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Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia: Persuasion and Its Limits
Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia: Persuasion and Its Limits
Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia: Persuasion and Its Limits
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Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia: Persuasion and Its Limits

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Since the end of World War II, protests against U.S. military base and related policies have occurred in several Asian host countries. How much influence have these protests had on the p;olicy regarding U.S. military bases? What conditions make protests more likely to influence policy? Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia answers these questions by examining state response to twelve major protests in Asia since the end of World War II—in the Philippines, Okinawa, and South Korea.

Yuko Kawato lays out the conditions under which protesters' normative arguments can and cannot persuade policy-makers to change base policy, and how protests can still generate some political or military incentives for policy-makers to adjust policy when persuasion fails. Kawato also shows that when policy-makers decide not to change policy, they can offer symbolic concessions to appear norm-abiding and to secure a smoother implementation of policies that protesters oppose. While the findings will be of considerable interest to academics and students, perhaps their largest impact will be on policy makers and activists, for whom Kawato offers recommendations for their future decision-making and actions.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 8, 2015
ISBN9780804795388
Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia: Persuasion and Its Limits

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    Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia - Yuko Kawato

    Stanford University Press

    Stanford, California

    © 2015 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved.

    No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system without the prior written permission of Stanford University Press.

    Printed in the United States of America on acid-free, archival-quality paper

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Kawato, Yuko, author.

    Protests against U.S. military base policy in Asia : persuasion and its limits / Yuko Kawato.

    pages cm — (Studies in Asian Security)

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    ISBN 978-0-8047-9416-9 (cloth : alk. paper)

    1. Military bases, American—Political aspects—Asia—Case studies.   2. United States—Military policy—Case studies.   3. Asia—Military policy—Case studies.   4. Protest movements—Asia—Case studies.   5. United States—Military relations—Asia—Case studies.   6. Asia—Military relations—United States—Case studies.   I. Title.   II. Series: Studies in Asian Security.

    UA26.A84K39 2015

    355.7095—dc23

    2014038506

    ISBN 978-0-8047-9538-8 (electronic)

    Protests Against U.S. Military Base Policy in Asia

    PERSUASION AND ITS LIMITS

    Yuko Kawato

    Stanford University Press

    Stanford, California

    Studies in Asian Security

    SERIES EDITORS

    Amitav Acharya, Chief Editor

    American University

    Alastair Iain Johnston

    Harvard University

    David Leheny, Chief Editor

    Princeton University

    Randall Schweller

    The Ohio State University

    INTERNATIONAL BOARD

    Rajesh M. Basrur

    Nanyang Technological University

    Barry Buzan

    London School of Economics

    Victor D. Cha

    Georgetown University

    Thomas J. Christensen

    Princeton University

    Stephen P. Cohen

    The Brookings Institution

    Chu Yun-han

    Academia Sinica

    Rosemary Foot

    University of Oxford

    Aaron L. Friedberg

    Princeton University

    Sumit Ganguly

    Indiana University, Bloomington

    Avery Goldstein

    University of Pennsylvania

    Michael J. Green

    Georgetown University

    Stephan M. Haggard

    University of California, San Diego

    G. John Ikenberry

    Princeton University

    Takashi Inoguchi

    Chuo University

    Brian L. Job

    University of British Columbia

    Miles Kahler

    University of California, San Diego

    Peter J. Katzenstein

    Cornell University

    Khong Yuen Foong

    Oxford University

    Byung-Kook Kim

    Korea University

    Michael Mastanduno

    Dartmouth College

    Mike Mochizuki

    The George Washington University

    Katherine H. S. Moon

    Wellesley College

    Qin Yaqing

    China Foreign Affairs University

    Christian Reus-Smit

    Australian National University

    Varun Sahni

    Jawaharlal Nehru University

    Rizal Sukma

    CSIS, Jakarta

    Wu Xinbo

    Fudan University

    Studies in Asian Security

    Amitav Acharya, Chief Editor

    David Leheny, Chief Editor

    The Studies in Asian Security book series promotes analysis, understanding, and explanation of the dynamics of domestic, transnational, and international security challenges in Asia. The peer-reviewed publications in the series analyze contemporary security issues and problems to clarify debates in the scholarly community, provide new insights and perspectives, and identify new research and policy directions. Security is defined broadly to include the traditional political and military dimensions as well as nontraditional dimensions that affect the survival and well-being of political communities. Asia, too, is defined broadly to include Northeast, Southeast, South, and Central Asia.

