An Anti-Bases Network Finds its Base

An Anti-Bases Network Finds its Base

By Herbert Docena 14 March 2007

The consolidation of an international network for the abolition of foreign military bases marks an important advance for the global peace and justice movement

On the perimeter fence of the Eloy Alfaro air base in Manta, Ecuador hangs a sign, “Warning: Military Base. No Trespassing.” Since 1999, the base has been used as a “forward operating location” by the US military – just one of over 737 US military installations currently scattered in over 100 countries around the world.

On March 9, about 500 visitors showed up at the base’s main gate. One of them walks up to the fence and pastes a bright blue and red sticker saying “No Bases!” on the warning sign, a broken rifle forming the diagonal line with the letter “o” to make the universal sign of prohibition.

It is a small, symbolic act of trespassing for a newly formed international network with a big goal: the closure of all such military bases worldwide. But with the successful convening of a conference that launched the International Network for the Abolition of Foreign Military Bases (No Bases) in Quito and Manta, Ecuador from March 5 to 9, 2007, that goal has become a little closer to reality.

Perhaps the largest gathering against military bases in history, the conference drew over 400 grassroots and community-based activists who are at the forefront of local struggles from as far away as Okinawa, Sardinia, Vieques, Pyongtaek, Hawaii, and dozens of other places from more than 40 countries. There were environmentalists, feminists, pacifists, war resisters, farmers, workers, students, parliamentarians, and other activists from social movements, human rights groups, faith-based organizations, and various regional and global networks and coalitions.

But even the final tally of those present probably underestimated the extent of participation in the conference: In the network’s e-mail list on the eve of the conference, an anti-bases activist from Iceland wrote to say that their absence in Ecuador should not be taken to mean that they are absent from the movement. The range of groups that made it to the conference – both in terms of where they come from geographically and politically – demonstrate just how broad the movement against bases has become.

International conferences are sometimes dismissed as talk-fests where nothing gets done. But getting together and talking to each other is often an important first step in building a community. In various panels and self-organized seminars, film-showings, and forums, participants deepened their understanding of the role of military bases in global geo-politics, the various forms and guises that military presence takes, and their impacts on local communities and the environment. They also exchanged lessons about strategies and approaches to more effectively campaign against bases back home. Even the Pentagon has taken note of the growing domestic opposition to their bases and it is these grassroots campaigns that are foiling their plans.

But this was not all. What was significant about the conference was that the participants went beyond talking about how bad bases are and why we should all oppose them. They rolled up their sleeves and, in one intensive workshop after another, set out to establish a network, articulate the bases of unity, agree on a higher level of coordination, and decide more concrete plans for common action.

That task proved to be daunting yet illuminating. As the participants tried to clarify what exactly brought them together, potentially divisive but fundamental questions soon rose to the surface: Should the network just target foreign military bases or also domestic bases? Since they all have military and war-making purposes, shouldn’t all military bases – regardless of whether they are the US’ or Cuba’s – be abolished? What about the “domestic” military bases in Hawaii, Guam, or Puerto Rico? Or in occupied countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan? What about NATO bases which are arguably both “foreign” and “domestic” at the same time? If the network targets only “foreign” bases, how does this distinguish it from all those right-wing nationalist groups in Europe or the Middle East who oppose bases just because they’re “foreign”? And while it was generally agreed that no one comes close to the US in terms of the sheer number of bases, how much effort should the network exert against the bases of Russia or France?

These proved to be important questions because the answers to them touch on the values and identity of the network. Underlying them are broader questions that define some of the diverging – but also overlapping – currents within the network and, perhaps, within the larger anti-war movement.

Broadly – and perhaps crudely – categorized, there are those within the network who oppose bases from what could be called an “antiimperialist” perspective. They see foreign military bases as both the instruments – as well as the visible manifestations – of imperialism.

They are against US bases on foreign soil but will defend Cuba’s or Iran’s right to have domestic military bases for self-defense. Within this current, there are differences on the extent to which the US should be singled out: While there is unanimous recognition that the US is the primary threat, others are quick to point out that the European powers have their own imperialist drives and are equally dangerous. On the other hand, there are those who oppose bases from the perspective of “anti-militarism”: they’re against all military bases – regardless of who owns them.

