Mike Lee demands Japan free naval officer; briefly suspended on Twitter

The language on Sen. Mike Lee’s personal Twitter account toward Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishidia for not returning Lt. Ridge Alkonis may have led to @BasedMikeLee being briefly suspended Wednesday.

The language on Sen. Mike Lee’s personal Twitter account toward Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishidia for not returning Lt. Ridge Alkonis may have led to @BasedMikeLee being briefly suspended Wednesday. (Twitter)


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SALT LAKE CITY — Sen. Mike Lee intends to call for the U.S. to renegotiate its military agreement with Japan because the Far East nation ignored his one-man deadline to release an imprisoned Navy officer.

And the Utah Republican's language on his personal Twitter account toward Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishidia for not returning Lt. Ridge Alkonis may have led to @BasedMikeLee being briefly suspended from the platform Wednesday morning.

".@kishida230, you've made your choice. I hope you're ready for some conversations on the Senate floor that you're not likely to enjoy. This issue isn't going away, and neither am I," Lee tweeted early Wednesday morning.

Lee also tweeted ".@kishida230, 自業自得," which translated means what goes around comes around.

Also, just before his midnight deadline, Lee tweeted, ".@kishida230, you have 40 minutes left. Hand Lt. Ridge Alkonis over to the U.S. Navy. Now."

The senator's office did not immediately respond to questions about Twitter suspending Lee's personal account.

"My personal Twitter account – @BasedMikeLee – has been suspended. Twitter did not alert me ahead of time, nor have they yet offered an explanation for the suspension. My team and I are seeking answers," Lee tweeted on his Senate account, @SenMikeLee.

Lee's personal account came back up about two hours after Twitter suspended it. It reappeared without the thousands of followers it had when it was taken down, but the number was climbing.

"Thanks to all who assisted in operation #Free@basedMikeLee. Still no explanation from @Twitter as to what happened," the senator tweeted.

Last month, Lee demanded via Twitter that Kishida transfer Alkonis to U.S. custody no later than midnight Feb. 28. The senator vowed to have a public discussion about the U.S.-Japan Status of Armed Forces Agreement if Japan did not hand over Alkonis.

"Japan failed to transfer Lt. Ridge Alkonis to U.S. custody in time," according to a press release from Lee's office.

Lee plans to seek renegotiation of the 63-year-old agreement in a speech Wednesday afternoon on the Senate floor.

Alkonis was convicted of negligent driving in the deaths of an 85-year-old Japanese woman and her 54-year-old son-in-law on May 29, 2021, while the Alkonis family was driving down Mount Fuji after a day trip.

A Japanese judge determined Alkonis had fallen asleep at the wheel and lost control of his vehicle, which plowed into pedestrians and parked cars in a restaurant parking lot two hours from Yokosuka Naval Base, where he was serving as an anti-submarine warfare officer.

But U.S. Navy investigators determined that Alkonis suffered from acute mountain sickness and lost consciousness. His wife and children said that he was not sleepy and appeared to black out. They said that once he passed out, he was unresponsive to their screams and one daughter's kicks. He remained unconscious even during the crash itself.

Navy Lt. Ridge Alkonis, and his wife, Brittany, are pictured in this undated family photo. Lt. Alkonis remains imprisoned in Japan.
Navy Lt. Ridge Alkonis, and his wife, Brittany, are pictured in this undated family photo. Lt. Alkonis remains imprisoned in Japan. (Photo: Alkonis family photo)

Alkonis started serving a three-year prison sentence in July.

Kishida met with President Joe Biden at the White House in January to discuss North Korea, Ukraine and China's tensions with Taiwan.

Biden told Kishida that the U.S. was "fully, thoroughly, completely" committed to Japan's defense and praised Tokyo's security buildup, saying the nations had never been closer, according to Reuters. In a joint statement, the two leaders reaffirmed that the alliance remains the cornerstone of peace, security and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific.

The U.S. has about 55,000 troops stationed in Japan at more than half a dozen bases and other facilities.

Alkonis' wife, Brittany Alkonis, had a brief discussion with Biden on the U.S. House floor after his State of the Union address last month.

"I promise you, we're not giving up, OK?" the president told Brittany Alkonis on Feb. 8.

"My kids are counting on you," she replied in a video that captured the interaction.

Brittany Alkonis, the couple's three young children and other family members have demonstrated outside the White House to get Biden's attention.

In delivering his ultimatum to Kishida last month, Lee said it's time for a candid discussion about "what you did" to Alkonis and his family and time to heal "this senseless wound." He said he is grateful for the relationship the U.S. and Japan has enjoyed, and asked the prime minister to not "weaken it as you have" by imprisoning Alkonis.

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Dennis Romboy
Dennis Romboy is an editor and reporter for the Deseret News. He has covered a variety of beats over the years, including state and local government, social issues and courts. A Utah native, Romboy earned a degree in journalism from the University of Utah. He enjoys cycling, snowboarding and running.

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