Soldier peacefully ends standoff with police

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

July 1, 2008

Man gives up peacefully in Waipahu

By Dave Dondoneau
and David Waite

ROYAL KUNIA – A standoff involving a Schofield Barracks soldier ended peacefully at about 10:40 a.m. today when the man walked out of his Royal Kunia townhouse with his hands up and surrendered to police.

Neighbors said they were told the soldier had returned earlier this year from Iraq and was diagnosed recently with post traumatic stress disorder.

Police began evacuating residents of one area of the Villas at Royal Kunia at about 4 p.m. yesterday after becoming concerned that the soldier might be a threat to himself or others.

The soldier, who lives in unit 20 of the townhouse complex at 94-976 Hanauna St., was described by neighbors as tall and thin. They said they often saw him in front of his unit cooking food on an outdoor grill with friends.

Neighbors said the man’s wife left with the couple’s two children yesterday to return to the Mainland. They said police were called to the home about two weeks ago and escorted the wife from the home following a domestic argument.

Neighbors Jade and Emery Black were evacuated yesterday at about 6 p.m. They said they had heard “the guy had two guns.”

Jade Black watched the police operation from across the street until midnight and then went to stay with friends.

The Blacks returned this morning to find the situation had not been resolved.

Andy Reckers and wife, Hannah, went to walk their dog – adopted from the Hawaiian Humane Society six days ago – and saw police surrounding the townhouse complex when they returned.

They also stayed overnight with friends hoping to return to their home this morning.

Levi Reulecke and his wife, Ericka, who live diagonally across in the same cluster from the unit in question, said police came to their home about 8:15 last night and told them to leave.

They said they were surprised by all of the commotion and that their neighbor in question “seemed like a normal guy – until yesterday.”

About 10:15 a.m. this morning, police were allowing some of the residents who were evacuated earlier to return to get some of their belongings and to retrieve their cars.

The west-bound lanes of Anonui Street, which connects with Hanauna Street, were open but the east-bound lanes of Anonui remained closed to traffic.

Police had set up shade tents and brought in an air-conditioned trailer to allow SWAT team members to take a break from the heat.

Deceptive recruiting methods damage the military

OUR OPINION

Deceptive recruiting methods damage the
military

THE ISSUE

A Navy recruiter has been accused of making false promises to enlist

Misleading young men and women in order to sign them up for military service makes no sense for anyone involved, including the tricky recruiter.

When enlistees discover they have been deceived, they aren’t likely to view their stints favorably, the military gains service members who are disgruntled and the recruiters — though possibly reaching their enlistment quotas — get bad reputations that can prevent them from doing their jobs effectively. In addition, the military and
recruiters in general are tainted by the bad practices of a few.

Parents and young people as well as older people considering enrolling in the armed forces should make sure they know in detail what’s ahead before they agree to enlist. While a career in the military can provide an education, a range of opportunities and other benefits, potential recruits need to enter the services with eyes wide open.

Two recent Kapolei High School graduates and their families have found that a recruiter’s promises of college benefits weren’t exactly as billed. They were told that the Navy would pay for them to go to college for four years before having to serve four years, but it turned out the sequence was reversed; they were to serve on full-time active duty before earning any college benefits.

The mother of one of the graduates told the Star-Bulletin’s Susan Essoyan she was skeptical of the promises and went with her son to assure herself everything was in order and to verify the terms of enlistment. But they turned out to be otherwise.

The recruiter, Petty Officer 1st Class Jimmy Pecadeso, apparently had been the source of previous problems.

The school’s principal said he had banned Pecadeso from recruiting on campus for being “overly aggressive” and “doing things that appear not to be ethical.” The recruiter’s supervisor was advised of problems several times, the principal said.

Recruiters can meet with students at the school only if parents have given permission and if a counselor is present. However, the resourceful recruiter managed to track down one of the teenagers off campus.

Granted, the teenagers should have known what they were doing, but it appears they were rushed into a decision without the benefit of talking with their families.

A 2006 government study showed that while hard-sell tactics by recruiters were rare, claims of recruiter misconduct were increasing and, because the military did not track all allegations, the problems likely were underestimated.  The study also showed that the majority of recruiters, who are involuntarily assigned the duty, are dissatisfied with the task, which has become increasingly difficult because of the war in Iraq.

Source: http://starbulletin.com/2008/06/17/editorial/editorial01.html

Teens say recruiter duped them

June 17, 2008

Teens say recruiter duped them

Grads claim they were told they could go to college before serving

Advertiser Staff and News Services

The Navy said it is investigating a Honolulu-based recruiter after two Kapolei High School graduates said they were scammed into joining the service.

Cory Miyasato and Joseph Mauga Jr. said Navy recruiter Petty Officer 1st Class Jimmy Pecadeso promised them they would be able to get a free, four-year college education before going off to sea.

Instead, the two 18-year-olds said they found out they would be going off to boot camp and then active duty.

Their families made a complaint to the Navy.

Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class David McKee, a spokesman for Navy Recruiting Station Los Angeles, which includes Hawai’i, said, “We’ve done the preliminary inquiry, and we’ve initiated a formal investigation.”

McKee said Miyasato and Mauga are no longer obligated to fulfill a Navy contract and enter boot camp.

“They’ve asked to be removed from the delayed entry program, and we’ve honored that request,” McKee said.

McKee said he would have to check whether Pecadeso was temporarily relieved of duties, or if he continues to work as a recruiter.

A person who answered the phone at the Kapolei Navy recruiting station said Pecadeso wouldn’t be able to comment, and referred any questions to McKee.

The Navy said it has recruiting offices in Kapolei, ‘Aiea, Honolulu and Kane’ohe.

McKee said Miyasato and Mauga were to go into the Navy under the “delayed entry” program, but that the delay in reporting for boot camp ranges from about a month to, rarely, as long as a year.

McKee said he believes the general integrity of Navy recruiters to be high.

The Los Angeles recruiting office encompasses 54 recruiting stations in California, Hawai’i, Guam, South Korea and Japan, McKee said.

For June, the total goal for the stations is 210 recruits, 30 of whom are expected to come from Hawai’i, Guam, South Korea and Japan, McKee said.

Source: Honoluluadvertiser.com

Deception lures Kapolei students to join Navy

Navy recruiter’s false promises allegedly snare Kapolei students

Petty Officer 1st Class Jimmy Pecadeso’s tactics have drawn previous complaints

By Susan Essoyan
sessoyan@starbulletin.com

Enlist in the Navy now, the recruiter told Cory Miyasato and Joseph Mauga Jr., and get a free, four-year college education before going off to sea.

artrecruit03a

JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO@STARBULLETIN.COM
Joseph Mauga Jr., right, and his friend, Cory Miyasato, were allegedly railroaded into enlisting in the U.S. Navy just before graduating from Kapolei High School. The recruiter is accused of promising they could get a free education from the Navy before seeing active duty.

The two Kapolei High School seniors thought they could believe the talkative Navy recruiter in the spotless white uniform. Mauga wanted to become a naval officer after college. His father is a 20-year Navy veteran and 11 of his uncles have served in the military.

Miyasato, an honor student, also was intrigued. “The full-ride scholarship really interested me,” he said. “I am a very trusting person. I thought the U.S. government would be truthful to me.”

With the military under pressure to keep producing fresh troops for an increasingly unpopular war in Iraq, a few recruiters stretch the truth – or worse – to meet their quotas. Mauga and Miyasato, both 18, say they found that out the hard way.