These debates also raise questions about the nature of “nationalism” and “sovereignty.” In many contexts, mainly but not exclusively in the South, opposition to foreign bases draws from a deep nationalist well, with bases seen as “external” incursions against “sovereignty” and with “nationalism” seen as a necessary bulwark against colonialism. In other contexts, however, “nationalism” and “sovereignty” have become bad words, used to rally public support for wars against “the other” and to justify repressive measures against “foreigners.” Cautiously, the network treaded the fine line between self-determination and chauvinism.

After ten hours of spirited but cordial deliberation, the draft declaration presented in plenary was widely commended as a sharp but nuanced formulation (see full text below) that succeeded in drawing the approval of both anti-imperialist and anti-militarist positions. (Or at the very least, it was not expressly rejected by either.) What may have clinched the day was the broadening of the target of the network to include not just foreign military bases but “all other infrastructure used for wars of aggression.”

The formulation thus takes a more sophisticated understanding of the complex configuration of military bases by allowing for the inclusion of domestic military bases inside the US, as well as in NATO and in other countries. It appealed to those who insisted on a strong focus on foreign military bases – most of which are owned by the US and all of which are arguably used for aggression – while at the same time not contradicting those who wish to expand the focus of their own work.

In contrast to the right-wing, chauvinist opposition to bases, the declaration makes it clear that the network’s objection to bases is not premised on what analysts call the NIMBY (not-in-my-backyard) logic – i.e. foreign military bases are fine as long as someone else bears the noise, the waste, and the crimes – but on the NIABY logic(not-in-any-one’s backyard), i.e. foreign military bases are bad because they “entrench militarization, colonialism, imperial policy, patriarchy, and racism.” In light of the influence of the right-wing objection to bases, the network’s opposition to all bases – and not just those in one’s locality -offers a global counter-pole premised on internationalism and solidarity.

For an incipient grouping still struggling to define its purpose and to sharpen its focus, the importance of clarifying and reaching agreement on the network’s bases of unity should not be underestimated. As Helga Serrano, one of the conference organizers concluded, “The ideological and political bases of unity of the network is more consolidated than we had thought.” It is true that the subsequent session for planning concrete actions and strategies proved to be less clarifying: only a grocers’ list of ideas emerged, not a clear set of priorities. But without coming to an agreement on its common vision, the network could have been paralyzed by unresolved contradictions and confusion. The articulation of collective principles lays the foundations for future actions.

Carrying out these actions requires, in turn, a certain degree of organization. On-guard against threats to their autonomy, wary of centralizing tendencies, but keen to achieve their objectives, many delegates stressed the need to combine openness and horizontality with strategic and organized action. As Joel Suarez, a participant from Cuba said, “We cannot continue with the way we have been organizing. Horizontality is correct but, applied wrongly, it has led to the disintegration and paralysis of the movements. Our advancement depends on the efficiency of our organization. We can’t let this fall apart.” The question, said Serrano, is “how do we create new forms of horizontal relationships?” The challenge, as posed in one panel, was to strengthen the coordination within the network without centralizing and bureaucratizing it.

Put this way, the dilemmas faced by the network is little different from that faced by other networks that have emerged in recent years. Accepting the need for closer interaction while cautious of rushing the process, participants in the end reached a consensus to remain as a loose grouping but with a higher level of coordination. A process was set up for putting in place an open international coordination committee with a clear but circumscribed political mandate and a defined set of responsibilities for carrying out collective projects.

Still, there are significant hurdles to overcome: The network still has to reach out to so many more local anti-bases activists, especially from West and Central Asia; the issue of bases is still not high on the agenda of the anti-war movements; the network lacks resources because the issue is seen as too radical even for sympathizers; and even within the network, there is uneven access to resources and capacities; translation remains to be worked out more efficiently; and so on.

Despite all these obstacles, the network has come a long way. The conference is a milestone in that it marks the consolidation of the international network as both a space where the broadest grouping of organizations, coalitions, and movements can come together and as an organizational vehicle which can carry out globally coordinated campaigns while providing continuing and sustained support to local struggles everywhere.

