Makua panel to air on ‘Olelo

ALOHA  this OHA/OLELO production will be shown on Thursday(s) February 17 and 24th at 7:00 p.m. on Channel 53.  You may also pick up the program by going to www.olelo.org a couple of minutes before airtime and clicking on Channel 53.

OHA #158

FEBRUARY 12, 2010

MALAMA MAKUA – LIVE FIRE OVER MAKUA VALLEY

Fred Dodge, Malama Makua

Sparky Rodrigues, Malama Makua

David Henkin, Staff Attorney, Earthjustice

Moderator:  Lynette Cruz, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Hawaii Pacific University

Citizens ask why the Army Need Makua.

Live-fire over Makua valley

As the Honolulu Weekly reported below, the community turned out to protest the Army’s plan to establish an Asia-Pacific Fusion Counter-IED center at Makua.   Like a pimp, the Army is soliciting other countries to use and abuse Makua.  Stars and Stripes reported that in Thailand during “Cobra Gold” joint military exercises, “U.S. Army Pacific officials briefed the Thai brass on a new Asia-Pacific Fusion Counter-IED Center now starting up in Hawaii.”   Time for the Army to get out of Makua.

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http://honoluluweekly.com/feature/2010/02/live-fire-over-the-valley/

Live-fire over the valley

Citizens ask why the Army needs Mākua at all

Chris Nishijima
Feb 10, 2010

Development

Image: Chris Nishijima

Tension was high at the Waianae Neighborhood Community Center as Waianae Neighborhood Board Chair Jo Jordan opened the Feb. 2 meeting by leading a restive crowd in Hawaii Ponoi. When the song reached its traditional conclusion and most of the room started to sit, many in attendance carried on through the deeper verses of King David Kalakaua’s national anthem.

Before the meeting, Jordan offered condolences to the family and friends of her fellow board member, Michael Anderson, who died during a hiking accident the previous week. Anderson’s empty chair set a somber tone, as did the main business of the evening–the Army’s presence in Makua Valley.

Makua Valley spans more than 4,190 acres and has been the site of military training since World War II. In recent years, Native Hawaiians and environmentalists have been pressing the Army to reduce its impact in Makua, and to halt live-fire training in particular.

“Makua is a want of the Army, not a need,” said William Aila Jr., a Hawaiian cultural practitioner who is active in the community’s attempts to reduce the Army’s presence in the valley. Aila points out that the Army has not trained in Makua at any point during the past five years.

“This is the greatest indication that they don’t need Makua,” he said. “It is a need of the community.”

Others echoed Aila’s concerns, and said that the Army is not properly respecting the area as a sacred part of Hawaiian heritage.

But Army officials insist they understand the community’s concerns.

“We are not some big evil organization,” said Col. Matt Margotta, who represented the Army’s 25th Infantry Division. “We are attempting to better understand the Hawaii community.”

Margotta explained that Makua provides a unique setting which allows the Army to simulate a war zone without taking soldiers stationed on Oahu away from their families for an extended period of time. Margotta also pointed to ways in which the Army’s presence has helped improve the community. He said that the military has spent some $7 million toward repairing roads and $10 million toward protecting Hawaii’s endangered species, 41 of which can be found in Makua Valley.

“The Army recognizes that we have an impact on the community,” he said, “We are trying to change that.”

But many of those in attendance were not satisfied, and voiced concerns over the military turning the area into what they said amounts to a munitions trash heap.

“What you need to do is go back to Kahoolawe and clean it up!” said Shirley Nahoopii of Waianae. “You have not fulfilled your promise to clean up there after you were finished with it! Is Makua going to end up the same way?”

Concerns about the dangers of unexploded ordnances, or UXOs, left over from Army training are widespread in areas surrounding the Makua Valley. That’s why Apple, Inc., is donating more than 300 Apple MacBook computers, each equipped with a unique question-and-answer system, to select public schools.

“The students will be required to answer one question regarding UXOs before signing in,” said Tom Burke of the Hawaii Veteran’s Society, who announced the program at the meeting.

Despite these efforts, some found the program itself, which features a caricatured version of a Native Hawaiian, to be controversial.