It wasn’t until after the pair enlisted in the Navy’s Delayed Entry Program on May 29 that they discovered they would be going off to boot camp and then full-time active duty, scrubbing and painting ships, before earning any college benefits. And it wasn’t until their irate parents raised a ruckus that they learned that the recruiter who lured them into enlisting had already run into trouble for his heavy-handed tactics with students.

Kapolei High School Principal Alvin Nagasako told the Star-Bulletin that Petty Officer 1st Class Jimmy Pecadeso had been banned from recruiting on campus for being “overly aggressive” and “doing things that appear not to be ethical. It was told to his supervisor by our counselor not once but multiple times,” Nagasako said.

Recruiters are allowed to meet with students at the school only with parental permission and if a counselor is present. In this case, the recruiter tracked down Miyasato off campus after getting his cell-phone number from another student. The seniors were about to graduate from Kapolei High and had already enrolled at local colleges.

Cory’s mother, Jayne Arasaki, was skeptical, so she went along on one visit to the recruiting station and heard the same promise from Pecadeso. “He did lie to me,” she said. “He said the Navy would pay for four years of college and then Cory would be obligated to serve four years.”

Pecadeso did not return a call from the Star-Bulletin, and his supervisor, Petty Officer 1st Class Latasha Kahana, said they were not authorized to speak to the press. But the spokesman for the Navy Recruiting Station Los Angeles, which includes Hawaii, said the case would be investigated.

“Nobody should be railroaded into buying a car, a house, or joining the military under false pretenses by being misled,” said Petty Officer 1st Class David McKee, public affairs officer for the district.

“When it comes out that a recruiter has misled an applicant, it reflects poorly on all recruiters and the Navy and the military,” he said. “The military does take this seriously. The family can be assured that the recruiter is going to be investigated.”

Concern over recruiter tactics prompted a study by the General Accounting Office in 2006 that found claims of recruiter misconduct were on an upswing, although they remained rare. It noted that the military services do not track all allegations and the data likely underestimates the problem.

There were 2,456 claims of recruiter “irregularities” among 22,000 recruiters and nearly 318,000 new enlistees in 2006, according to more recent data from the U.S. State Department. Most involved “concealment, falsification or undue influence.” About one in five claims was substantiated.

“I feel my son was railroaded into enlisting for active duty with the Navy,” Arasaki said. “The whole process took less than a week. Cory was enticed with money, prestige as an officer, college and other military benefits.”

At 5 p.m. the day after she met Pecadeso, the recruiter picked up both boys and whisked them off to spend the night at an airport hotel, courtesy of the Navy, saying they needed to get an early start on medical testing and security clearance at the Military Entrance Processing Station at Pearl Harbor. He promised to have them back by noon.

It was nearly 24 hours before the brought them back, late for graduation practice at 4 p.m. Their worried mothers had been trying to reach them by phone, but their cell phones were confiscated on base as a security measure.

“They were just going to see what they had to offer,” Gloria Mauga said. “I did not know my child was going to come back enlisted. They couldn’t even call to ask us advice. It’s like they kidnapped our sons.”

Their contracts noted that they were eligible for the Navy College Fund, and the boys say they thought they were signing up to go to school full time.

At first, the Maugas thought Joseph might have signed up for ROTC, but when they reviewed the contract, they realized he would be entering as an enlisted man at the lowest level. It was 10 p.m., but they immediately jumped up to call Pecadeso on his cell phone to cancel it.

“He said, ‘Just don’t have him show up (for his ship date) at the end of December, we’ll consider it canceled,'” Joseph Mauga Sr. recalled.

Instead, the families are working to get immediate discharges and written assurances that the boys’ careers will not be affected. McKee, the Navy spokesman, said the two young men can opt out with no penalty.

“At any point in the Delayed Entry Program, if a person decides that they do not want to join the military, they’re not obligated,” he said. “We discourage people from just walking away from the process. But before you go to basic training, you are under no obligation to continue.”

McKee apologized for any miscommunication, and noted that recruiters may feel time pressure as their monthly deadlines approach. Hawaii recruiters are expected to produce 30 new enlistees for the Navy this month.

“Not everyone who becomes a recruiter is a talented communicator,” McKee added. “Some are used to working in an engine room. … Please don’t write the military off completely.”

Pecadeso, who has been a recruiter since 2005, joined the military in 1998 and is trained in surface warfare as a gas system turbine technician-electrician.

He told Mauga and Miyasato they could earn higher pay if they recruited a few friends before going off to basic training. Navy regulations do permit bumping a recruit up to the E-3 level from E-1, a $240 difference per month, if they recruit two or more others.

But at this point, neither boy is interested in trying to sign up anyone else.

“Right now, all I want to do is get out of the military and continue my schooling by going to Leeward Community College,” Miyasato said.

BY THE NUMBERS
Recruiting for the U.S. Military, 2006
Number of recruiters: 22,000
Number of recruits: 318,000
Claims of misconduct: 2,456
Claims substantiated: 518

Source: “Military Recruiting and Recruiter Irregularities,” U.S. Department of State

REPORTING MISCONDUCT
To report Navy recruiter misconduct in Hawaii, contact the recruiter’s supervisor or district headquarters:

Navy Recruiting District Los Angeles
5051 Rodeo Road
Los Angeles, CA 90016
Tel. (800) 252-1588

For the Army, Air Force or Marines, contact the recruiting district headquarters for that branch of service.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2008/06/15/news/story03.html#full

Peace activists deflate dome of Waihopai spy base

Statement issued 6.30pm 4 May 2008:

ANZAC PLOUGHSHARES DEFLATE AND UNMASK WAIHOPAI

waihopai

At 6am on the morning of the 30 April three people entered the Waihopai Spy Base and used a sickle to deflate one of the two 30 metre domes covering satellite interception dishes.

The group then built a shrine and prayed for the victims of the war with no end – the so-called ‘War on Terror’ led by the United States.

They took such action because they felt compelled to non-violently respond to the Bush Administration’s admission that intelligence gathering is the most important tool of the ‘War on Terror’.

The ECHELON spy network, including Waihopai, is an important part of the US government’s global spy network.

Despite New Zealand government opposition to the US-led invasion of Iraq, Waihopai could have been used to spy on UN Security Council members so the US could more easily ‘persuade’ them to favour the invasion.

Waihopai is funded by the New Zealand taxpayer yet its activities are shrouded in secrecy. All that is needed for Waihopai’s continued operation and our subsequent complicity to the ‘War on Terror’ is our silence.

We ask you to support such non-violent action against Waihopai, New Zealand’s most significant contribution to the ‘War on Terror’, a war that has resulted in illegal military invasions, illegal detention and torture and an unprecedented attack on civil liberties in all Western democracies.

– – – – – – –

Original Statement issued 6.30am 30 April:

STATEMENT OF THE WAIHOPAI ANZAC PLOUGHSHARES

They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift sword against nation; and there shall be no more training for war. Isaiah 2:4

Waihopai Spy Base Penetrated

This morning, 30 April 2008, we entered the Waihopai Spy Base near Blenheim.

Our group, including a Dominican Priest, temporarily closed the base by padlocking the gates and proceeded to deflate one of the large domes covering two satellite dishes.

At 6am we cut through three security fences surrounding the domes – these are armed with razor wire, infrared motion sensors and a high voltage electrified fence.

Once inside we used sickles to cut one of the two 30-metre white domes, built a shrine and knelt in prayer to remember the people killed by United States military activity.

We have financed our activities through personal savings, additional part-time employment and a small interest-free loan from one of our supporters.

We are responding to the Bush administration’s admission that intelligence gathering is the most important tool in the so-called War on Terror. This war will have no end until citizens of the world refuse to let it continue. The ECHELON spy network including Waihopai, is an important part of the US government’s global spy network and we have come in the name of the Prince of Peace to close it down.