But it’s more than this. The network’s development could also be seen as evidence of the consolidation of the anti-globalization/anti-war movements that emerged in the last decade. While the idea has been germinating before, the birth of the network could be traced back to a gathering of anti-war/anti-globalization activists, shortly after the invasion of Iraq, in Jakarta, Indonesia in May 2003. Attended by representatives from some of the groups that were behind the coordination of the historic February 15, 2003 global day of action against the war in Iraq and who had previously been active in the anti-globalization movement, the Jakarta meeting endorsed the proposal of launching an international network against bases as one of the priorities for the movements.

A group of organizations in that meeting then carried the idea forward through various World Social Forums, local and regional social forums, and other activist gatherings. As Wilbert van der Zeijden, an activist who was among those who steered the network through the years, said, “This would not have been possible without the World Social Forum process.” While the concept remains debated, the “open space” provided by the social forum process provided opportunities for networking, information-sharing, and organizing that would have been too difficult or too expensive had the space not existed. The consolidation of the network proves that the movement is
capable not only of uniting around a proposal but of actually seeing it through.

Also often underrated and unreported is the degree by which the movement has been getting more efficient at organizing. While there were a few of the usual glitches and some internal disagreements, it felt as though the conference and the run-up to it was, on the whole, better organized politically and logistically than similar projects in the past. International conferences of the scale that activists had been organizing in the last few years require a high level of organization and coordination but, with very limited human and financial resources, and activists are stepping up the plate. As one participant remarked, “Five years of organizing the World Social Forums and other meetings and we’re learning.” Ecuadoran organizers of the network conference themselves acknowledge that they have gained confidence and valuable experience from organizing the Americas Social Forum and other international meetings in the past.

What is remarkable – but often taken for granted – is how activists – who are not trained and salaried professional events organizers – have succeeded in realising ambitious projects for a small fraction of the cost that corporations or governments spend on similar meetings. That the movements are learning and becoming more proficient heralds their development and growing capacity for organized action.

More than anything, the consolidation of the anti-bases network demonstrates that the movements have become more deliberately strategic. The network is a “single-issue” campaign focused on the
issue of bases. And as Lindsey Collen, an activist from Mauritius, warned, “Single-issue fragmentation may lead to short-term success but long-term failure.” The single-minded focus on bases, however, is neither fragmentary nor fragmenting; on the contrary, it arises from a comprehensive understanding of the conjuncture that locates bases within the global strategy of domination.

Rather than being divisive, the emphasis on bases brings together a much more holistic understanding of the ways in which the coercive and corporate sides of militarized globalization come together to perpetuate structures of dispossession and injustice. As Joseph Gerson, an activist-scholar on bases, put it “Bases perpetuate the status quo.” The decision to zoom-in and focus on the issue of bases in a coherent and consistent manner comes out of an objective assessment and a compellingly simple logic: without foreign military bases, wars would be so much more difficult to wage; without wars, the pursuit of geo-strategic and economic interests over democracy and self-determination would be so much harder. As Corazon Fabros, a veteran anti-bases activist from the Philippines, said, “The strategy of empire is global. So must our response.”

Marshall Islander Speaks Out Against Missile Defense Tests

By Que Keju

I first witnessed missiles being launched from Kwajalein Island in the 1960s. The beaches of Ebeye Island, an islet about 5 miles north of Kwajalein, would be swamped with both children and adults each time a launch was scheduled. It was always a spectacular scene each time-fire works, at its best.

Ten years later, when I returned from the states after attending high school, it would not be an uncommon thing to stop in the middle of a basketball or volleyball game to watch streaks of missiles zooming over Ebeye and Kwajalein Atoll. Destination: the Mid-Corridor zone- an off-limit Mid-Western Pacific Ocean “Bermuda Triangle” in the Kwajalein lagoon, and the bull’s eye to incoming ICBMs shot from Vandenberg Air Force Base, where we are this minute. So I’ve completed a circle trying to understand where these missiles were going or coming from, starting on Ebeye Island and ending up here in Vandenberg. So this is the place. This is what it’s all about! What a journey…