“If this is a native, I think it is rather tasteless,” said Johnnie-Mae Perry, a member of the board.

The Army has yet to release a date to resume training in Makua. Another meeting with representatives of the 25th Infantry will announced by the Waianae Coast Neighborhood Board within 60 days.

UPDATED: Rise Up! Roots of Liberation – Youth Camp for Justice and Peace

UPDATE:  Thanks to a special gift from the Hawai’i Peoples Fund, we able to offer a $150 stipend to participants who successfully complete the program.

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MARCH 1st, 2010

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youth camp for justice and peace

March 15 – 19, 2010

Camp Kokokahi, Kane’ohe

Who:             Youth ages 15 – 19 with a passion for peace, justice and aloha ‘aina.

What:             Be Real:  Liberate the power of our histories, cultures and identities.

Be the Change: Gain knowledge and skills to help grow our movement for peace & justice.

Connect: Meet other youth who also care about making Hawai’i and the world a better place.

Download the application forms here.

Program eligibility

  • Youth the ages of 15-19 years old.
  • Must be self-motivated and able to work well in a team towards a common goal.
  • Must have the desire to work for justice and peace, protect the environment.

How to apply

1) Complete the application form. Download the application forms here. Have a teacher/adviser complete the recommendation form.  Applicants under 18 years of age must also fill out and return a signed parent permission form .

2)  Mail, fax or email your completed application packet to:

  • Mail:  American Friends Service Committee -Hawai’i Area Program

Rise Up! Roots of Liberation – Youth for Justice and Peace

Attn: Kyle Kajihiro

2426 O’ahu Avenue

Honolulu, HI 96822

  • Fax:      808-988-4876
  • Email: kkajihiro@afsc.org

OR

  • Video:  Send us an online video of your response to the application form.  You must still submit signed teacher/adviser recommendation form and if you are under 18 years of age, a parent/legal guardian permission form.

3) DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS EXTENDED: MARCH 1, 2010

This program is FREE.   Spaces are limited.  Applicants will be selected based on your application packets.  We may also call to interview finalists.   Applicants will be notified by March 5, 2010 whether they are admitted to the program.

Thanks to a special gift from the Hawai’i Peoples Fund, we are able to offer a $150 stipend to youth participants who successfully complete the program.

For more information:             Call 808-988-6266.  Email: kkajihiro@afsc.org

Action Alert: Sign Holding at Army briefing on Makua

ACTION ALERT!

Sign Holding at Army briefing on Makua

Army Colonel Margotta will speak about “Makua Future Training Update” at the Wai’anae neighborhood Board on Feb 2, 2010.

7 pm

At the Waianae Neighborhood Community Center 85-670 Farrington Hwy

(Past McDonalds, Taco Bell and the stream on the mauka side; there’s a bust of Iz Kamakawiwo’ole out front)

Dr. Fred Dodge of Malama Makua writes:

We would like to have as many people as possible greet him and be present with signs. E.g., “Do a valid EIS NOW!” &/or “Lease runs out in 2029” &/or

“Leave Makua” &/or “No More Training” &/or “Clean up”; “Good Neighbors Clean Their Messes”; ” No Live Fire”; “Fix EIS Now”; etc.

Please tell your friends. Questions? E-mail me or call 696-4677.

Mahalo, fred

Jam the meeting! Bring signs. Please come out to tell the Army that the only future plans it should be discussing for Makua is to clean up and get out.

Not one more bomb! Not one more bullet!

Army out of Makua!

Stop the wars from Makua to Afghanistan!

Honolulu Advertiser editorial: “Army needs to make case for Makua plan”

Editorial from the Honolulu Advertiser:

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100113/OPINION01/1130306/Army-needs-to-make-case-for-Makua-plan

Posted on: Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Army needs to make case for Makua plan

The Wai’anae community in particular and the state in general need a clearer understanding of what the Army has in mind for Makua Valley, in the near and short term.