The base is funded by New Zealand tax payers and located on New Zealand soil which makes New Zealand a target through our association with the UKUSA intelligence cooperation agreement.

Five years ago the Clark government opposed the US-led invasion of Iraq. Yet at the same time the Bush administration was using the National Security Agency’s ECHELON system, of which Waihopai is an integral component, to spy on UN Security Council members so it could more easily swing them in favour of an invasion.

There have been over 100 Ploughshares actions over the last twenty years around the world. Ploughshares direct actions are linked through the common factors of: entry to locations connected to military activity, Christian prayers and most involve some form of property destruction.

– – – – –

About Waihopai & ECHELON

Green MP Keith Locke quoting the Anti-Bases Campaign claims the base has cost New Zealand up to NZ$500million since 1989. The base intercepts electronic communications throughout the Pacific region including New Zealand and is often staffed by personnel from US agencies.

In 1996 researcher Nicky Hager published an expose on Waihopai and New Zealand’s strong links to the USA-led ECHELON network of six similar spy stations around the world. The United Nations launched an investigation in 2003 to claims that ECHELON had been used by the US government to eavesdrop on UN diplomats and Security Council members. A report published in 2000 showed that ECHELON had also been used by the US to gain commercial advantage for US corporations.

Information gathered at Waihopai is transferred to the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) in Wellington and fed unseen directly to Washington DC.

Source: http://ploughshares.org.nz/original-statement/

Air Force won’t fly low over Big Isle

http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Apr/26/ln/hawaii804260329.html

Posted on: Saturday, April 26, 2008

Air Force won’t fly low over Big Isle

Advertiser Staff

The Air Force has dropped a plan to establish a low-altitude flight path over the Big Island as a training route for C-17 cargo transport planes, U.S. Rep. Mazie K. Hirono said yesterday.

The decision came after Big Island residents raised concerns about noise, pollution and safety, as well as possible effects on area livestock, Hirono said in a news release.

The Air Force said it wanted to fly as low as 300 feet over unpopulated areas of the Big Island, and at 2,000 feet over populated areas.

“I am pleased and impressed that the Air Force took the concerns of the community to heart, and acted so expeditiously to address this situation,” Hirono, D-Hawai’i, said. “They should be commended for their work on this matter.”

Hirono said the proposed training route would have taken C-17 jets over the communities of Honoka’a and Waimea, as well as other populated areas.

Hirono said the decision came after Monday’s meeting of the Hawai’i County Council, where dozens of Big Island residents offered public testimony.

After evaluating the community input, Air Force commanders determined they will be able to satisfy their low-altitude training needs without using the proposed training route over the Big Island, Hirono said.

Hickam Air Force Base spokes-man Phil Breeze said the routing had not been finalized. Low-altitude terrain flying will continue during flights to Alaska, he said.

Col. Andy Hockman, the 15th Operations Group commander at Hickam Air Force Base, recently said, “Flying low and using mountains and ridgelines to keep us away from the threat is one of the tactics that we use in this (the C-17) aircraft, and we practice it everywhere except in Hawai’i.”

The flying corridor would have been four to seven miles wide and about 70 miles long, the Air Force said.

By year’s end, eight of the C-17 Globemaster transports will be based at Hickam. The $200 million jet is the U.S. military’s newest large-capacity transport, with the ability to carry 102 soldiers or three Stryker combat vehicles.

Budget crunch hits C-17 training

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/p…./LOCALNEWSFRONT

Budget crunch hits C-17 training

Air Force needs new Kona practice strip but lacks money to build it

The Air Force is falling short of the C-17 cargo plane training it needs in Hawai’i for combat landings and takeoff practice and low-altitude terrain flying, an official said.

Already, an approximately 4,200-foot “assault landing zone” planned at Kona International Airport is at least two years late as a result of a budget crunch.

Air Force officials hope the 2009 Pentagon budget will include money for the $28 million practice strip.

The Air Force said it wants to incorporate low-level flying down to 300 feet over unpopulated areas of the Big Island, and at 2,000 feet over populated areas.

“Flying low and using mountains and ridge lines to keep us away from the threat is one of the tactics that we use in this (the C-17) aircraft, and we practice it everywhere except in Hawai’i,” said Col. Andy Hockman, the 15th Operations Group commander at Hickam Air Force Base.

The last of eight C-17 Globemaster IIIs assigned to Hickam arrived in July 2006. The active-duty Air Force and Hawai’i Air National Guard jointly operate and maintain the four-engine cargo jets.

The proposed training route over the Big Island avoids Captain Cook, Ocean View and Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park, the Air Force said.

But early information on the plan, which is expected to be detailed in a draft environmental assessment, caused concern that there would be flights over populated areas.

Efforts are being made to reach out to community officials, but the Air Force said it’s too soon to talk publicly about specifics.

“Right now, there are a lot of folks very afraid of what we’re going to do,” Hockman said. “I think we’re going to provide some information that hopefully will get rid of some of that.”

The C-17 “military training route” corridor would reduce the area where the aircraft operate from 14,400 square miles to less than 500 square miles, the Air Force said.

The flying corridor would be 4 to seven miles wide and approximately 70 miles long “while avoiding populated and noise-sensitive areas,” the Air Force said.

Among the areas where low-altitude navigation would take place is Pohakuloa Training Area. The open air space is based on visual flight rules, and the C-17 pilots need to be able to fly under instrument flight rules as well, officials said.

As for combat landings and takeoffs, Hockman said C-17 pilots mainly practice the short-distance maneuvers at the Marine Corps base at Kane’ohe Bay.

A stripe has been painted at 3,500 feet so pilots can practice in the shortened space they need for combat landings.

Hockman said as a result, pilots don’t need to be as precise as they would be in a real-world situation.

“As naval aviators practice to land on an aircraft carrier, they learn to fly airplanes on a normal runway, then they fly into a painted zone on a runway, and then they graduate to an aircraft carrier where they’ve actually got to do it right,” he said. “If we don’t take it to the next level, then we are not practicing.”

In a hostile environment, there may not be the opportunity to “go around, try it again,” Hockman said. “In the combat zone, you’ve got to do it right the first time.”

Every six months, seasoned pilots are required to do four daytime combat landing and takeoff operations, while co-pilots and individuals who fly less have to do eight per month.

The maneuvers can’t be done at Honolulu International Airport because it is too busy, and the 5,000-foot runway on Lana’i can’t handle hard-impact landings.

The $28 million assault landing zone on the Big Island would be built makai of the existing runway and could be used by the state as a taxiway when not in use for C-17 training, the Air Force said.

Korean Bases of Concern

Korean Bases of Concern

Jae-Jung Suh | April 2, 2008

Editor: John Feffer

www.fpif.org

Last month the New York Philharmonic grabbed the world’s attention by performing Dvorak’s New World Symphony in Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea. The Philharmonic may well have chosen Dvorak’s piece as an overture for a new world of peace. With negotiations over security issues in Northeast Asia making some progress, the United States and North Korea have been inching closer.

Before and after this music diplomacy, however, a different kind of new world was being rehearsed around the Korean peninsula: the Pentagon’s brave new world of lily pads and rapid deployment forces. This latest military transformation involves turning Cold War-vintage heavy armored forces into high-tech, agile, rapidly deployable fighting forces for the 21st century. The military is being restructured into modular units that can be put together in innumerable combinations, like Lego blocks. U.S. bases overseas are being realigned to maximize the efficiency of the transformed, restructured forces. In early March, U.S. forces held military exercises in Korea to test the existing plan and to facilitate the process of realigning the military bases and restructuring the military deployment.

