THE ASIAN REPORTER October 7, 2019 C O M M U N I T Y n Page 19 C L A S S I F I E D S THE ASIAN REPORTER CAN BE PICKED UP ON THE FIRST & THIRD MONDAY EACH MONTH AT MANY LOCATIONS, INCLUDING: Uwajimaya 10500 SW Beaverton-Hillsdale Hwy., Beaverton Tin Seng Trading H Mart Lily Market Lao Vieng Market 8350 SE Division St. Portland 3301 SE Belmont St. Portland 11001 NE Halsey St. Portland 1032 N Killingsworth St., Portland Hong Phat Supermarket 101 SE 82nd Ave. Portland BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR SALE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE Home Entertainment For Rent/Sale/Lease For Rent/Sale/Lease For Rent/Sale/Lease For Rent/Sale/Lease PACKING & SHIPPING FRANCHISE Excellent business opportunity in Eu- gene area. Turn-key franchise opera- tion in high-traffic shopping center. 5,000. Call Bill: (541) 654-2201. HOME ENTERTAINMENT INSTALLATION BAR + PROPERTY Rare opportunity! 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Large chunk of border wall funding diverted from tiny Guam Continued from page 9 ment of Marines on Okinawa to Guam, and that the U.S. government commitment to the realign- ment plan is unchanged,” then-defense minister Takeshi Iwaya told re- porters in early September. Discussions to reduce the U.S. presence on Okinawa began in the mid-1990s after the rape of a 12-year- old Okinawan girl by three U.S. servicemen sparked mass demonstrations. The allies in 2006 said they would send Marines to Guam by 2014, a deadline that slipped as they revised plans. Although Okinawa makes up less than 1% of Japan’s land space, it hosts about half of the 54,000 American troops stationed in Japan and is home to 64% of the land used by the U.S. bases in the country under a bilateral security treaty. Jeffrey Hornung, a re- searcher at the RAND Cor- poration, a public-policy re- search institute, said even before the latest develop- ment, some Okinawa residents were frustrated with the lack of progress in moving the Marines. “The fact is, the longer that the projects on Guam are delayed, that means the longer that there’s not going to be any forward movement on some aspects of moving the Marines off Okinawa,” Hornung said. “And this all comes from taking money to build a border wall.” Diverted spending also will affect the Air Force, including $45.1 million for two projects to update 70-year-old munitions storage. The Air Force has been rotating bombers — the B-2 stealth bomber as well as the B-1 and B-52 — through Guam since 2004 to compensate for U.S. forces sent from the Asia-Pacific region to fight in the Middle East. In 2017, the U.S. dispatched a B-1 bomber from Guam to the Korean peninsula as a show of force after North Korea accelerated its ef- forts to test intercontinen- tal ballistic missiles and expand its nuclear weapons program. Project documents say existing facilities won’t adequately support the mission of the 36th Munitions Squadron on Guam. They say upgrades are needed to correct a faulty door design, address earth cover lost during typhoons, and house new long-range air-to-ground precision missiles. U.S. representative Ed Case, a Democrat from Hawai‘i who sits on the house appropriations sub- committee for military construction, said he’s con- cerned the administration diverted so much from Guam, given the island is key to the nation’s defense posture in the Pacific. But he said re-awarding these funds in another bud- get would set an “incredibly dangerous precedent.” “That is a very difficult situation because these are priority projects. However, if we simply said yes to this president on that basis, which he is very much hoping that we will do, then we have essentially said to him and any future president that congress’ role as the responsible branch of government for appropriations no longer counts,” Case said. Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.