Active duty service members do not require a passport. A copy of your leave and travel orders, and your military ID are sufficient.
Yes
is there a military cemetery in okinawa
It was brought originally by immigrants from Okinawa. Soldiers stationed in Japan and Okinawa also brought it back.
Not really. Military personnel are subject to reassignment pretty much at the whim of Uncle Sam, and it's going to be awfully hard to get to practices and games when you're stationed in Okinawa.
Yes, you do, unless you travel on military flights both ways (there are scheduled and unscheduled flights from Futenma to Osan and sometimes Seoul, but you'd have to fly Apce-A, on 'puddle jumpers' without a lot of space). You should have been able to obtain an 'orders' passport before arriving in Okinawa; since apparently you didn't, talk to someone in Legal about applying for one from where you are, via the US Consul. Generally, once in country your ID Card is good, but it won't get you through Japanese or Korean civilian Customs and Immigration unless you're traveling on orders.
I was on the flight deck on the coral sea from 71 to 72 and saw nothing ...but I was stationed in Okinawa from 73 to 74 and know for a fact that it was sprayed all over the military bases in Okinawa for weed control...And another fact is that Okinawa was where the Agent orange was shipped to Viet Nam...historical fact and well documented.
The U.S. has had a strong presence in japan since the end of WW2 particularly on the island of Okinawa
yes. you will need a passport to visit Okinawa, Japan if you are traveling from the United states. if you plan to stay upwards of 90 days in Okinawa or Japan in general, you will need to get a travel Visa. if you plan to work while you are there you need a visa for that as well ( im not sure if work visa's can count as travel visa's as well).
Robert Griffin III was born in Okinawa, Japan, where his parents, both U.S. Army sergeants, were stationed.
As of now, there are 38 US Military facilities in Okinawa. This includes bases, training grounds, camps, storage areas, and any other items not immediately connected to one another.
Okinawa. Strictly speaking, the current U.S. military base did not exist at the time, so it was not "won" (i.e. the Battle of Okinawa was over the entire island, not for a specific base on it).
I'm not in a position to answer, but do you mean Army, military, or marines?