Nowhere is the trinity of transformation, realignment, and restructuring more vividly demonstrated than in South Korea. There U.S. bases are being consolidated to facilitate the “strategic flexibility” of the U.S. forces. With this flexibility, various U.S. forces can be flown in from outside the region and assembled into a lethal force, and U.S. forces in Korea can be projected out of Korea and Asia to be parts of a larger force. According to the Pentagon plan, the new bases will function as lily pads on which new high-tech forces will land to jump off to far away places. Welcome to the Pentagon’s new world.
Realigning Bases in South Korea

This new world entails a major reshuffling of overseas bases, including a significant realignment of U.S. bases in South Korea. The most ambitious part of the realignment is to consolidate most of the U.S. military facilities, now scattered south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that separates South Korea from the North, in Pyongtaek City, about 55 miles south of Seoul. Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek City, currently home to U.S. Army Garrison Command and the Area III Support Activity of the U.S. Army Installation Management Command Korea, is expected to absorb most of them. As one of only two planned “enduring hubs,” the camp is slated to grow by as much as 500% by 2012, rocketing from its current 3,500-troop population to more than 17,000, and making it the largest installation on the peninsula. Combined with family members, civilian staff, and contractors, the population is expected to grow to more than 44,000, according to official estimates.

The location of the newly expanded camp is important for a number of reasons. First, it is not the capital of South Korea. Since U.S. military was sent to accept the surrender of the Japanese forces in 1945, it has been stationed in downtown Seoul. Currently home to the headquarters of the United States Forces Korea, the Eighth United States Army, the U.S.-ROK Combined Forces Command, and the United Nations Command, the Yongsan compound occupies some 630 acres of prime real estate in overpopulated Seoul. Koreans see its size and location as a major impediment to Seoul’s development. Adding insult to Koreans’ sense of injury is the fact that U.S. forces inherited the same area where the Japanese Imperial Army had been headquartered during the occupation of Korea from 1910 to 1945. Concerned about the explosive mix of economic impediments, social frictions, and nationalist sentiments, Seoul and Washington agreed in 2004 to move most American forces out of the capital. These forces will be relocated to the Pyeongtaek area once the new facilities are completed.

The relocation, by removing one of the enduring sources of frictions in Seoul, may help ease the continuation of the U.S.-Korea alliance into the 21st century. But it also may have only transferred the source of frictions from Seoul to Pyeongtaek. Even before the new facilities could be constructed, the Korean government had to mobilize thousands of police and military forces in order to forcefully remove hundreds of residents who were opposed to the planned construction of the new base over their homes and farming land in Pyeongtaek area. The residents waged spirited resistance for five years, including 935 consecutive days of candlelight vigils. They were dispersed in March 2007, paving the way to the ground-breaking for the new military base in November. But a seed of discontent has been sown that may some day grow uncontrollable.

To the Americans, the relocation may help justify the continued presence of U.S. forces in Korea at a time when South Korea is outspending the North in military expenditures by over ten times. Camp Humphreys is conveniently out of reach of the long-range artilleries the North’s military deployed just north of the DMZ. Of the North’s 13,000 artilleries, 250 can fire shells at Seoul on short notice. Even with the most advanced counter-battery systems that can track and destroy these artillery positions, the U.S. forces, as well as 11 million Seoulites, are vulnerable at least to the first few rounds, which can wreak enough damage to turn this modern city into a pile of rubble and corpses. The relocation of U.S. forces to Pyeongtaek would get the U.S. forces “out of harm’s way into sanctuary locations,” as General Bell, Commander of U.S. Forces Korea, stated in March testimony. For further protection, the base will be surrounded by a 3.5 meters high levee and built on top of a 2.5 meters high land-fill so that “the base may last over 100 years,” according to Michael J. Taliento Jr., commander of Camp Humphreys.
Shifting Base for the Bases

What is the purpose of an “enduring hub” that is expected to sit on 3,500 acres for the next 100 years? The question becomes more puzzling given that U.S. forces have been reducing their size and missions while at the same time giving more responsibilities and power to South Korea’s military. The number of U.S. soldiers has declined from a high of 37,000 two years ago down to 28,500, and is planned to go down to 25,000. After American forces are redeployed to the “sanctuary locations,” South Korean military is expected to assume the frontline defense. By 2012 when the Combined Forces Command is to be disbanded, South Korea will regain the operational command control of its military that has been in the hands of the U.S. commander since the Korean War.

Although the United States is reducing its responsibilities, it is nevertheless proceeding with base construction at an estimated cost of $10 billion. The purpose of this investment, according to U.S. officials, is to deter and defeat the North, as ever before, but with different, and more efficient, means. “On the Korean peninsula, our planned enhancements and realignments are intended to strengthen our overall military effectiveness for the combined defense of the Republic of Korea,” argues former Pentagon official Douglas Feith.

With South Korea leading the fight, Pyeongtaek’s tactical importance increases for American forces. The “sanctuary locations” will provide convenient stops for forces flown from out of area, such as Alaska or California. As the Key Resolve/Foal Eagle exercise this March demonstrated, Stryker units of armored combat vehicles were deployed from Alaska to Korea in less than 9 hours. Marine troops, flown in from California, were outfitted only with light personal arms and were not weighted down by heavy armored vehicles such as M1A2 tanks. They were then “married” with the heavy equipments that had been “pre-positioned” in country or off-shore, thereby dramatically reducing their reaction time without compromising their lethality.

The March exercise made an extensive use of ports and air bases in South Korea’s southeast hub – such as Busan, Jinhae, Pohang, and Taegu – to land, and move forward, rapid deployment forces and pre-positioned heavy equipments under the protection of missile defense systems. Pyeongtaek, once the base relocation is completed, will assume a similar role. It will serve as a “sanctuary location” to receive forces from around the world and from which rapid deployment forces can be projected deep into North Korea as current war-fighting plans require.

This “enduring structure” in South Korea, however, no longer depends entirely on a North Korean threat. In 1992, Korea’s minister of defense and the U.S. secretary of defense tasked their think tanks to “assess whether and how the United States and the ROK can maintain and invigorate their security relationship should North Korea no longer pose a major threat to peace and stability on the Korean peninsula.” Their answer emerged by 2000. “The alliance will serve to maintain peace and stability in Northeast Asia and the Asia-Pacific region as a whole,” the joint communique read, “even after the immediate threat to stability has receded on the Korean peninsula.”

In 2003 when the Department of Defense announced its plans to realign the U.S. force structure in Asia, it offered a straightforward rationale: to make U.S. forces in Asia more flexible in a security environment that called for more forces to be available on shorter notice instead of being permanently earmarked, as in South Korea, for a single operational plan (the defense of South Korea). The Department of Defense also intended to consolidate a number of U.S. bases in South Korea, creating hubs from which forces could be deployed outside the region if necessary.

The military requirements for dealing with North Korea and the region more generally are similar. A 2007 report by Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments puts it frankly: “[c]onceptually, the posture/force structure necessary to confront regional nuclear powers and a rising China are generally the same”. It also justifies the “move toward dispersed Pacific basing structure,” including the hubs in South Korea, in terms of the tactical requirements of forward basing “within easy range of Chinese strike forces” and the need for hardened mobile offshore bases and rapidly constructed “cooperative security locations.” The dispersed Pacific basing structure likely includes not just the hubs in Korea. Camp Zama outside Tokyo is slated to house the U.S. 1st Corps Army Headquarters. Kenney Headquarters in Hawaii is to direct U.S. air forces in the Pacific. And Guam is expected to play a key role as it plans to host B-2 bombers, KC-135 aerial refueling tankers, and nuclear submarines,- some redeployed from the continental United States and others newly commissioned – as well as the Marines redeployed from Okinawa.
Neoliberal Globalization Applied to Military

Rumsfeld’s Pentagon envisioned a global military posture that highlights flexibility, speed, and efficiency on a global scale. While Rumsfeld and his cohort are long gone, their vision lives on, still guiding the trinity of military transformation, base realignment, and force restructuring that seeks to deploy modular forces throughout the world, globally source them, deliver them in time. It is neoliberal globalization applied to security.

