martha Bash- would return Friday. ford, wrote in a letter Tuesday ecutors said Tuesday that to Kelly's lawyer, Andrew M. dn't found cause to charge Lankler. with a crime. Kelly said "After reviewing all of the evi- at he was looking forward dence, we have determined that ng back to work but didn't the facts established during our n. . investigation do not fit the defi- woman told authorities nitions of sexual assault crimes 1ly raped her in her lower under New York criminal law," ttan office after they went Bashford wrote. "Therefore, no drinks on Oct. 8, assaulting criminal charges are appropri- ile she wasn't capable of ate." ing to sex, a person famil- Kelly had vehemently denied. b the investigation said. doing anything wrong, and he d authorities she became portrayed the prosecutors' con- nt from the encounter and clusions as vindication. abortion, according to a "I am thankful that the inves-' orcement official. Neither tigation established what I've 'son nor the law official known all along, that I am inno- cent of the allegations that were waged against me," Kelly, 43, said in his statement. The woman, who works at a downtown Manhattan law firm, told police she met Kelly on the street; they then arranged to meet for drinks three days later at a bar at the nearby South Street Seaport, a second person familiar with the investigation has said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss details not made public. The woman and Kelly stayed in contact after- ward, the first person said. The woman's boyfriend learned the story and became enraged, that person said. Before the woman went to police, her boyfriend confronted the commissioner in person at a public event, saying Greg Kelly had ruined his girlfriend's life but declining to elaborate on the spot when asked what he meant, police .spokesman Paul Browne said. The commissioner suggest- ed the boyfriend send him a letter, but the man apparently never did, Browne said. Prosecutors do not plan to charge Kelly's accuser with any crime, DA's office spokeswoman Joan Vollero said. The AP does not name peo- ple who report being sexually assaulted unless they agree to be identified or come forward pub- licly. 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