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Cheney Lauds Tokyo's Hostage Stance

Vice president says U.S. is doing all it can for the three captives in Iraq and praises Koizumi's refusal to meet the insurgents' demands.

The World

April 13, 2004|Doyle McManus, Times Staff Writer

TOKYO — Vice President Dick Cheney said Monday that the United States is doing "everything we can" to help secure the release of three Japanese civilians held hostage in Iraq, and warned that insurgents may seize even more captives as the June 30 target approaches for the launch of a new Iraqi government.

Cheney, who is visiting Tokyo on the first stop of a weeklong trip to East Asia, praised Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi for rejecting the kidnappers' demand that Japan withdraw its troops from Iraq.


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"We wholeheartedly support the position the prime minister has taken with respect to the question of the Japanese hostages," Cheney said after meeting with Koizumi. "[We] have consulted closely with the prime minister and his government to make certain we do everything we can to be of assistance."

The vice president refused to describe how the U.S. is helping Japan resolve the crisis. But another official noted that American forces could gather information and seek the aid of tribal leaders in the Sunni Muslim area where the hostages were seized. U.S. troops also could attempt to rescue the hostages if the opportunity arose and Japan approved, although neither government was willing to discuss that possibility.

The discussion of the hostage crisis, which overshadowed the beginning of Cheney's trip, underscored the unusually high political stakes in the issue. The kidnappers demanded that Japan withdraw its roughly 550 noncombat troops from Iraq by last Sunday, and threatened to burn the hostages if the demand was not met. Koizumi refused, and the deadline passed with no news of the hostages' fate.

The standoff has turned into a political problem for the prime minister, with the hostages' families appearing on television daily -- sometimes asking why Japanese troops cannot be withdrawn at least temporarily to save the lives of the captives.

The Bush administration, after laboring for months to persuade Japan and other countries to send troops to Iraq, is now facing the prospect of an equally difficult struggle to persuade them to remain.

So far, most governments with troops in Iraq have vowed to keep them there, despite the increased danger. But Spain's incoming Socialist government has said it will withdraw the country's 1,300 troops if certain conditions are not met, Honduras said its 370 troops would follow the Spaniards, and Thailand has said it will withdraw its 443 noncombat troops if violence makes their humanitarian mission impossible.

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