By 2006, the Roh Moo-Hyun government – the supposedly anti-American regime in South Korea – saw no problem with this globalist view. It agreed to globalize the scope of the alliance: “the future Alliance would contribute to peace and security on the Korean Peninsula, in the region, and globally.” The 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review suggests “reorienting U.S. Military Global Posture” so that the “United States will maintain its critical bases in Western Europe and Northeast Asia, which may also serve the additional role of hubs for power projection in future contingencies in other areas of the world.”

In his inauguration last month, just one day before the Philharmonic played Dvorak in Pyongyang, South Korea’s new president Lee Myong Bak said that “we’ll work to develop and further strengthen traditional friendly relations with the United States into a future-oriented partnership.” Time will tell whether his future is oriented more toward the Pentagon’s vision of neoliberal militarism or the New York Philharmonic’s music diplomacy. Either way, a new world is upon us.

Jae-Jung Suh, a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org), is an associate professor and director of Korean Studies at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of Power, Interest and Identity in Military Alliances (2007).

Source: http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5111

Resisting the Empire

Foreign Policy In Focus
www.fpif.org

Resisting the Empire

Joseph Gerson | March 20, 2008

Editor: Emily Schwarz Greco

Victories are within sight for people in a growing number of nations where communities that host U.S. foreign military bases have long fought to get rid of them.

Ecuador’s decision not to renew the U.S. lease for the forward operating base at Manta (see Yankees Head Home) is the culmination of just one of many long-term and recently initiated community-based and national struggles to remove these military installations that are often sources of crime and demeaning human rights violations. A growing alliance among anti-bases movements in countries around the world, including the United States, is preventing the creation of new foreign military bases, restricting the expansion of others, and in some cases may win the withdrawal of the military bases, installations and troops that are essential to U.S. wars of intervention and its preparations for first-strike nuclear attacks.
The Challenge

Of course, there is still plenty of bad news. The Bush Administration is currently negotiating what is, in essence, a security treaty with the Maliki puppet government in Baghdad to secure one of the principle Bush-Cheney war aims: permanent military bases for tens of thousands of U.S. troops. The goal is to transform Iraq into an U.S. unsinkable aircraft carrier in the heart of the oil-rich Middle East. Unfortunately, the plan for Iraq is only one part of the vast and expanding U.S. infrastructure of nearly 1,000 military bases and installations strategically scattered around the world.

Across Asia, in Japan, another Marine has raped an Okinawan school girl, traumatizing yet another life and temporarily shaking the foundations of the U.S.-Japan military alliance. Under the guise of a “Visiting Force Agreement,” U.S. troops have returned to the Philippines where they are deployed from “temporary” and unconstitutional military bases. In the Indian Ocean, Chagossian people were removed from Diego Garcia to make way for massive U.S. military bases; they have won all of their legal appeals but still can’t return home. In Central Europe, the Bush Administration is pressing deployment of first strike-related “missile defense” bases in the Czech Republic and Poland. Russia has countered by threatening to target the bases with nuclear weapons, and opposition to “missile defense.” In response to this renewed Cold War, opposition to “missile defense” weaponry is building in public squares and in parliaments throughout the region. And, as he recently traveled across Africa, President George W. Bush was met with near universal opposition to his plans for further military colonization of the continent in the form of moving the Pentagon’s Africa Command headquarters from Europe to the oil and resource-rich continent.

The Bush Administration and Pentagon are “reconfiguring” the U.S. global network of more than 750 foreign military bases to impose what Vice President Dick Cheney termed in a New Yorker interview as “the arrangement for the 21st century.” This imperial “arrangement” is increasingly being met with opposition in “host” nations and the United States alike, and victories by allied movements are within reach.
How We Got Here

For more than a century, the United States has been building an unrivaled global structure of nearly foreign fortresses. Located on every continent and at sea, these military bases and installations provide an infrastructure from which invasions and nuclear wars can be launched. They enforce an unjust and often violent status quo, influence the politics and diplomacy of “host” nations, secure privileged access to oil and other natural resources, encircle enemies, “show the flag,” and more recently have served as prisons operating outside the restrictions of U.S. and international law.

These bases violate democratic values in other ways. When the United States was founded, the Declaration of Independence decried the “abuses and usurpations” caused by King George having “kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies.” Since then, “abuses and usurpations” inherent in the presence of foreign “Standing Armies” have become far more dangerous. Their demeaning and disruptive impacts include:

* Undermining the sovereignty of “host” nations
* Militarizing and colonizing the “host” nation’s culture
* Assaulting democracy and human rights
* Seizing people’s private property and damaging their homes
* Violently abusing and dehumanizing women and girls
* Causing life-endangering military accidents and crimes that are rarely punished
* Terrorizing low-altitude training flights and night-landing exercises
* Polluting with military toxics

Since the Cold War ended, U.S. presidents and the Pentagon have worked to “reconfigure” the architecture of this military infrastructure to address changing geopolitical realities, technological “advances,” and growing resistance to the presence of foreign bases. With agility, flexibility and speed being given priority in U.S. military operations, bases are being transformed into hubs, forward operating bases, and “lily pads” for invasions and foreign military interventions.

The other axis of reconfiguration is geographic. As U.S. forces have been forced out of Saudi Arabia, and with U.S. geostrategic priorities turning away from Europe and toward China, Washington has concentrated its military build up elsewhere in the Persian Gulf nations, Asia and the Pacific.
Tipping Points

In a number of countries, the reconfiguration has not proceeded as smoothly as anticipated:

Iraq

As Major General Robert Pollman explained in 2004, “It ma[de] a lot of sense” to “swap” U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia for new ones in Iraq. U.S. command and air bases located near the holy cities of Mecca and Medina incensed many Muslims and were among Osama Bin Laden’s professed reasons for the 9-11 attacks. In the lead up to the 2003 invasion, many of the functions of these bases were moved to Qatar and Kuwait, and after the conquest, 110 bases were established across Iraq. To limit their political and military vulnerability, the Pentagon has been spending more than a $1 billion a year to consolidate them into 14 “enduring” and massive Air Force, Army and Marine bases in Baghdad and other strategic locations, In addition to helping secure U.S. control over Iraq, these bases contribute to encircling Iran, and they can be used for attacks across the Persian Gulf region and into oil-rich Central Asia.

The Bush administration’s plans to saddle its successor with these bases and the continuing occupation by negotiating an agreement with the Maliki government hit unexpected road block. In addition to popular Iraqi opposition, U.S. peace movement organizations joined Rep. Bill Delahunt (D-MA) to prevent the unconstitutional imposition of what is essentially a treaty. The Delahunt hearings about the proposed commitment to defend the Baghdad government from internal and external enemies, the bases which are permanent in all but name, and privileged access to investment opportunities (read oil) for U.S. corporations forced Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to rhetorically back away from the open-ended security commitment to Baghdad. But his promises that the bases are “not permanent” are less credible.