What’s the big deal? Actually a lot. First, the Kwajalein landowners are displaced from their land and relocated to Ebeye Island to make room for the Mid-Corridor zone and the missile testing program. Ebeye is only 66 acres and home to more than 10,000 Marshallese. The composition of the population density: Kwajalein landowners mixed with other indigenous Marshallese from other neighboring atolls. The result: community and social ills at peaks. Some say that Ebeye was once the slum of the Pacific. Was? It still is! When the relocation plans were drawn up for the Kwajalein landowners, it was understood and agreed that basic infrastructure would be in place: housing, healthcare, schools, recreation, and land payments, among other perks-don’t worry, be happy! More than 40 years later, the landowners are still grappling with chronic community and social challenges. Ebeye-and Marshall Islands as a nation-has surpassed Nauru, a neighboring Pacific nation, with the highest rate of diabetes. The known diseases such as tuberculosis and acute flues, eradicated from most of the global community decades ago, are but rampant on Ebeye. The power outage saga on Ebeye continues, after four decades, with the two halves of the island sharing basic electricity to run their hospitals, public works, schools, businesses, churches, cooking utensils, basic lighting and food refrigeration for their homes, and, oh yes, the island’s main sewage command center. When power is out on Ebeye, all of the previously mentioned, and essentially the livelihood of these innocent folks, cease. During my trip back there in 2002, I encountered the electric-toilet combination must, and I was shocked: no power, no toilet on all of Ebeye! Please take a moment to recap the more than 10,000 inhabitants scrambling to find basic relief. It was a powerful reminder that we, the big city dwellers here in the U.S., are so fortunate to have such basic infrastructure 24/7.

Sadly though, five miles south of Ebeye lies Kwajalein Island; a pristine community of both military and civilian personnel, ready to mobilize and man the Star Wars Program. Some of the best burgers and fries in the world are grilled and bubbled down there. There is a golf course; several movie venues; a radio station and accesses to cablevision and speedy internet service; a bowling alley; sports courts and fields; scuba diving, sports fishing and sailing; and retail stores operation with prices ridiculously cheaper than U.S. wholesales, where you can buy the cheapest Paul Mitchell Awapuhi Shampoo and the Detangler Conditioner, or the current copy of Fortune Magazine. Life is good on Kwajalein! Yet misery reigns on Ebeye. That’s sad.

Secondly, the SDI Program is flawed. The American Physical Society-among many others-informs us that in the end, when all the mobilizing forces think that the program is finally ready, by then it’ll be obsolete. We learn that 9 out of 10 test missiles miss their targets. In looking at the program’s basic premise, it isn’t so difficult to question and be skeptical as to how the program can effectively intercept-and-destroy 5, 10, or even 15 incoming Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles, considering the time it would take to respond-or rather react-if such missiles travel at blazing speeds of 18,000 mph. And when we think about the working wonders of the ever-confusing decoys, it wouldn’t be so difficult either to seriously doubt the precision of the SDI.

Third, if the SDI is unrealistic, compromises have to be made, and fraud is powerfully played. Homing Devices are used in order to convince the American public that this program is real. Heating certain elements within the launched unit is tactically done to easily track and hit the “bad missile.” Doctoring data, tweaking test results and making false statements are a norm in the program’s attempts to glue down the trust of the American public. Then when the whistleblowers from the Pentagon, MIT, Boeing and Lockheed reveal the deception, the GAO (Government Accountability Office) steps in to set the record straight, concluding only that no wrongdoing was ever done. Amongst the bad there is always the good one; one of GAO’s own whistleblowers came forth to tell us that even the overseer is fraudulent, and that it is a serious matter that there is no one to oversee the overseer.

Is this SDI an exploratory program? But it’s taking a toll on a lot of things, especially humans.

Rather than exhausting precious energies on the SDI Program, perhaps we need to cross over to the realistic side and concentrate on improving the overall defense of the United States by revisiting tangible mechanisms such as the airport systems, the country’s seaports, or the ever expansive and multi-nationally laid borders from sea to the mountaintops. When we’re reminded that the 911 terrorists used box cutters to infiltrate our airports, and until we finally realize that 16,000 containers enter the U.S. seaports daily with fewer than 2% of them opened for inspection by U.S. Customs, no one can dispute that it is time to cross over. It’s now-or-never.

Instead of firing off ICBMs to the Mid-Corridor Zone, the U.S. ought to share its might in health, education, transportation, communications, investments and outright good will to keep Kwajalein and the rest of the Republic of the Marshall Islands afloat. If good programs are to spill over to regions such as the Marshalls and the rest of Micronesian, they ought to be in the forms of solid institutions and effective systems.

