SFGate: Japan, U.S. Agree on Return of Airspace

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Friday, October 27, 2006 (AP)
Japan, U.S. Agree on Return of Airspace
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer


   (10-27) 05:58 PDT TOKYO, Japan (AP) --

   The United States agreed Friday on a plan to return 40 percent of the
airspace over a U.S. Air Force base in Tokyo to Japanese control,
officials said.

   The return of the airspace to Japan could shorten flight times to civili=
an
airports, save fuel, and ease congested air traffic in the metropolitan
area.

   Under the agreement, the United States will return 40 percent of the
U.S.-controlled airspace over Yokota Air Base stretching toward Tokyo's
Haneda Airport to Japan in time for Haneda's planned expansion in 2009,
said a Japanese Defense Agency spokeswoman, speaking on condition of
anonymity because of agency policy.

   Officials from both countries had been discussing the final details of t=
he
deal as part of a broad U.S. military realignment plan.

   The measure would cut flying time for flights to and from Haneda, as well
as fuel and other operating costs, the Foreign Ministry said. For
instance, flights connecting Tokyo and southern Japan could save about 3
minutes.

   "We'll be able to get to the destination faster, and we don't have to
waste fuel," Keisuke Okada, an official at the Scheduled Airlines
Association of Japan, told public broadcaster NHK.

   U.S. military officials in Japan were not immediately available for
comment.

   About 400 flights a day to and from Tokyo's two main airports of Narita
and Haneda are forced to take less-efficient routes when approaching from
the west to avoid passing through the U.S.-controlled airspace, which
includes parts of Tokyo and surrounding areas, according to airline
officials.

   American troops have been stationed in Japan since the end of World War
II. The U.S. keeps about 50,000 troops in Japan under a mutual security
pact. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

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