    Designed to encourage original and rigorous scholarship, books in the Studies in Asian Security series seek to engage scholars, educators, and practitioners. Wide-ranging in scope and method, the series is receptive to all paradigms, programs, and traditions, and to an extensive array of methodologies now employed in the social sciences.

    To my family in Japan and France

    Contents

    List of Acronyms

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    1. Response to Protests in Okinawa Under the U.S. Administration, 1945–1972

    2. Response to Protests in Okinawa, 1995–1996 and 2009–2010

    3. Response to Protests in South Korea, 2000–2007

    4. Response to Protests in the Philippines, 1964–1965 and 1972–1979

    5. Persuasion and the Closure of U.S. Military Bases in the Philippines, 1991

    Conclusion

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

    Acronyms

    Acknowledgments

    Many people offered me time, insights, introductions, and good advice while I conducted research and wrote this book. These are some of the most precious gifts we receive in life and I am truly grateful.

    First and foremost I thank Elizabeth Kier, Jonathan Mercer, Robert Pekkanen, and Susan Whiting. I could not ask for a better group of people to guide my development as a scholar. Elizabeth Kier encouraged me to pursue my interest in researching protests against U.S. military base policy in Asia, when another professor told me that the topic is too politically controversial and is more suitable for after tenure. Her support gave me confidence to study a topic I felt passionate about. I also benefited from her expertise in the roles that norms play in international relations. Her comments improved my arguments significantly.

    Jonathan Mercer is a superb outside-the-box thinker, and offered some of the most interesting and unexpected comments on my work. He encouraged me to explore various literature and ways of approaching my topic, which greatly enriched my research experience and this final product. I thank him for his knowledge of psychology in international relations as well.

    I am equally grateful to Robert Pekkanen for introducing me to the literature on the state-civil society relationship in Japan, which has been very helpful for thinking about why protests occur and how policy-makers perceive and respond to protests. Thanks to his invitations to co-author book chapters about Japan’s civil society, I have developed an expertise on the subject and have enjoyed the opportunity to stay connected to my country of origin while living abroad. I thank Susan Whiting for helping strengthen the comparative aspect of this book and for her expertise on social movements.

    Kerry Smith at Brown University assigned three books in his undergraduate history course Japan’s Pacific War that had a profound impact on my research interests. As an international relations concentrator, I read about foreign policy with policy-makers as the main actors. But Japan at War: An Oral History by Haruko Taya Cook and Theodore F. Cook (The New Press, 1992) taught me that ordinary people’s experience and beliefs are an equally important and fascinating subject of research. I decided to spotlight citizens’ perceptions about U.S. military base policy because of this book.

    Tennozan: The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb by George Feifer (Houghton Mifflin, 1992) got me interested in learning more about Okinawa and led me to read the works of one of the personalities he follows in his book: historian and former governor of Okinawa Ōta Masahide. In 1995, after three American military personnel raped a twelve-year-old girl in Okinawa, which triggered large protests, Governor Ōta refused to cooperate in a procedure to expropriate land for U.S. military use against landowners’ wishes. I wrote an honors thesis on the Okinawan protest of 1995–1996 and later expanded my research to include other cases from Okinawa, South Korea, and the Philippines.

    John W. Dower’s War without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War (Pantheon Books, 1986), about how American and Japanese racial stereotypes of the Other influenced the way they fought the war, made me interested in studying the effects of personal beliefs on international security policy. Dower’s book also showed me a path to follow after Brown. I thought while reading his gripping book, it is really cool to be able to do research and write a book. I thank the authors of these books and Professor Smith for assigning them.