Nothing is officially “permanent,” of course. Not even the bases in Japan and Korea, which have been there for more than six decades, and not the Great Wall of China, or the pyramids of Egypt, which are slowly decaying.

With opposition to the treaty and the permanent military bases now a defining issue between Democrats and Republicans, the U.S. peace movement has an important opening to press its demands for the immediate and total withdrawal from Iraq.

AFRICOM

U.S. planners anticipate that by 2015 Africa will provide the U.S. with 25% of its imported oil. With Islamist political forces operating across northern Africa, the continent is also seen as an important front in the misconceived “war on terrorism.” So, to “promote peace and stability on the continent” the Bush Administration and the Pentagon want to augment the U.S. military presence in Africa, beginning with the transfer of the Africa Command, AFRICOM, from remote Germany to an accommodating African nation. As President Bush learned during his recent ill-fated African tour, the continent’s leaders are understandably reluctant to accept renewed military colonization. Ghana’s President John Kufuour put it bluntly when he met with Bush, saying, “You’re not going to build any bases in Ghana.”

Africa is not free of bases. France and Britain still have bases scattered there. The U.S. has bases in Djibouti and Algeria, access agreements with Morocco and Egypt, and is in the process of creating a “family” of military bases in sub-Saharan Africa (Cameroon, Guinea, Mali, Sao Tome, Senegal and Uganda.) And, although Bush responded to African fears about AFRICOM’s possible relocation by saying that such rumors were “baloney” and “bull,” he also conceded that: “We haven’t made our minds up.”

With a growing No AFRICOM movement in the United States that’s that is allied with anti-colonialist forces in Africa, this is one U.S. threat that can be contained.

Diego Garcia

In the mid-1960s, in a quintessential act of European colonialism, all of Diego Garcia’s 2,000 inhabitants were forcefully removed from their homeland by British authorities to make way for massive U.S. air and naval bases. In an act of legal fiction, the island was separated from Mauritius on the eve of that island nation’s independence.

Located in the Indian Ocean, Diego Garcia’s two-mile long runways have since been used to launch B-1 and B-52 attacks against Iraq and Afghanistan. Its stealth bomber hangars have recently been upgraded for possible strikes against Iran, and its submarine base is being refitted to serve Ohio-class submarines that can be used for both missile attacks and to secretly deploy Navy SEALS in Iran and other Persian Gulf nations.

The Chagos people of Diego Garcia want to return home, ending their exile in Mauritius’ slums, where up to 90% are unemployed and live desperate lives. The base rests on colonial constructions. With the help of allies in London and around the world they attempted to return, but have been halted on the high seas. But their plight and struggle has wide and sympathetic media attention, especially as they have won one challenge after another in the British courts. The British House of Lords is to make a “final ruling,” but an end run in which Diego Garcia would be returned to Mauritius’ authority and the “rented” to Washington remains possible. Education about the plight and struggle of the people of Diego Garcia, beginning with the spring speaking tour of Chagos leader Olivier Bancoult, is the best way to prepare for the next round of this compelling struggle.

Okinawa

Since its 1945 bloody conquest in 1945, Okinawa has served as the principle bastion of U.S. military power in East Asia – even after its 1972 reversion to Japan. Sixty years after the end of World War II, nearly 45,000 U.S. troops, civilian staff, and their families are based on Air Force, Navy, Marine and Army bases that occupy 27% of the island prefecture. Okinawans have suffered nearly every imaginable military abuse: One quarter of its people were killed during the 1945 battle, many by Japanese soldiers. U.S. nuclear weapons have fallen off ships and into coastal fishing grounds. Shells and bullets from live fire exercises have slammed into people’s homes. Children, their grandmothers, base and service workers have suffered rapes that are too numerous to count. Land has been seized, and military accidents – including helicopters and their parts falling into students’ schools – are not uncommon.

To pacify the nationwide outrage that followed the 1995 kidnapping and rape of a 12-year-old Okinawan school girl in 1995, Washington and Tokyo agreed to reduce, not remove, the size of the U.S. footprint on Okinawa. With the U.S.-Japan alliance hanging in the balance, the Status of Forces Agreement was revised to accord the Japanese courts greater authority over crimes by G.I.s, and a plan was developed to move half of the 16,000 Marines – the greatest source of G.I. crime – to Guam largely at Japan’s expense. Several bases were consolidated and Washington agreed to move the Futemna Air Base, in Ginowan’s city center, to a more remote part of the island. This leaves the massive Air Force, Naval and Marine bases still occupying a quarter of the prefecture.

Inspired by respected elders, the people of Henoko, the coastal site to which Futnema’s functions were to be transferred, have put up a stiff resistance. To prevent the militarization of their community and the destruction of the reef on which the new air base is to be built, they have built alliances with peace activists and environmentalists around the world. Their focus has been to prevent destruction feeding grounds for dugongs (large, gentle sea mammals similar to manatees) that became the symbol of their movement. They have also conducted months-long sit-ins and taken their case to court. A California appeal court recently confirmed their environmental claims, and the relocation process stalled.

Within weeks of this court victory, Marines raped a 14-year-old Okinawan school girl and a Filipina woman sparking renewed outrage across Okinawa and Japan. In the “Message from the Women of Okinawa” that followed, the U.S. military and the world were notified that the days when “so many rape victims…told no one and wept silently in their beds…are now over.” Their message is clear, “Go back to America. Now.”

With Washington and Tokyo focused on “containing” China, it will be years before the last G.I. returns from Okinawa. In the meantime, we can provide critical support to women and men who are courageously and nonviolently campaigning to defend their lives, their families, their communities, and nature itself. The base at Henoko must not be built. The base in Futenma must be closed. It is past time to bring all the Marines home.

Guam

Guam is not home. Located in the North Pacific and conquered by the United States from Spain in 1898, it has long served as a U.S. stepping stone to Asia. Nominally it is not a U.S. colony, but an “unincorporated territory” with a nonvoting delegate in Congress. Throughout the Cold War, U.S. air and naval bases occupied the island’s best agricultural lands, water sources and fishing grounds. Now the abuses and usurpations are becoming much worse.

Since the nonviolent 1995 Okinawan uprising, the Pentagon has been preparing for the day when it is finally forced to withdraw from Okinawa and Japan. Thus Guam is being transformed in to a military “hub.” Already large enough to accommodate B-52 and stealth bombers, Andersen Air Force Base is being expanded to serve as “the most significant U.S. Air Force base in the Pacific region for this century.” More submarines are being homeported in its harbor, and the Navy is considering homeporting an aircraft carrier strike force there is well. Then, there are those Marines from Okinawa. Understandably, Guam’s tiny Chamorro population feels besieged. In the traditions of U.S., Israeli and South African settler colonialism, it is “cowboys and Indians all over again.” We have a responsibility to prevent this cultural genocide.

Europe

The Cold War never really ended in Europe. An estimated 380 U.S. nuclear weapons are still based in seven European nations, and most of the 100,000 troops deployed across Western Europe remain there. But Pentagon campaigns to deploy misnamed “missile defenses” in the Czech Republic and Poland and to expand the Aviano Air Base in Italy are leading hundreds of thousands of Europeans into the streets.

The missile defense system is ostensibly modest. A missile tracking radar is to be installed in the Czech Republic, and ten interceptor missiles are to be sited in Poland, reportedly to defend Europe from Iranian missiles that have not been deployed. In fact, this is the tip of the iceberg. Russia properly fears that, once deployed, the missile defense system will be greatly expanded with the goal of neutralizing Moscow’s missile forces, leaving Russia vulnerable to U.S. first strike attacks. In response, President Vladimir Putin has menacingly threatened to target nuclear weapons against the Czechs and Poles.