Lastly, each time we explore the phenomena of the SDI or the exploitation of indigenous Marshallese through A- and H-Bomb tests, it isn’t rhetoric or blah-blah-blahs. It’s all real stuffs! We’re fiddling around with innocent folks’ lives. Two years ago in 2004, I had the grand opportunity to translate in a documentary film yet to be released by Adam Jonas Horowitz, personal stories of some of the only remaining few survivors of the nuclear fallout on Rongelap Atoll from the bomb tests in the 50s. Two of these ladies finally succumbed to nuclear radiation just a few months ago. I will forever revere the endurance of Ariko Bobo and Elmira Matayoshi. In 1993 my father, Jinna Keju, agonized and was bedridden in the hospital on Majuro, Marshalls for over a month. He lays in the Monkubok cemetery on Ebeye. Three years later in 1996, my sister, Darlene Keju-Johnson, also lost her battle to cancer. Both Jinna and Darlene had the symptoms of cancers from nuclear radiation. My mother, Alice Keju, who lives on Ebeye today, is a cancer survivor; she went through a mastectomy about 15 years ago.

My friends, you have the energy, the know-how, the deep convictions. It is time to cross over to the other side, the realistic side. It’s now…or never!

Ketak Le eo!

Declaration: International Conference for the Abolition of Foreign Military Base

March 9, 2007

Declaration: International Conference for the Abolition of Foreign Military Base

Quito and Manta, Ecuador

We come together from 40 countries as grassroots activists from groups that promote women’s rights, indigenous sovereignty, environmental justice, human rights, and social justice. We come from social movements, peace movements, faith-based organizations, youth organizations, trade unions, and indigenous communities. We come from local, national, and international formations.

United by our struggle for justice, peace, self-determination of peoples and ecological sustainability, we have founded a network animated by the principles of solidarity, equality, openness, and respect for diversity.

Foreign military bases and all other infrastructure used for wars of aggression violate human rights; oppress all people, particularly indigenous peoples, African descendants, women and children; and destroy communities and the environment. They exact immeasurable consequences on the spiritual and psychological wellbeing of humankind. They are instruments of war that entrench militarization, colonialism, imperial policy, patriarchy, and racism. The United States-led illegal invasions and ongoing occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan were launched from and enabled by such bases. We call for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from these lands and reject any planned attack against Iran.

We denounce the primary responsibility of the U.S. in the proliferation of foreign military bases, as well as the role of NATO, the European Union and other countries that have or host foreign military bases.

We call for the total abolition of all foreign military bases and all other infrastructure used for wars of aggression, including military operations, maneuvers, trainings, exercises, agreements, weapons in space, military laboratories and other forms of military interventions.

We demand an end to both the construction of new bases and the reinforcement of existing bases; an end to and cleanup of environmental contamination; an end to legal immunity and other privileges of foreign military personnel. We demand integral restauration and full and just compensation for social and environmental damages caused by these bases.

Our first act as an international network is to strengthen Ecuador’s commitment to terminate the agreement that permits the U.S. military to use the base in Manta beyond 2009. We commit to remain vigilant to ensure this victory.

We support and stand in solidarity with those who struggle for the abolition of all foreign military bases worldwide.

Foreign Military Bases Out Now! Manta Si! Bases No!

No Bases Network born in the Middle of the World

No Bases Network born in the Middle of the World

Helga Serrano Narváez

The consolidation of the International Network for the Abolition of Foreign Military Bases is one of the main achievements of the International Conference for the Abolition of Foreign Military Bases held in Ecuador on 5-9 March, 2007. The 400 delegates from 40 countries celebrated with applauses the formal founding of the Network, as well as the agreements reached to establish coordination mechanisms and more articulated global actions.

The ideological and political basis of the Network, confirmed in the Final Declaration, is a central unifying factor which will allow the Network to move firmly forward in its construction. The Declaration places the No Bases Network in the framework of the movements that struggle for peace, justice, self-determination of peoples and ecological sustainability. It also recognizes that foreign military bases are instruments of war that entrench militarization, colonialism, imperial policy, patriarchy, and racism.