    I received generous help from many people during field research in Okinawa, South Korea, the Philippines, and the United States. I am grateful for the cooperation and encouragement of those I interviewed. In Okinawa, Ōta Masahide responded positively to my letter out of the blue offering to volunteer as an undergraduate intern at his Peace Research Institute, and allowed me to stay at one of his homes for a month with his daughter-in-law, Katsuko. I learned much from reading his writings and from conversations with Katsuko. I also want to express my gratitude to Steve Rabson for conversations about Okinawa while I was at Brown, and for commenting on the Okinawa chapters in this book. Takada Wakako shared her contacts and sent me material from conferences in Naha about base policy. Kubota Tomio introduced me to many of his connections with diverse perspectives on the U.S. military presence. I am grateful for Davinder Bhowmik’s comments on the Okinawa chapters.

    For my field research in South Korea, Yong-Chool Ha shared important contacts for interviews. He also offered invaluable comments on an earlier draft of this book. Special thanks to Byoung-Inn Bai, Chang-Jin Kim, Taedong Lee, and Joonseok Oh for their introductions. Professional interpreters Jeeyoung Kim and Kate Choi enabled me to conduct many interviews in South Korea. I thank Mixie Eddy for introducing me to Wonseok Park and his wife, Shimako, who helped me find a place to stay in Seoul and offered delightful company.

    I am equally grateful to Vicente Rafael and Nagano Yoshiko, who shared contacts in Manila and great advice. Patricio Abinales helped me secure an institutional affiliation with the Third World Studies Center at the University of the Philippines. I am greatly indebted to the center for sharing important contacts for interviews and providing office space, which made my stay there productive. I thank Teresa Encarnacion Tadem, Sharon Quinsaat, and Bienvenida Lacsamana. I am deeply grateful for Herbert Docena and Roland Simbulan’s comments on my chapters on the Philippines.

    I thank Jeffrey Checkel for his helpful comments on the Introduction. Richard Petty and Duane Wegener graciously responded to my questions about social psychological research on persuasion. Many other scholars generously commented on my conference papers that developed into this book: Linda Isako Angst, David Bachman, Kent Calder, Alexander Cooley, Leif Easley, Ayano Ginoza, Chikako Oka, Richard Samuels, Sheila Smith, Meredith Woo-Cumings, and Andrew Yeo.

    My heartfelt thanks go to my colleagues at the University of Washington for their comments and encouragement: Byoung-Inn Bai, Moon Yeong Choi, Joshua Eastin, Devin Joshi, Turan Kayaoglu, Taedong Lee, Terence Lee, Hironori Sasada, Jason Scheideman, Ki-young Shin, Christi Siver, Theresa Squatrito, and Michael Strausz.

    I thank Sébastien Lechevalier and the France-Japan Foundation of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales for affiliation as a post-doctoral researcher between 2010 and 2012. I thank the Asia Centre, an independent think tank in Paris, for being my intellectual home since 2012.

    I would like to express my deep gratitude to David Leheny, Amitav Acharya, and the editorial committee for this book series. The two anonymous reviewers deserve special acknowledgment for their extremely helpful suggestions for revision. I am also grateful to Geoffrey Burn, Rob Ehle, Richard Gunde, James Holt, David Jackson, and Tim Roberts at Stanford University Press.

    Chester Fritz Grant for International Study and Exchange from the University of Washington funded my research in the Philippines. General and Mrs. Matthew B. Ridgway Military History Research Grant from the United States Army Military History Institute and a research grant from the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation allowed me to visit archives and learn about American military perspectives on protests against base policy. I also acknowledge the support of the East-West Center to develop this book manuscript.

    Finally I thank my parents and my husband. I have so much to be thankful for that it is difficult to list just a couple of things. So I thank them for everything. But above all, I thank my parents for the freedom to pursue my interests abroad and for telling me that wherever I am, they are happy if I am happy. I thank my husband, Nicolas, for making sure I laugh often. I also thank his parents for taking care of our son, Arthur Tsubasa, when I needed extra time to work. I thank Tsubasa for his smiles and hugs, which bring us profound joy.

