2018-09-21, 10:38 PM
(2018-09-21, 11:05 AM)Xí Xọn Wrote: Sound very good á huynh PV, nhưng sao hổng còn giống Police of the World nữa mà giống Lính Đánh Thuê quá à.
Chắc bác nào giờ không theo tin thế giới mới lấy lạ
Germany, South Korea, Japan đều trả tiền cho lính Mỹ đóng quân ở nước họ
Quote:According to an annual report titled Allied Contributions to the Common Defense published by the U.S. Department of Defense in 2004, Japan provided direct support of $3.2 billion (about ¥366 billion) and indirect support worth $1.18 billion .
Even though the numbers were drawn from 2002 expenses, the figure has often been used by Japan in arguing that it’s paying a fair share. The figure was the highest among major U.S. allies at the time.
But last Friday, Defense Minister Tomomi Inada updated the information for the first time in more than 10 years, saying Japan paid about ¥191 billion in 2015.
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/0...6W1kPaQxPY
Quote: Q: So how much is Japan paying for the U.S. bases here?
A: The Japan-U.S. Status of Forces Agreement states that, as a basic principle, Japan must bear the costs relating to hosting U.S. bases while the United States pays for maintaining U.S. military facilities and operational expenditures.
In the late 1970s, when Japan was seeing rapid economic growth and consumer price increases while the U.S. economy was in trouble, Japan also agreed to pay part of the labor costs for non-military base employees as well as facility maintenance costs. Since fiscal 1987, Japan has been paying the entirety of those labor expenses plus utility costs that are supposed to be covered by the U.S.
These payments are covered under something called the "sympathy budget," with which Japan sought to allay criticism that Japan was getting a "free ride" on defense. These annual payments peaked in fiscal 1999 at 275.6 billion yen and have been on a generally downward trend due to Japan's economic downturn. They now stand at about 190 billion yen.
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/201...na/017000c