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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2025
On July 11, 2016, the organization Veterans for Peace issued a statement (see document below) observing the 162nd anniversary of the Lew Chew Compact, popularly known as a “friendship” or “amity” treaty. In reality, officials of the Ryukyu Kingdom were forced to sign it by Commodore Matthew C. Perry who commanded a squadron of battleships invading the Ryukyus in 1853 and 1854. The Compact permitted unlimited visitation and residence to Americans in Ryukyu and mandated that American criminal suspects be turned over to U.S. authorities aboard American ships. Also in 1854, Perry forced Japanese officials under threat of bombardment to sign the “Convention of Kanagawa” compelling Japan's ports to accept foreign trade and imposing a system of extraterritoriality which placed foreign residents under the jurisdiction of their respective nations' consular courts, exempting them from Japanese law. This was gunboat diplomacy much like what the United States imposed on the nations of Latin America throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Both of these “treaties” ominously foreshadowed postwar U.S. military policies toward Japan where the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) exempts Americans and their bases from key provisions of Japanese law; and, especially in Okinawa, where a disproportionate U.S. military presence remains despite overwhelming opposition expressed in elections, local government policies, and public protests.
1 George Kerr, Okinawa: The History of an Island People (Rutledge, VT: Tuttle Publishing, 1958), 297.
2 Ibid.
3 Francis L Hawks, Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2000).
4 Ibid., 152.
5 Ibid., 153.
6 Kerr, 310.
7 Samuel Eliot Morison, “Old Bruin:” Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry (Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1990), 285.
8 Hawks, 156.
9 Ibid., 156.
10 Ibid., 190.
11 Ibid., 191.
12 Kerr, 323.
13 Hawks, 275.
14 Ibid., 492.
15 Ibid., 492-493.
16 Ibid, 493-494.
17 Hawks, 495.
18 Kerr, 334-335.
19 Ibid., 335-336.