    Introduction

    On April 25, 2010, approximately ninety thousand people gathered in an athletic field in Okinawa, Japan, to press Prime Minister Hatoyama Yukio to keep his promise to relocate the Marine Corps’ Futenma Air Station out of Japan if possible, but out of Okinawa at the very least.¹ To fulfill this promise would have required him to rescind an agreement with the United States to relocate Futenma to a new facility in Henoko in northeastern Okinawa. Hatoyama was wavering. Instead of relocating all of Futenma’s functions out of the prefecture, he was considering a relocation of some helicopters to Tokunoshima Island in Kagoshima Prefecture and moving the rest of the functions to Henoko. The participants at the rally passed a resolution demanding Futenma’s swift closure and relocation to another prefecture or abroad.

    This rally was the largest to date on the issue of relocating the Futenma base. All political parties in Okinawa participated, as did Governor Nakaima Hirokazu and representatives from all forty-one cities, towns, and villages in the prefecture. A poll conducted in the prefecture one week before the rally showed that 89.8 percent of the respondents supported Futenma’s relocation outside of Okinawa.² The opposition to Futenma’s relocation within Okinawa developed into what the people of Okinawa call an island-wide struggle (shimagurumi tōsō).³

    This was not the first island-wide struggle in Okinawa on the issue of U.S. military bases. Three other significant episodes of protest that spread throughout Okinawa had occurred since the end of World War II. In the 1950s under the American administration of Okinawa, protesters mobilized against a policy of land expropriation for American military use. The second wave of protests came in the 1960s against the American administration of Okinawa. Protesters demanded Okinawa’s reversion to Japan and the closure of all U.S. military bases. The third wave followed the rape of a twelve-year-old girl by three U.S. military personnel in 1995. Protesters urged a revision of the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) to facilitate the handover of American suspects to Japanese authorities, and a reduction in the number and size of U.S. military bases in Okinawa.

    Protests against U.S. military bases and related policies have also occurred in the Philippines and South Korea. Some accidents and crimes that U.S. military personnel committed against citizens of these states triggered major protests, which asked the United States to transfer the right to exercise criminal jurisdiction and custody to the host states. Protests demanding closure of military bases and opposing new base construction occurred as well. The development of environmental consciousness in South Korea in the 1990s contributed to protests that expressed concern about the environmental policy governing U.S. military bases.

    From these episodes, we know that citizens of host states express their grievances about U.S. military bases and related policies through protests. However, we are less certain about the extent to which these protests influence the policy decisions of the United States and host states. Although protests often seem similar in terms of actors and issues, the results are often different. What explains the difference? There are four possible policy outcomes in response to protests. First, a protest can lead to a fundamental change in base policy. Closure of all U.S. military bases in the Philippines in 1992 is an example. Second, protests can result in limited policy change. For example, in 2001 the United States agreed to transfer custody of U.S. military personnel accused of crimes to Korean authorities at an earlier stage of judicial proceedings. However, the United States limited change by attaching various conditions for the transfer of custody, much to the frustration of protesters who demanded greater change.

    Third, states can decide not to change their policy in response to protests. For example, despite the significant protest mobilization in Okinawa in 2010, Hatoyama returned to the original plan to relocate Futenma to Henoko. In South Korea, some farmers and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) vigorously opposed a bilateral plan to expand Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek, but Seoul and Washington did not cancel the plan. Finally, in some cases where states decide not to change base policy, they nevertheless offer symbolic concessions to protesters. These are gestures to create a public image that governments pay attention to grievances. For example, in 2000, protesters in South Korea demanded that the U.S. and Korean governments include some environmental provisions in their SOFA in order to oblige the United States to follow Korean environmental laws. The two governments attached a Memorandum of Special Understandings on Environmental Protection to their SOFA, but it was a symbolic declaration of the two states’ intention to cooperate on environmental protection. It did not change the environmental policy on U.S. military bases.

    Various outcomes such as these raise important questions about the extent to which protests influence policy on U.S. military bases. Why do some protests lead to change in base policy while others do not? When states decide to change base policy, what influences the extent of change? When states decide not to change base policy, why do they sometimes offer symbolic concessions? These questions are important to the United States, which maintains a global network of military bases, to governments that host those military bases, and to protest organizers and participants who challenge base policy.