It’s been more than a decade since the type of training conducted in Makua Military Reservation, at the far reaches of West O’ahu, first set off legal disputes between the Army and community and environmental groups. The gulf between the two sides still hasn’t been bridged, so it’s clear the Army still has work to do to make the case for the latest variation of its training plan.

Lt. Gen. Benjamin R. Mixon, commander of the U.S. Army in the Pacific, has restated plans to return to live-fire training in Makua in March. But in an interview with Advertiser military writer William Cole, he also outlined a plan to move that training to Pohakuloa on the Big Island and shift the use of Makua toward training soldiers to cope with convoy fighting and roadside bombs, known as improvised explosive devices.

It’s easy to understand why the Army wants to boost this kind of training, given the toll the IEDs have taken on soldiers deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. Even the notion that roads snaking through the valley simulate what troops encounter in battle seems logical.

But so much about the plan is still murky, and considering the proximity of residences and the sensitivities about the Hawaiian cultural sites and native species at risk, clarity is essential.

The Army owes the community a series of face-to-face meetings where residents of the area can get their questions answered — and it should happen early in the planning process.

For example, the Army describes an IED training facility at Makua that would involve constructing mock “villages” for gunfights, and yet maintains this use would pose less harm to the environment and cultural sites than the live-fire, heavy-artillery training the community has fought for so long. How can impact be reduced this way?

Opponents still insist that the Army’s studies did not adequately test the threats to subsurface archaeological artifacts and marine life. Federal court has upheld that view, and further challenges are likely should live-fire training resume.

But even if the Army does restart live-fire exercises at Makua, officials haven’t explained why it should take an estimated five to 10 years to make the transition to Pohakuloa. A much more definite and reasonable timetable is needed.

Army officials have described Makua as “uniquely suited” to this next-generation kind of training. The neighbors in close proximity to the noise and fire risk of training — some of them living as close as three miles away — should be told the reasoning behind that choice.

Mosquitoes of Makua

War of the small,

War of the flea,

Where the strongest bomb is human

Who is bursting to be free.

The moon will be my lantern,

And my heart will find the way

To sow the seeds of courage

That will blossom into day,

To blossom up a garden

So green before they came,

Our joy will be the sunshine,

And our tears will be the rain.

– Chris Iijima and Nobuko Miyamoto, War of the Flea

In the following article from the Honolulu Weekly, Sparky Rodrigues of Malama Makua compares the group’s approach to a mosquito biting an elephant. The metaphor evokes the classic description of guerrilla warfare as a “war of the flea”, where small resistance forces utilize asymmetry to their advantage. But the guerrilla strategy relies on mobility, improvisation, the ability to “hit and run” and the support of the community. The Army’s efforts to generate pro-military sentiment in the Wai’anae and Native Hawaiian communities seeks to remove the environment from which the Makua movement draws its support and suggests that the military is applying counterinsurgency methods to its public relations strategy as well as training mission in Makua. It challenges the Makua movement to evaluate how well we are applying these lessons in our strategies and tactics in the social and political arena.

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http://honoluluweekly.com/feature/2010/01/the-mosquitos-coast/

The mosquito’s coast

Is the Army committed to changing its tune in Mākua, or is it just paying lip-service?

Catherine Black

Jan 6, 2010

Resources

A clash of cultures, and some dialogue as well.  Image: Davd Henkin

When Malama Makua, represented by Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, filed suit against the U.S. Army in 1998, it was a David and Goliath-type facedown, though the group’s president Sparky Rodrigues says its preferred metaphor is “a mosquito biting a rogue elephant as it crashes through the forest. We’re tiny, but we’ve been able to make it stop to itch.”

The Waianae non-profit organization’s original demand was that the Army conduct an Environmental Impact Statement, after a series of fires set off by its live-fire training exercises burned thousands of acres of environmentally and culturally sensitive land. In a 2001 settlement, the Army agreed to do the EIS and has not conducted any live-fire exercises (simulations of combat scenarios using “live” munitions) since 2004.

In July of 2009, however, it seemed as though the valley’s recovery period would end: The Army completed its EIS and issued a Record of Decision advocating a return to live-fire training in the valley.