It affirms that foreign military bases and all other infrastructure used for wars of aggression, violate human rights; oppress all people, particularly indigenous peoples, African descendants, women and children; and destroy communities and the environment. Therefore, the Network demands the abolition of all foreign military bases. It was stated that if the empire is global, resistance should be global as well. And this implies challenging militarism and imperialism, and its bases structure, which is the U.S. empire. The Declaration denounces the primary responsibility of the U.S. in the proliferation of foreign military bases, as well as the role of NATO and other countries that have or host foreign military bases.

The Conference also approved resolutions that stand in support and in solidarity with those who struggle for the abolition of all foreign military bases, while also calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq and Afghanistan and reject any planned attacks against Iran.

Skeleton of the empire

During the Conference, participants acknowledged the negative effects caused by the installation of more than 737 US bases in 130 countries around the World. These have affected the lives of women and children, as a result of rapes and sexual aggressions, frequently left unpunished. Only in Philippines, it is calculated that since 1945, there have been 50.000 unacknowledged children of US soldiers. In Okinawa, where 75% of the US bases in Japan are located, there was an increase in sexual violence and rapes.

The United States-led illegal invasions and ongoing occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan were launched from and enabled by bases in Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Diego Garcia. To open way for the US base in Diego Garcia island, which forms part of the Chagos Archipielago in Mauritius, 2000 people were displaced and are forbidden to return. The use of the Guantanamo base for torture of prisoners by US troops and as a concentration camp, caused indignation and concern.

Participants also were informed of the contamination caused by the US military presence, such as the situation of Vieques in Puerto Rico, which was used as a training camp for many years. Only when the US troops left could people see the magnitude of the environmental damage and the urgent integral restauration and full and just compensation that should be demanded to the US.

People frequently mentioned how foreign military bases affect peoples’ sovereignty, such as the Manta Base in Ecuador which is used by U.S. soldiers after the signing of an unconstitutional “Cooperation Agreement”. As occurs in Manta, and in all cases presented, U.S. soldiers have immunity so they can move around freely without any fear due to the privileges contemplated in such Agreements.

But we also saw that where there is a base, there is a resistance movement. Experiences were shared from Japan, Korea, Puerto Rico, Mauritius, Guam and Manta, among others, as well as the recent demonstrations in Vicenza, Italy. These experiences provided inspiration for consolidating the Global No Bases Network.

The Conference fulfilled its objective not only to analyze the impact of foreign military bases on the population and the environment -also presented in publications prepared by the different organizations- but also to reach consensus on global objectives, strategies and coordination mechanisms to strengthen local struggles and global actions. There was a commitment to develop strategic alliances with global movements that struggle for global peace and justice; expand the No Bases Network; generate global actions; and influence global public opinion. The International Coordinating Committee, established in the Conference, will develop communication and information, lobbying, research, support local struggles and promote global campaigns.

Military bases in the public agenda

It is also important to highlight the impact of the Conference through its dissemination in mass media, electronic lists, Websites and news agencies. The foreign military bases agenda was on the media before and during the Conference. The constant interviews to international scholars and activists forced the U.S. Embassy in Quito to develop a strategy to try to minimize the role of its bases, especially of the Manta Base. It organized visits for foreign and domestic press, trying to challenge the comments made by researchers, who even based some of the data on figures provided by the Pentagon itself.

The Conference also came to the attention of the President of Ecuador, Mr. Rafael Correa, who met with a delegation from the Conference, along with Lorena Escudero, Minister of Defense. For the first time since the President took office on January 15, 2007, he ratified his pledge that the government will not renew the Agreement with the U.S. for the use of the Manta Base, due in 2009. This firm position was widely disseminated in domestic and foreign media. The participation of local and national government authorities in the Conference was also highlighted by the international delegates.

The leadership and participation of women was recognized as a key element for the success of the Conference. This was clear not only in the organization of the Conference itself, but also in the “Women for Peace” Caravan carried out on March 8, International Women’s Day, when 8 buses full of delegates traveled from Quito to Manta for the activities in the port where the U.S. personnel is stationed. Another important aspect, which made this Conference different than other events, was the massive participation of youth, both in the self-organized events in Quito, as well as in the Forum and demonstration in Manta.