    More specifically, studying the influence of protests on base policy is important for three reasons. First, ordinary people rarely seek participation in decision-making in international security issues but base policy is an exception.⁴ Base policy is a part of high politics that governments normally handle without the public’s participation. This is why the popular expression of grievances on base policy is through protests. Protest is a means of communicating objections when people do not have direct access to policy-making. Protesters challenge not only the content of base policy but also the fact that policy-making occurs without their participation. Given their limited access to policy-making, it is important to learn when, why, and to what extent U.S. and host governments take the public’s preferences into account.

    Second, examining the influence of protests on base policy is important because protests reveal some weak points of U.S.–host state alliances, and state response suggests how policy-makers intend to manage the alliances. U.S. military bases exist in Japan and South Korea, and existed in the Philippines until 1992, as an essential feature of the host states’ alliances with the United States. Protests against U.S. military base policy reflect popular discontent with how the alliances operate. State officials are often forced to respond to protests in order to maintain public support for the alliance, although the importance of this response varies across cases.

    Third, studying protests’ influence on base policy contributes to the on-going debate over U.S. grand strategy in East Asia, between those who argue that the United States should remain a deep engager with forward deployment of its military forces, and those who believe that the United States should retrench and become an off-shore balancer.⁵ The study of local protests against U.S. military base policy sheds light on one of the challenges of deep engagement. It is useful to know how and to what extent protests complicate deep engagement. This will help with the evaluation of the strategy to either improve its implementation or to add to other arguments for changing it.

    This book explains the extent to which protests influence base policy by exploring state response to twelve protests: three in the Philippines between 1964 and 1991, four in Okinawa between 1945 and 2010, and five in South Korea between 2000 and 2007. The cases cover diverse policy issues including base closure, base construction through land expropriation, jurisdiction and custody when American military personnel commit crimes, storage and transit of American nuclear weapons, environmental problems in and around military bases, and prohibition of American military personnel’s involvement in prostitution as customers.

    In each case, protesters demanded change in base policy by arguing that existing policy violated important norms, which are widely shared principles. Protesters referred to one or more of the following norms: antiwar, antimilitarism, sovereignty, human rights, antinuclear, and environmental norms. Protest organizers used these norms to shape policy demands. I call norm-based policy proposals normative arguments, and examine their influence on policy. In some cases, for example, protesters with antiwar and antimilitarism beliefs argued that military bases should be closed and new ones should not be built because they are instruments of war and generate military tension with neighboring countries. In criminal cases involving American military suspects, protesters demanded increased jurisdictional and custodial rights for host countries by arguing that limits placed on host countries’ rights represented a curtailment of sovereignty. When states expropriated land for military use without landowners’ consent, and when American military personnel were involved in prostitution as customers or raped local women, protesters argued that the U.S. military presence led to the violation of human rights and therefore U.S. forces should be reduced or withdrawn. Protesters demanded prohibition of transit and storage of nuclear weapons in U.S. military bases with the antinuclear norm. Protesters used environmental norms to urge governments to adopt more rigorous environmental standards on military bases.

    I argue that there are two processes by which protesters’ normative arguments change base policy. First, protesters’ arguments can persuade policy-makers. Persuasion is more likely when normative arguments do not contradict policy-makers’ knowledge and beliefs, and when policy-makers think that protest leaders and organizations are credible. Persuasion leads to policy change under domestic institutional settings that allow persuaded policy-makers to shape policy. Persuasion defines or redefines policy-makers’ interests and can change base policy in fundamental ways.

    Second, when persuasion fails, normative arguments can change policy by mobilizing large protests that create incentives for policy-makers to change policy. The type of incentives varies across cases. Policy-makers in host states may become concerned that protests might reduce public support for their government. Policy-makers in the United States and host states may worry about diminishing support for the security alliance and a reduction of U.S. military effectiveness. Policy-makers try to eliminate these political and military concerns by changing base policy. Yet policy-makers’ security, political, and economic interests compete with protesters’ demands and make fundamental change difficult. Policy-makers limit change to protect their interests while hoping that their response will help placate protesters.