Yet the mosquito bit again: in August, Malama Makua filed a claim contending that two studies required by the 2001 settlement were poorly conducted and not released for public comment, as mandated. The Army requested that the court dismiss this claim, but in November, U.S. District Court Judge Susan Oki Mollway denied the Army’s request, upholding Malama Makua’s argument that the studies’ methodologies were insufficient to test possible contamination threats to subsurface archeological remains and marine life.

“We have serious concerns about the adequacy of the EIS itself,” says Earthjustice attorney David Henkin, “but before dealing with that larger question, we are asking the court to resolve a threshold issue regarding these studies, which are inadequate. It’s basically a continuation of Malama Makua’s struggle with the Army since 1998, trying to force the Army to do an honest appraisal of the effects of training in a valley full of endangered species and cultural sites, and to address the question of why they can’t do this somewhere else and still accomplish their mission?”

Service, or lip-service?

The Army’s policy is to not comment on ongoing litigation, but local Army Garrison spokesman Dennis Drake signals a number of proposed mitigations to lessen the impact of training at Makua.

These include identifying and protecting culturally sensitive sites; eliminating some of the areas previously used for training such as Kaena Point and one of the valley ridges; investing in native species restoration efforts (the Army spends 10 million dollars annually on environmental protection in Hawaii, and contracts 28 biologists at Makua alone); and a cultural sensitivity training program for soldiers in Makua so that archeological sites–totaling more than 120, including at least two known heiau–are not damaged. The Army also recently launched a new Military Munitions Response Program to engage the community in the process of cleaning up unexploded weapons along the coastline.

Yet according to Rodrigues, “their cultural sensitivity is less than zero. They say they’re doing cultural sensitivity training, but what we’re finding is that it’s not about Hawaiian culture or the community’s culture, but the Army’s culture. Their talk about sensitivity is more for the sound bite, the news report, the press release.”

A changing strategy

The main question at issue is whether the Army’s live fire training–which involves mortar, artillery, anti-tank weapons, grenades and mines–can be done elsewhere. According to Drake, the Army’s new focus for Makua Valley training is in preparing soldiers for the type of situations that might be found in the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“We’re not doing force on force fighting now, but counter-insurgency training. The big one is defense against IEDs, because that’s the weapon that’s killing the most soldiers right now. So convoy live fire training is a critical task, because if you’re in a convoy and one of your convoy hits an IED and your convoy stops, they could be sitting ducks for an ambush situation.”

The Army recently announced plans to transform Makua Valley into a counterinsurgency training site over the next decade, though it defends its argument, outlined in the July Record of Decision, for conducting up to 32 combined live-fire exercises (what Makua Valley has been traditionally used for) and 130 convoy live-fire exercises (the newer counter-insurgency exercises) per year.

Henkin says, however, that the proposal makes clear it is both reasonable and feasible for the Army to move all of its combined arms training out of the valley.

“The Army should simply do that, rather than try to think of new training it can conduct at Makua,” he says. “After all, the Army has never satisfactorily answered the core question: why it thinks any training whatsoever at Makua is appropriate or vital for national security. No rational planner in the 21st century would decide to conduct military training in the midst of Makua’s biological and cultural treasures.”

Ultimately, Malama Makua and Earthjustice argue that the price for the Army’s live-fire training, which involve potential fire hazards, physical damage to historic sites and toxic waste contamination in an ahupuaa of rich historical, cultural and environmental resources (the area is home to 48 endangered plant and animal species, including the ‘elepaio bird and the endangered Oahu tree snail) is too high, even with the proposed mitigations.

The Army argues that 4,190-acre Makua valley is the only place on Oahu where soldiers can get the type of training they need in order to be prepared for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan without spending large amounts of money on transportation off-island or cutting into soldiers’ already reduced time at home with their families between deployments.

Although the military’s 133,000-acre Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA) on the island of Hawaii has been suggested as an option, “that alternative is not at all preferable for us,” says Drake. “It’s impractical and costly for small units to deploy to PTA and return each time they desire to train. A battalion or brigade deployment to PTA should occur only when their company-sized units are proficient to the level where they can integrate into a larger exercise.”