Opinion polls indicate that most Czechs oppose the missile defense deployments and want to hold a referendum to block them. Many NATO leaders are angry that the U.S. circumvented the European Union’s decision-making process, and protests spearheaded by the U.S. Campaign for Peace and Democracy greeted Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek when he recently visited the United States. With many leading congressional Democrats also opposed to these dangerous deployments, missile defenses can be stopped.

Finally, there is Italy where, unexpectedly, hundreds of thousands of citizens turned out to protest the expansion of the U.S. Air Base at Aviano (which also hosts U.S. nuclear weapons.) Dissent over the base expansion nearly toppled the Prodi government in 2007, and it will remain the focus of European and U.S. anti-bases campaigns.
Resistance

In response to popularly based movements to win the withdrawal of unwanted U.S. foreign military bases, an incipient U.S. anti-bases movement is emerging. It includes organizations as diverse as the American Friends Service Committee, and the Southwest Workers Union, the United for Peace and Justice coalition, and scholars who are moving from studying military bases to working for their withdrawal.

Four increasingly integrated U.S. anti-bases networks have developed in recent years, spurred in part by the development of the global “No Military Bases Network” in World Social Forums and the global Network’s formal inauguration in Quito, Ecuador at a conference last year that brought together four hundred activists from forty nations. The U.S. networks are currently organizing April speaking tours featuring Olivier Bancoult from Diego Garcia, Terri Keko’olani from Hawaii, Jan Tamas and the Czech Republic, and Andreas Licata from Italy. And a national U.S. “No Foreign Military Bases” conference is in its early planning stages.

Joseph Gerson, a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org), is director of programs of the American Friends Service Committee in New England. His books include The Sun Never Sets…Confronting the Network of U.S. Foreign Military Bases, (South End Press, 1991) and Empire and the Bomb: How the U.S. Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World (Pluto Press, 2007).

Foreign Occupations

Here’s an article from Foreign Policy in Focus with many links to other articles covering different aspects of the U.S. Empire including military bases and missile defenses, economic crises and interventions in the affairs of other countries.

Source: www.fpif.org

World Beat
by JOHN FEFFER | Monday, February 25, 2008
Vol. 3, No. 8

Foreign Occupation

Imagine a foreign military base in the United States.

The European Union has developed an independent army. It maintains a strategic interest in its former colonies in the Caribbean. The dollar is weak, and the euro is strong. In exchange for canceling some of the U.S. debt owed to European countries, the EU says, “Hey, how about a spot of land on your southern coast where we can help ensure the security of the region?” The United States gives a Henny Youngman response: “Take Miami. Please.”

The U.S. public is concerned. Foreign soldiers on U.S. soil? That hasn’t happened since 1812, when the Brits burned down the White House. The U.S. government, desperate for a little debt relief, reassures the population: “They’re allies. You don’t have to worry about them. There’s been a spike of terrorist activity down there in the islands, and our European friends will be helping us defend you against the bad guys.” So the Europeans buy some cheap real estate in
downtown Miami and set up shop.

The problems with this little debt-for-bases swap emerge rather quickly. Our “allies” begin behaving badly. First it’s just a couple fistfights with the locals. Then one of the EU soldiers is accused of raping a young woman. Shortly after that, an EU armored personnel carrier, on a narrow road at dusk, strikes and kills a University of Miami sophomore on his bike. The controversy over these crimes escalates when, as per the status of forces agreement, the Miami authorities hand over the suspects to the EU, which is concerned about the rather barbaric U.S. habit of executing people whether they’re guilty or innocent. Meanwhile, Miami civic groups begin accusing the EU military officials of burying toxic chemicals on base property and releasing noxious fumes into the atmosphere. People living near the compound complain about the noise from the artillery range. Then there’s the grower whose entire crop of oranges is destroyed when an EU jet fighter drops a bomb that completely misses the testing ground.

Sound implausible? That kind of stuff couldn’t happen between allies. Except that it does. And you could get a bushel of similar stories from the people of South Korea, Okinawa, the Philippines, Diego Garcia, Guam, Cuba, Djibouti, and all the other places where the United States maintains one of its 700-plus military bases around the world. Until recently, South Korea hosted a huge military base in downtown Seoul. Over the course of its military presence on the Japanese island of Okinawa, U.S. service personnel have attacked, kidnapped, abused, gang-raped or murdered over 400 women (just this month a staff sergeant was arrested and charged with raping a 14-year-old girl in Okinawa). Back in the 1990s, the U.S. Army estimated that it would cost $3 billion to clean up just the soil and groundwater pollution that the bases have caused abroad. And the United States has argued that these bases are necessary to protect not only U.S. interests but also the local people.

This week at FPIF, we debut our new strategic focus on the global U.S. military footprint – and how to shrink it. We start with Iraq, where the footprint is off the charts. As FPIF contributor Tom Engelhardt of TomDispatch.com explains in The Million Year War, the Bush administration has put down roots in the country. “This administration has already built its state-of-the-art mega-bases in Iraq as well as a mega-embassy, the largest on the planet,”
Engelhardt writes. “Yet in April 2003, the month Baghdad fell to American forces, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld first denied that the United States was seeking ‘permanent’ bases in Iraq. Ever since then, administration officials have consistently denied that those increasingly permanent-looking mega-bases were ‘permanent.'” The Bush administration is temporary but alas, the Iraq bases are looking very suspiciously permanent.

FPIF contributor Adil Shamoo provides two explanations for Bush’s strategy of an “enduring presence” in Iraq. “One is to intimidate future Iraqi governments from daring to break the relationship with the only superpower that can threaten their very existence,” he writes in The Enduring Trap in Iraq. “The second is to intimidate anyone who wins the U.S. presidential election with the accusation of ‘cutting and running’ in Iraq.”

In some parts of the world, the United States is reducing, retrenching, repositioning. But not Africa. With the new Africa Command – AFRICOM – the United States is aiming for full continental dominance. “The Pentagon claims that AFRICOM is all about integrating coordination and ‘building partner capacity,'” write FPIF contributors Daniel Volman and Beth Tuckey in Militarizing Africa (Again). “But the new structure is really about securing oil resources, countering terrorism, and rolling back Chinese influence. Given AFRICOM’s emphasis on defense over diplomacy, resistance to the initiative is possible not only from civic movements but even the U.S. State Department.”

The expansion of U.S. basing extends to Europe as well. The United States has been twisting arms in the “new” Europe – in Rummyspeak – to install 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar military base in the Czech Republic. But according to FPIF contributors Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison, it’s far from a done deal. Sixty percent of Poles and 70% of Czechs are opposed to the bases. “Resistance in Europe and elsewhere has received reinforcement from the U.S. Congress, which has hesitated to move forward with the bases,” they write in Pushing Missile Defense in Europe. “In May 2007, the Senate Armed Services Committee cut $85 million from the 2008 Defense Authorization act intended for site activation and construction work on the missile installation in Poland and radar site in the Czech Republic. The Senate committee action followed a House vote earlier in May to cut the president’s request for the anti-missile system by $160 million.”

This Wednesday, February 27, if you’re in the Washington, DC area, please join us for a protest we’re cosponsoring with the Campaign for Peace and Democracy against the proposed U.S. base in the Czech Republic. We’ll be meeting at 12:30 in front of the White House, just across from Lafayette Park. Bring your lunch, your signs, and your friends.

Welcome President Bush!

