I HAVE today signed an amendment to Executive Order 10713
dated June 5, 1957, providing for the administration of the Ryukyu Islands.
The amendment1 to
the Executive Order, as well as a number of other measures set forth below,
are the result of recommendations of the interdepartmental Task Force appointed
last year to investigate current conditions in the Ryukyu Islands and the
United States policies and programs in force there.
The work of the Task Force underlines
the importance the United States attaches to its military bases in the
Ryukyu Islands. The armed strength deployed at these bases is of the greatest
importance in maintaining our deterrent power in the face of threats to
the peace in the Far East. Our bases in the Ryukyu Islands help us assure
our allies in the great arc from Japan through Southeast Asia not only
of our willingness but also of our ability to come to their assistance
in case of need.
The report of the Task Force
examines in detail the problem of reconciling the military imperative for
continued United States administration with the desires of the Ryukyuan
people to assert their identity as Japanese, to obtain the economic and
social welfare benefits available in Japan, and to have a greater voice
in the management of their own affairs. The report has also considered
in the same context the desire of the Japanese people to maintain close
contact with their countrymen in the Ryukyus.
I recognize the Ryukyus to be
a part of the Japanese homeland and look forward to the day when the security
interests of the Free World will permit their restoration to full Japanese
sovereignty. In the meantime we face a situation which must be met in a
spirit of forbearance and mutual understanding by all concerned. I have
directed that a number of specific actions be taken to give expression
to this spirit by the United States, to discharge more effectively our
responsibilities toward the people of the Ryukyus, and to minimize the
stresses that will accompany the anticipated eventual restoration of the
Ryukyu Islands to Japanese administration. These actions consist of:
1. Asking the Congress to amend
the Price Act (Public Law 86-629) to remove the present $6 million ceiling
on assistance to the Ryukyu Islands.
2. Preparing for submission
to the Congress plans for the support of new programs in the Ryukyus to
raise the level of compensation for Ryukyuan employees of the U.S. Forces
and the Government of the Ryukyu Islands and the levels of public health,
educational and welfare services so that over a period of years they reach
those obtaining in comparable areas in Japan.
3. Preparing proposals for the
Congress to provide over future years a steady increase in loan funds available
for the development of the Ryukyuan economy.
4. Entering into discussions
with the Government of Japan with a view to working out precise arrangements
to implement a cooperative relationship between the United States and Japan
in providing a cooperative relationship between the United States and Japan
in providing assistance to promote the welfare and well-being of the inhabitants
of the Ryukyu Islands and their economic development, as discussed between
Prime Minister Ikeda and myself during his visit to Washington last year.
5. Carrying on a continuous
review of governmental functions in the Ryukyu Islands to determine when
and under what circumstances additional functions that need not be reserved
to the United States as administering authority can be delegated to the
Government of the Ryukyu Islands.
6. Carrying on a continuous
review of such controls as may be thought to limit unnecessarily the private
freedoms of inhabitants of the Ryukyu Islands with a view to eliminating
all controls which are not essential to the maintenance of the security
of the United States military installations in the Ryukyus or of the islands
themselves.
The amendments to Executive
Order 10713 are designed to accomplish the following purposes:
1. Provide for nomination of
the Chief Executive of the Government of the Ryukyu Islands by the legislature.
2. Restate the veto power of
the High Commissioner, to emphasize its restricted purposes.
3. Lengthen the term of the
legislature from two to three years.
4. Permit the legislature to
alter the number and boundaries of election districts.
5. Provide that the Civil Administrator
shall be a civilian.
6. Make certain technical changes
in the provisions for criminal jurisdiction over certain Americans in the
Ryukyus.
NOTE: For a joint statement on the Ryukyus by the President
and Prime Minister Ikeda of Japan following their discussions in Washington
in June 1961, see 1961 volume, this series, Item
252.
An amendment to Public Law 86-629
providing for an increase in funds for the economic and social development
in the Ryukyu Islands was approved by the President on October 4, 1962
(Public Law 87-746, 76 Stat. 742).