As long as Makua is a viable option for smaller-scale exercises, the Army’s reasoning “just makes common sense” says Drake. Doing the training off-island would require more money to ensure that soldiers get the same degree of combat preparation. Drake insists that as long as the Army needs to prepare soldiers for potential combat, there will be a need for a local training area for soldiers stationed in Hawaii. While these reasons don’t eliminate other ranges as possibilities, they do make Makua the most attractive one as long as the costs don’t outweigh the benefits.

A slow shift

This is all part of a larger, ongoing debate over the military’s impact in Hawai’i. For many environmental and cultural stakeholders the costs are too high, and as Rodrigues explains, the Waianae Coast’s military presence is a health and quality of life concern for the region’s already underserved, largely Hawaiian population.

Malama Makua’s outreach has helped to broaden the debate regarding military use of Waianae and state resources, and one positive outcome of the 2001 settlement is that the group has brought thousands of people into a valley that was previously off-limits to the public. They have been leading cultural accesses twice a month since 2002, including overnight Makahiki ceremonies, Christmas vigils and Easter Sunrise services.

“We take everybody back there, students, neighbors, people from other parts of Oahu, even military personnel…in fact it’s good to take people who don’t agree with us,” says Fred Dodge, one of the group’s directors. This, along with participation in many of the coastline’s community organizations, is how Malama Makua is attempting to educate the broader public about the valley’s cultural and ecological importance.

Ultimately the question comes down to how worthwhile it will be for the Army to maintain its training at this particular site. In the coming months, Judge Mollway will likely hear arguments from both sides on whether the Army complied with the settlement agreement, or whether it can return to live-fire training. In the meantime, the soldiers, the community and the valley itself await an outcome that will determine which vision of Makua will prevail.

To view the Army’s EIS, visit [garrison.hawaii.army.mil]
Malama Makua will host a fundraiser yard sale Sat 1/9 & Sun 1/10 at 86-024 Glenmonger Street in Waianae.

Army wants to use Makua for counterinsurgency training

So here is the Army’s counterinsurgency plan for Makua.   They will be “lessening” the impact, moving “storm the hill” type training to Pohakuloa and changing the training to traditional infantry live fire training and roadside bomb detection.  Meanwhile they have tried to win support from the Wai’anae community.  They plan to return to training as early as March.  The Army also wants to train the military troops of other countries in Makua.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100103/NEWS01/1030390/Makua+Valley+eyed+for+counterinsurgency++road+bomb+training

Posted on: Sunday, January 3, 2010

Makua Valley eyed for counterinsurgency, road bomb training

By William Cole

Advertiser Military Writer

The Army wants to spend about $3.7 million to transform Makua Valley into a “world-class” roadside bomb and counterinsurgency training center with convoy live fire along hillside roads, simulated explosions and multiple “villages” to replicate the roadside bomb threat in Iraq and Afghanistan — the No. 1 killer of Americans.

As that occurs, the Army said it also wants to eventually transition some of its storm-the-hill traditional live-fire training from Makua to Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island.

The counter-improvised explosive device, or IED, focus at Makua is a new proposal by the Army as it also seeks the more immediate return to the traditional infantry live-fire exercises in the 4,190-acre Wai’anae Coast valley — something it hadn’t been able to do since 2004 due to environmental lawsuits.

Schofield Barracks may seek to conduct traditional live-fire drills in Makua involving companies of 150 soldiers with artillery, mortars and helicopter fire as early as March, officials said.

“What this (longer-term) plan enables us to do is to modernize Makua Valley (to meet) what we think is the long and enduring threat,” said Lt. Gen. Benjamin R. “Randy” Mixon, referring to counterinsurgency and roadside bombs.

Mixon is head of the U.S. Army in the Pacific.

He said the plan also would reduce the cultural and environmental impact in Makua — the source of ongoing lawsuits — “because we would shift over time, and I’m talking five to 10 years from now, the heavy ordnance training, artillery training and things of that nature over to Pohakuloa.”

