usarj การใช้
- USARJ supported the affected people after operations officially ended by providing equipment and maintenance support to the JGSDF until September.
- Under the complex reversion, IX Corps was transferred from Okinawa and collocated with this command to become HQ USARJ / IX Corps.
- Reorganized again on September 1, 1968, USARJ employed a new structure to maximize operational efficiency while keeping its existing missions and functions.
- The name, US Army Japan ( USARJ ), first appeared on 1 July 1957 in a reorganization of US forces in the Pacific.
- With the discontinuance of USARPAC, USARJ was designated a major Army command on January 1, 1975, reporting directly to Department of the Army.
- Within minutes, USARJ began humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations in support of the JGSDF during Operation Tomodachi, Japan s largest-ever bilateral operation.
- Operational control of the 1141st U . S . Army Signal Battalion remained with the Commander, USARJ / 9th Theater Army Area Command ( TAAC ).
- There were several minor reorganizations and redesignations over the next decade so that by September 11, 2001, USARJ consisted of logistics bases in Japan and Okinawa.
- USARJ remains headquartered at Camp Zama, where it engages in numerous bilateral activities with the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force ( JGSDF ) and performs duties as the Army Component Command to USFJ.
- On July 1, 1957, a U . S . Forces reorganization in the Pacific designated USARJ as one of the major subordinate commands of U . S . Army Pacific ( USARPAC ) in Hawaii.
- The reversion of Okinawa to Japanese control on May 15, 1972, resulted in the realignment of the Pacific Army commands with HQ USARJ absorbing elements for Okinawa and providing improved structure for command and control.
- In August 1990, USARPAC was reestablished and USARJ became a major subordinate command of that headquarters as well as continuing as the Army Component Command of U . S . Forces, Japan ( USFJ ).
- Command of the 78th remained with the Hawaii-based 516th Signal Brigade ( formerly 1106th ) and operational control remained with the commander, USARJ / 9th TAAC and since December 19, 2007, USARJ / I Corps ( Forward ).
- Command of the 78th remained with the Hawaii-based 516th Signal Brigade ( formerly 1106th ) and operational control remained with the commander, USARJ / 9th TAAC and since December 19, 2007, USARJ / I Corps ( Forward ).
- In August 1984, subcommands came under USAISC . At that time, the U . S . Army Japan Office of Assistant Chief of Staff, Communication-Electronics, was re-designated as USARJ Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, Information Management.
- During 1986, the USARJ television studio and closed circuit television cable and public address system also were incorporated into SAN . The Administrative Services Division, Consolidated Data Processing Center, and Information Center came under the operational control of SAN in February 1988 thereby placing all five IMAs under SAN.
- On July 1, 1974, a USARJ reorganization established three subordinate commands : U . S . Army Garrison, Honshu ( USAGH ); U . S . Army Garrison, Okinawa ( USAGO ); and the U . S . Army Medical Department Activity-Japan, ( MEDDAC-JAPAN ).
- Camp Zama is home to the U . S . Army Japan ( USARJ ) / 441st Military Intelligence Brigade, the Japan Engineer District ( U . S . Army Corps of Engineers ), the 78th Signal Battalion and the Central Readiness Force and 4th Engineer Group of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force.
- In April 1985, the USARJ information mission consisting of audiovisual and automation functions was transferred to USAISC-J . On November 1, 1985, the signal battalion in Okinawa was restructured and provisionally reorganized into two separate subcommands, USAISC-J Signal Battalion and USAISC-J Area Maintenance and Supply Facility-Pacific.
- As the Army Component Command to United States Forces Japan ( USFJ ) and as a Major Subordinate Command of United States Army Pacific ( USARPAC ), United States Army Japan ( USARJ ) / I Corps ( Forward ) is responsible to provide support of Article V ( Defense of Japan ) and VI ( ensuring regional stability ) of the Mutual Security Treaty ( MST ).