FPIF continued its coverage of President George W. Bush’s visit to Africa last week. In his sardonic contribution Welcome President Bush!, FPIF contributor Tajudeen Abdulraheem explains the difficulties of rolling out the red carpet. “The hassles of hosting a U.S. president are bad enough,” he writes. “His people take over your whole country and make our normally inefficient states go into overdrive and our egregious first ladies and their husbands go into overkill to show their hospitality.”

But the carpet is red for other reasons. As FPIF contributors Bahati Ntama Jacques and Beth Tuckey explain, the legacy that the U.S. president is leaving in Africa is a bloody one. “Bush knows that Rwanda’s involvement in the armed conflict in the DRC delays peace in eastern Congo, but he continues to authorize military aid to Rwanda,” they write in Rwanda and the War on Terror. “In 2007, the United States armed and trained Rwandan soldiers with $7.2 million from the U.S. defense program Africa Contingent Operations Training Assistance
(ACOTA) and $260,000 from the International Military and Education (IMET) program.”

The last stop on the trip was Liberia. As FPIF contributor Tim Newman points out in Rejecting Paternalism in Africa?, the Liberian case undercuts the president’s claim that he has boosted development on the continent. “Bush will end his trip by spending a few hours in Liberia,” Newman writes. “There he will try to cast himself in the role of the compassionate conservative who successfully intervened in Liberia’s long civil war, thus heralding in a shining new democracy led by Africa’s first democratically elected female president. In his
February 14 press conference, Bush celebrated increasing private capital flows to sub-Saharan Africa. But the workers supposedly benefiting from foreign private investment in Liberia might have a different perspective.”

A New State?

Kosovo, the predominantly Albanian enclave of Serbia, declared its formal independence last week. FPIF’s Ian Williams and Stephen Zunes both support the right of the Kosovars to self-determination. But they don’t see exactly eye to eye on the issue of recognizing the new state.

In our latest strategic dialogue, Ian Williams observes in A New Kosovo that “recognition of Kosovar independence has started with the United States and most of the European Union. Most Islamic countries
will probably follow suit, along with many non-aligned states. So far Belgrade has blustered and threatened to downgrade relations with the dozens of very important neighbors who will recognize Kosovo. But after the multiple defeats that Miloševic caused for Serbs,fortunately there is little appetite for military action.”

Stephen Zunes, in Kosovo and the Politics of Recognition, argues that the U.S. decision to recognize Kosovo, which President Bush announced during his Africa trip, was perhaps a bit hasty. He points to the potential for pushing Serbian toward right-wing extremism, the prospect of the Albanian minority in Macedonia pushing to join a greater Kosovo, and the encouraging of secessionist movements in the Caucasus. Finally, he notes, “the impact of Kosovo’s independence and recognition by the United States and other Western nations could also seriously worsen U.S.-Russian relations, exacerbating differences that hawks on both sides are warning could evolve into a ‘new Cold War.'”

After its recent elections, Pakistan almost qualifies as a new state. The victory of the opposition in the parliamentary elections may well herald the return of democracy to the ill-fated land. Alas, General Pervez Musharraf shows no signs of stepping aside, not when he still has America on his side. FPIF contributor Najum Mushtaq urges the United States to reconsider. “Washington should have reviewed its ill-directed, one-dimensional Pakistan policy long ago,” he writes in Letting Go of Musharraf. “Instead of persisting with the failed Musharraf option, Washington should put all its weight behind the new parliament, which represents the voice of the Pakistani people.

Breaking the Bank

The financial big boys are freaking out, reports FPIF columnist Walden Bello. George Soros and World Economic Forum host Klaus Schwab are suddenly sounding like the gravediggers of capitalism. “Skyrocketing oil prices, a falling dollar, and collapsing financial markets are the key ingredients in an economic brew that could end up
in more than just an ordinary recession,” Bello writes in Capitalism in an Apocalyptic Mood. “The falling dollar and rising oil prices have been rattling the global economy for some time. But it is the dramatic implosion of financial markets that is driving the financial elite to panic.”

You might think that U.S. politicians, when confronted with an escalating economic crisis, would reach into the biggest pot of money around to help get us out of the pickle. Not so.

President Bush’s treatment of the military budget as a sacred cow is at least consistent with his conduct over the last seven years. But what about the Democrats? As FPIF contributor William Hartung explains in Dems: What about the Military Budget?, “Not only have the major presidential candidates been largely silent on these record expenditures, but they want to increase them. Barack Obama has said we will probably need to ‘bump up’ the military budget in a new administration, and both he and Hillary Clinton have committed themselves to increasing the size of the armed forces by tens of thousands of troops.”

And Now for Something Completely Different

In our second installment of poetry to celebrate the upcoming Split This Rock poetry festival, FPIF contributor Susan Tichy reflects on what we think about when we think about war. Her American Ghazals, named after the Persian poetic form, describe a landscape of pain and fear, and yet in there too is beauty and compassion.

Finally, in the Russian tradition of “laughter through tears,” we present to you the job description for a great new opening: the head of Cuba.

FPIF’s humorist Alec Dubro provides the details: “The nation of Cuba is planning a massive restructuring that may or may not actually happen. Possible outcomes: become Chinese-model, free-market police state; acquire banana republic status; enter United States as a county of Florida; limp along without direction; or make the
transition to social democracy and prosperity. We want you to be part of this momentous change, or possibly stifle it.
Links

John Lindsay-Poland and Nick Morgan, “Overseas Military Bases and the Environment,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol3/v3n15mil.html).

Tom Engelhardt, “The Million Year War,” Foreign Policy In Focus(http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4977); There’s a risk that the United States will never withdraw from Iraq.

Adil Shamoo, “The Enduring Trap in Iraq,” Foreign Policy In Focus(http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5000); The Bush administration wants to place U.S. military troops and bases permanently on Iraqi soil despite strong objections from many Democrats.

Daniel Volman and Beth Tuckey, “Militarizing Africa (Again),” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4997); With the new Africa Command, the United States is increasing its military presence on an energy-rich continent.

Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison, “Pushing Missile Defense in Europe,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5005); The United States wants to establish bases in Poland and the Czech
Republic – over the objections of the citizens of those countries.

Tajudeen Abdulraheem, “Welcome President Bush!” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5002); Not only examines President Bush’s Africa trip itinerary, country by country, but also why he is visiting the continent in the first place.

Bahati Ntama Jacques and Beth Tuckey, “Rwanda and the War on Terror,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4999); U.S. administrations allow narrowly defined “national interests” – instead
of needs, priorities, and realities in a given country – to dictate foreign assistance. And Rwanda happens to be a perfect example.

Tim Newman, “Rejecting Paternalism in Africa?” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4973); Does President Bush’s view of trade and investment on workers in Africa truly end paternalism?

Ian Williams, “A New Kosovo,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4992); Kosovo has declared its independence from Serbia. But there are still a few obstacles in the path of statehood.

Stephen Zunes, “Kosovo and the Politics of Recognition,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5006); The United States should have thought twice about rushing to recognize the new state of Kosovo.

Najum Mushtaq, “Letting Go of Musharraf,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5004); It’s time for Washington to wake up and smell the elections.

Walden Bello, “Capitalism in an Apocalyptic Mood,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4996); Even the world’s top financiers are beginning to panic.

William Hartung, “Dems: What about the Military Budget?” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5009); The Democratic candidates will debate each other, but not the metastasizing military budget.

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: http://www.splitthisrock.org/

Susan Tichy, “American Ghazals,” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5008); What we think about when we think about war.

Alec Dubro, “Job Opening (Cuba),” Foreign Policy In Focus (http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5007); Tired of your current job? Want more executive responsibility, good health care benefits, warmer weather? Cuba may want you.