    Base policy does not change when protests fail to persuade policy-makers or generate significant incentives for them. Base policy also does not change when protesters generate incentives for policy-makers to change policy but other factors such as lobbying by actors that support the policy that protesters seek to change and states’ capacity under law to impose their will reduce or eliminate these incentives. Furthermore, my cases show that policy does not change when protesters generate incentives for host-state governments to change policy but the United States opposes change. When policy does not change, policy-makers can nevertheless offer symbolic concessions for three reasons. First, policy-makers wish to show that the U.S. and host-state governments are norm-abiding even if they do not change policy in response to protests. Second, symbolic concessions allow states to save face. When policy-makers reject policy change, symbolic concessions help host-state governments appear effective, and help prevent the United States from appearing like a bully. Finally, policy-makers decide to make symbolic concessions to enable a smoother implementation of the policy that protesters oppose.

    Exploring how normative arguments influence base politics is new. Comparative research on base politics recently emerged with three pathbreaking volumes. Kent Calder’s Embattled Garrisons (2007) and Alexander Cooley’s Base Politics (2008) examine the influence of regime type on base policy. These scholars agree that protests and their normative arguments have very limited—if any—influence on base policy. Andrew Yeo’s Activists, Alliances, and Anti-U.S. Base Protests (2011) argues that protests can influence policy when host states’ policy-makers do not strongly concur that a positive relationship with the United States is critical to national security. A weak security consensus opens up a political opportunity for antibase movements, and a strong security consensus closes it. Yet a review of protests in Asia suggests that policy-makers respond to different normative arguments in different ways under a given security consensus. Explaining that variation requires a focus on normative arguments. This book reveals when, how, and to what extent protesters’ normative arguments matter.

    My analysis shows that normative arguments helped mobilize large protests in all twelve cases but had different levels of influence on policy. Protests led to policy change in five of the twelve cases. In one of these five cases, normative arguments persuaded policy-makers and this resulted in policy change. In four cases, normative arguments did not persuade policy-makers but large protests generated political and military incentives for policy-makers to change policy. In the remaining seven cases, policy change did not occur. However, policy-makers offered symbolic concessions in five of the seven cases. These concessions aimed to make states appear norm-abiding despite their decision not to change policy. Protests did not result in policy change or symbolic concessions in two cases.

    In sum, protests failed to bring about policy change more often than not (7 cases without policy change, 5 with policy change). When policy change occurred, this was more often due to large protests pressuring policy-makers to change policy through a rational calculation of political and military costs and benefits (4 cases) than due to protesters’ normative arguments persuading policy-makers (1 case). This confirms the intuition of other scholars that protests and their normative arguments have limited influence on policy-makers. However, the finding that protests led to policy change is significant. In the earlier works on base politics and traditional research on international relations, scholars assumed that protests do not have an important influence on security policy. My research shows that we must include protests in our analysis to explain some changes in policy.

    Moreover, in the one case in which persuasion of policy-makers led to policy change, all U.S. military bases in the host country were closed. Normative arguments may rarely persuade, but when they do they can produce significant results. This makes it important to examine the role of normative persuasion in base politics. We also need to explain why persuasion is so difficult. Furthermore, when persuasion fails, if norms produce incentives to change policy through mobilization of large protests, and policy-makers change policy even in a limited way, norms play an important causal (though not constitutive) role and merit examination. This book explores the different ways in which protesters’ normative arguments drive policy change. It also explains why some normative arguments fail to influence policy.

    Below I detail the processes of normative influence after presenting some background information about the main actors in politics over U.S. military bases and the types of normative arguments we often see in protests. I also discuss some complementary and competing explanations for change in base policy and conclude with an outline of the twelve cases.

    Base Politics and Main Actors

    Politics over basing policy, which I call base politics, deals with various issues related to the U.S. military presence in host states. These issues include which land, sea, and air space host states provide to the United States, how the United States may use these military facilities, and what status U.S. military personnel have in host states.

    Base politics has international and domestic dimensions. At the international level, representatives from the United States and host states conduct negotiations on base policy. Officials who participate in policy-making include executive leaders such

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