Changes already in the works for Hawai’i’s Stryker Brigade at the Big Island training area, along with possible new training ranges to replace Makua and other improvements, conceivably could total $300 million over the next 15 years, Mixon said.

restarting live fire

The counter-roadside bomb plan represents a fundamental change in what to date had been the Army’s dogged pursuit of traditional infantry live-fire training in Makua Valley, a quest that has cost it millions in court fees.

A lawsuit over training was settled with community group Malama Makua in 2001. However, the Army’s failure to complete an agreed-upon environmental impact statement analysis of decades of military training prevented a return to live fire since 2004 and spawned a series of sub-lawsuits.

The Army last July completed the environmental examination by saying it wanted to conduct up to 32 combined-arms live-fire exercises or 150 convoy live-fire exercises annually in the valley.

“The EIS we consider to be legally sufficient (and) we intend to return to live fire in Makua Valley,” Mixon said last week from his headquarters at Fort Shafter.

David Henkin, an Earthjustice attorney who represents Malama Makua, said he doesn’t know the details of the shift in focus being proposed by Mixon for Makua Valley.

“I guess all I can say is this proposal has never been subjected to any form of environmental review — including public review — so it’s impossible to make any informed statement about it without actually seeing what’s being proposed,” Henkin said.

New construction “raises a lot of concerns about potential damage to subsurface archaeological resources,” Henkin said.

More than 50 endangered plant and animal species, and more than 100 archaeological features, are found in the valley area.

global training site

Mixon said he intends to take the Makua and Pohakuloa plan before the Army chief of staff and other Army officials probably in the next 60 days.

“If I get their support, which I’m sure I will, we will start as soon as we possibly can,” he said. That could mean construction activity at Makua within a year, he added.

Henkin maintains that such a change would require a supplemental environmental impact review.

Mixon said part of his plan includes the development of an IED “fusion center” in Hawai’i that would bring together intelligence gathering, a knowledge base and training to defeat roadside bombs not only in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in Asia-Pacific countries such as Thailand, India and the Philippines, where the bombs also are a growing threat.

He said he’s already obtained “a couple million dollars” in start-up funding from the Pentagon’s Joint IED Defeat Organization.

U.S. soldiers could travel to Pacific partner nations to train their soldiers on roadside bomb techniques, and foreign soldiers might be able to travel to Hawai’i to receive training at Makua, Mixon said.

The three-star general said he envisions Makua as a “world-class IED and counterinsurgency” training center.

Makua’s austere hillside road network is a close approximation of Afghanistan roads. Mixon’s plan includes the installation of a couple dozen mobile structures that would be congregated in two spots and spread out elsewhere to represent villages.

The training would include convoy live fire in response to an attack, and a “shoot house” with about 10 rooms in which soldiers could practice live-fire room clearing, officials said.

Helicopters would be brought in for support and a key component of the plan is the use of unmanned aerial vehicles to look for roadside bomb planters.

Mixon said the fleet of UAVs will be increasing in Hawai’i, and Makua is one of the few allowable places to fly.

Training requirements were examined for Hawai’i with an eye to an integrated approach and “how can we make the best possible use, given the training requirements and the anticipated threat, of Schofield, Makua and Pohakuloa Training Area,” Mixon said.

community talks

Schofield units have been able to rotate annually to the National Training Center in California for large-scale training exercises during a time of war, but those availabilities, at a cost of between $18 million to $22 million, are expected to dwindle if and when the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down, he said.

As a result, more Hawai’i-based service members, including Marines and National Guard soldiers, will be at home station longer and need to get their training in the Isles, Mixon said.

Mixon said he envisions expanding the live-fire capability at Pohakuloa, and if that’s possible, “we would see a gradual shift to a different type of live-fire training (at Makua) which is focused on counter-IED operations in cities and close-quarters combat.”

But he also said the Army would have to retain the ability to use Makua for IED training and — if needed — the traditional company-size combined arms exercises involving mortars, artillery and helicopters firing overhead.

Mixon said he’s been out to the Wai’anae Coast to talk with community representatives in “general terms” about the new Makua plan.