The spirit of the encounter and the recognition of similar struggles around the world, mobilized immediate solidarity and commitments. However, more is needed for the Network to develop, grow and have a global impact. This implies the construction of common agendas, so that this issue may be faced both in the majority world and the developed world. If there are no structural changes in the North, it will be difficult to reach our objectives.

The building of the Network also requires a horizontal and open dialogue that recognizes the rich contributions and experiences of all movements, both in the South and in the North. It implies creating new forms of relation, cooperation, equity and solidarity. The richness of our diversity, of all our countries and regions, and the respect to the diverse processes is a must. A Global Network cannot work without a balanced participation of all regions, and this implies additional efforts to assure the participation of compañeros and compañeras from Africa, Asia and Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, in the networks’ and movements’ meetings. For the International No Bases Network it is essential to maintain a strong relation with the anti-war movements that struggle for peace and global justice.

– Helga Serrano Narváez, journalist, is member of the Asociación Cristiana de Jóvenes (ACJ/YMCA) de Ecuador and of the Interim International Coordinating Committee of the Global No Bases Network.

America’s broken trust in Micronesia

Source:
http://archives.starbulletin.com/print/2005.php?fr=/2007/02/20/news/story04.html

Micronesia has a complicated past

The islands have been conquered by a string of powers, the latest being the U.S.

By Gary T. Kubota
gkubota@starbulletin.com

MAJURO, Marshall Islands » Micronesia, once known as the Caroline Islands, occupies an expanse of about 3 million square miles of ocean with more than 2,000 islands, atolls and islets.

The size is comparable to the contiguous United States.

But the total land mass is about 913 square miles, less than the size of Rhode Island or one-fourth of the Big Island.

Haunani-Kay Trask, a Hawaiian-studies professor at the University of Hawaii, said there are historic parallels between the Hawaiian Islands and island nations in Micronesia.

“We have all of that colonial expansion out of Europe in common. … Both suffered bombing and occupation by the U.S. military,” she said.

The sister civilizations are also facing similar challenges, as their native peoples seek a sovereign status, including reparations for bombed lands, health problems related to the Westernization of their culture, global warming and loss of ocean resources.

Critics say the United States, entrusted by the United Nations with helping the islands toward self-government, fell short of its mandate to develop them economically, socially and politically.

“I think there were shortcomings in those areas,” said David Hanlon, director of Pacific studies at the University of Hawaii.

Since the islands were sighted by Westerners in the 1500s, most of Micronesia has been a trade route eastward to Asia and was conquered by a succession of nations, including Spain, Germany, Japan and the United States.

Some islanders still speak Japanese, and their surnames are a calabash of Micronesia, Asian and Western names.

Under a United Nations mandate in 1948, much of Micronesia was placed under the administration of the United States as a strategic trust territory.

The U.S. was entrusted with helping the region develop.

Four separate political entities have emerged out of the former U.N. Trust Territory of the Pacific, including the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of Palau and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas.

The Micronesian island of Guam, which was ceded by Spain to the United States in 1898 after the defeat of Spain, is an unincorporated territory of the United States.

Under a Compact of Free Association, the four governments have gained self-rule but agreed to allow the United States to control military access and use, in return for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid.

The United States continues to use islands in Micronesia for military exercises, including Kwajalein for its missile test range, Tinian for military maneuvers and Farrallon de Medenilla for bombing practice.

Hawai’i to participate in the International Conference for the Abolution of Foreign Military Bases in Quito and Manta, Ecuador

The construction of foreign military bases in Afghanistan and Iraq; the cases of torture at the bases in Guantanamo and Diego Garcia; the construction of new bases in Okinawa; the “realignment” of military alliances in Asia; and the dramatic increase of joint military exercises as part of the so-called “global war against terror” have highlighted how foreign military bases, other forms of military presence, and militarization of whole societies are used to secure certain states and corporations interests at the cost of democracy, justice, and sovereignty around the world.

Another world will not be possible without abolishing these bases and demilitarizing global and national societies.

Over the past two years, we have been building up an international network to achieve this aim. Many of us have come together for the first time at the World Social Forum and other meetings as to form a global community. Our approaches vary, our concerns are multi-faceted, but our objective is the same: the closure of foreign military bases around the world. The times demand that we escalate our actions and improve our coordination. The next step in consolidating our community is to organize an inaugural Conference for our network. After much communication and deliberation we decided to hold this conference in Ecuador in March 5-9, 2007.