“It’s our desire to continue to train in Makua Valley but look at ways to limit the cultural and environmental impact,” he said.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Anthropology Association Condemns Work with U.S. Counterinsurgency

The following article discusses the American Anthropological Association’s condemnation of anthropologists collaborating with military missions such as the Human Terrain System.   Applying anthropological knowledge to counterinsurgency missions is incompatible with the ethics of the profession.

The Army public relations campaign regarding training in Makua valley is designed along the lines of counterinsurgency campaign.  The point is to figure out what the community’s values, interests and concerns are and to try to address them in order to win trust.  The ultimate objective of counterinsurgency is to have control of a population.   Meanwhile, the Army’s mission is not questioned.

In the case of Makua, Army live fire training has destroyed endangered species habitat, desecrated sacred sites and shattered the lives of residents who were forcibly removed from their land.  With growing pressure to end the Army training in the valley, the Army has begun to enlist the help of prominent Native Hawaiians to sway support for Army training. The Army has also taken the offensive to conduct tours where they can showcase their efforts to preserve the valley, conveniently excluding the voices of the community activists who have struggled for decades to protect the valley and win its ultimate restoration and return.  However, as was demonstrated by the Vietnam War, the most sophisticated counterinsurgency strategy cannot make people forget the fundamental humiliation and violence of occupation and militarization.  The way to ‘pacify’ a people is to let them live in peace.

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-stein/anthropology-association_b_378503.html

Posted: December 3, 2009 10:32 AM

Anthropology Association Condemns Work with U.S. Counterinsurgency

Jeff Stein, Spy Talk Columnist

Anthropologists should not be helping U.S. military forces gather information about Afghan villagers and their way of life, a study commission sponsored by their academic organization said today.

The American Anthropological Association, in a study commissioned a year ago, called such work with the Army’s Human Terrain System (HTS) program in Afghanistan “incompatible” with the ethics of the profession.

“When ethnographic investigation is determined by military missions, not subject to external review, where data collection occurs in the context of war, integrated into the goals of counterinsurgency, and in a potentially coercive environment … it can no longer be considered a legitimate professional exercise of anthropology,” the AAA’ s Commission on the Engagement of Anthropology with the US Security and Intelligence Communities said in a report released today.

The commission recommended “that the AAA emphasize the incompatibility of HTS with disciplinary ethics and practice for job seekers and that it further recognize the problem of allowing HTS to define the meaning of anthropology’ within DoD.

The Human Terrain System, headquartered at Ft. Leavenworth, has been dogged by controversy since it was set up two years ago.

Three HTS social scientists have been killed in the course of their work in Afghanistan over the past two years. One of its researchers pled guilty to killing an Afghan who had attacked a fellow HTS social scientist. An HTS translator was charged last year with spying for Saddam Husseins Iraq for a dozen years.

From the beginning, the academic discipline was seen as a potentially important weapon in the U.S. counterinsurgency toolkit in Afghanistan.

Its mission was to “understand the people’s interests, because whoever is more effective at meeting the interests of the population will be able to influence it,” its most fervent advocate, Montgomery McFate, a Harvard- and Yale-trained anthropologist told Wired magazine’s Noah Shachtman in an interview last year.

But critics said anthropologists should not be helping military intelligence gather information about villagers in Afghanistan, Iraq — or anywhere else. Recent reports say the Army plans a $40 million expansion of the HTS program into U.S. commands in Africa, Asia and the Pacific.

“HTS managers insist the program is not an intelligence asset,” the report said. “However, we note that the program is housed within a DoD intelligence asset, that it has reportedly been briefed as such an asset, and that a variety of circumstances of the work of Human Terrain Teams (HTTs) ‘on the ground’ in Iraq and Afghanistan create a significant likelihood that HTS data will in some way be used as part of military intelligence, advertently or inadvertently.

Anthropologists’ research is “potentially irreconcilable” with the Army’s, the report said, leading to “irreducible tensions with respect to the program’s basic identity.”

Serving “as a data source, as a source of intelligence, and as performing a tactical function in counterinsurgency warfare” creates “confusion,” it said, and “any anthropologist considering employment with HTS will have difficulty determining whether or not s/he will be able to follow the disciplinary Code of Ethics.”

Follow Jeff Stein on Twitter: www.twitter.com/spytalker

Army public relations offensive with student tours at Makua

The Army is going on the public relations offensive by taking groups into Makua valley for tours of the cultural and natural resources of the valley.    Undoubtedly, their spin is that Army training and protection of cultural and natural resources are compatible and successful in Makua.   I’ll bet that they don’t tell the students that families were evicted and their community destroyed by the military, or that there have been more than 270 fires over the last ten years, or that the act of bombing a place named “the parents”.

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http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/12/22/32244-mililani-students-discover-culture-natural-resources-at-makua/

Mililani students discover culture, natural resources at Makua

Dec 22, 2009

By Kayla Overton, U.S. Army Garrison-Hawaii Public Affairs

Mililani students discover culture, natural resources at Makua

Photo credit Kayla Overton, U.S. Army Garrison-Hawaii Public Affairs

MAKUA MILITARY RESERVATION, Hawaii — Alton Exzabe, (far right) cultural resource specialist, points out cultural features at Makua Military Reservation during a student field trip to the area this week.

MAKUA MILITARY RESERVATION, Hawaii – More than 150 Mililani Middle School students had an opportunity to explore many unique cultural and natural resources during two field trips to the area, here, Dec. 15 and 17.

Seventh grade “Laulima,” (working together) students were welcomed to the Makua Military Reservation (MMR) to enhance their study of the Hawaiian ahupuaa system of sustainable land management. The ahupuaa concept is an ancient Hawaiian land division based on natural features such as mountains, streams, and valleys that also includes cultural, human, and spiritual resources.

“This field trip was a great opportunity to extend learning outside of the classroom. We’re able to see, touch and experience the things that we learn and read about in books,” said Michael Diggs, social studies teacher, Mililani Middle School.

After applying ample sunscreen, drinking plenty of water, being outfitted with proper footwear and getting a detailed safety brief by range personnel, students were ready for the field trip to begin. Separated into three groups, the students then hiked to archaeological sites and areas near endangered plant populations.

Kim Welch and Candace Russo, environmental outreach specialists from the Army Natural Resource Program (OANRP), gave a presentation on threatened and endangered species unique to MMR, and what actions the OANRP takes to protect them. The students learned about threats to these species such as invasive non-native plants (weeds), fire, and non-native predators such as rats that eat native bird eggs, plants, seeds and snails.

Some of the endangered species include the Hawaii state flower, Hibiscus brackenridgei; a small forest bird, the Oahu Elepaio; an endangered palm native to the northern Waianae Mountains, the Loulu; and the Kahuli tree snail.

The students also learned that the Hawaii state insect, the Kamehameha Butterfly and the Hawaiian Happy Face Spider can also be found at MMR.

Students visited a petroglyph rock, where Carly Antone, cultural resource specialist, talked about the Army’s efforts to protect and preserve fragile resources such as the petroglyphs.

Students viewed the weathered images of dogs, turtles, birds and people and discussed possible interpretations.

Each group then hiked to an archaeological site, passing various cultural and historic features and enjoying beautiful views of Makua’s landscape along the way. Alton Exzabe, cultural resource specialist, led the students in a discussion on how archaeologists record, research, and interpret resources such as this site.

“The Army’s Cultural Resource Program seeks to protect and preserve Makua’s Resources,” said Jaime Raduenzel, cultural resources outreach specialist. “An important part of that preservation is sharing the resources with the community. Through students visiting Makua, we can improve their awareness and appreciation of cultural resources and the Army’s efforts to manage those resources.”

“I really enjoyed seeing Makua, it’s really neat to be able to actually see the things we read about in class,” said student Megan Yamamoto.

After the field trip the group gathered in a large circle, and sang “Hawaii Aloha” to thank everyone for their visit and then ate their lunches under a mango tree.

16th Annual Makua Annual Vigil for Peace

Malama Makua is holding its 16th Annual Malama Makua Vigil for Peace

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

4:00pm

At the front gate of the Makua Military Reservation.  Participants are welcome to share prayers, poems, readings, or songs related to peace and the restoration of Makua.