Find out more about the conference and the network.

Sen. Inouye: “Stryker brigade should not be a referendum on the Iraq war”

This was a very interesting op ed from Senator Inouye. It came after the US 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the Federal District Court and found that the Army decision to station the Stryker Brigade Combat Team in Hawai’i without considering alternatives violated NEPA.  Inouye makes several arguments: (1) He tries to explain why the Army’s predecision to station the SBCT in Hawai’i was justified and proper; (2) He defends his own dealings with Gen. Shinseki asproper; (3) He defends the Stryker’s performance; (4) He tries to guilt trip opponents of the project for not backing a program that protects troops; (5) He evokes the spectre of bloodthirsty terrorists at our doorstep to alarm the reader; (6) He tries to guilt trip opponents for disrupting billion dollar construction projects and forcing Strykers to sit idle; (7) He goes so far to say that supporting the Strykers is downright patriotic; and the most interesting of all, (8) He tries to distance the Strykers from the war.

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

Posted on: Sunday, December 17, 2006
COMMENTARY

Don’t fence them in
By U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye

In 1999, the Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Eric Shinseki, informed me that he intended to transform our Army by making it lighter and more lethal, thereby allowing it to deploy more quickly and fight longer. He requested and received Congress’ support for a new advanced vehicle, the Stryker, which would become the backbone of the redesigned infantry brigade.

Many months later, the chief called to tell me that, after looking at all the Army bases in the United States, he would recommend basing one of the Stryker brigades at Schofield Barracks, if an assessment from a full environmental impact study showed it was safe. The two-year study noted that there would be some risk; however, it concluded that the Army could sufficiently mitigate the primary environmental concerns. Plans were then formulated to begin this powerful transformation.

Not everyone agreed. A few antimilitary and environmental groups opposed Gen. Shinseki’s plan. They sued, contending that Strykers did not belong in Hawai’i. The U.S. District Court reviewed this matter in great detail and concluded in 2005 that the Stryker basing could go forward as planned. However, in October of this year, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the District Court’s recommendation, not because of any pressing environmental concerns, but because Gen. Shinseki had not formally examined all other basing options before choosing Hawai’i.

As a result of this ruling, 167 Stryker vehicles are sitting idle at Schofield Barracks. Hundreds more sit in warehouses on the Mainland waiting to be shipped. Approximately 4,000 soldiers at Schofield Barracks have had to stop training but are still slated for deployment in 2007. Our country is at war. With the pace of operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan, our Army is stretched thin. We simply cannot afford to stand down any of our forces right now. This is particularly true of the Stryker brigades.

Today, Stryker brigades are the most effective and highly sought-after units for service in Iraq and Afghanistan. Why? Because Strykers protect and save the lives of our soldiers. Gen. Shinseki was right once again. The Army is desperately seeking approval to train our Stryker brigade because it is scheduled to deploy next year. For the safety of our soldiers we must allow the training to resume while the Army completes the supplemental environmental study that examines other locations, as required by the court.

There have been some who question why Strykers should be in Hawai’i, instead of Washington or Alaska. First and foremost, national security demands it. Gen. Shinseki selected Hawai’i because of its strategic location. Today, Southwest Asia is the frontline on the global war on terror; tomorrow it could be Southeast Asia. Terrorists are fighting in the Philippines. They are active in Indonesia and are attempting to gain footholds in other countries in our region. In addition to terrorism, there are other threats to the region. We face an unstable, dangerous and well-armed dictator in North Korea. We also know from the past that new threats emerge that we are unable to forecast today. It is essential to our security, our economy and our way of life today and tomorrow that we are prepared to defend and protect the Asia-Pacific region.

At the same time, we are cutting back our overseas forces. In fact, we are finalizing plans to reduce the number of U.S. forces in South Korea and Japan. To remain engaged and credible, we must maintain forces on U.S. soil in the region. Basing a rapidly deployable and lethal Stryker brigade in Hawai’i will signal to those who may wish to do us harm that we are prepared to meet our security objectives in the region.

The nation has made a significant investment to base Strykers in Hawai’i. More than $63 million has been spent in Hawai’i, $230 million is on hold, and a total of $1.9 billion is planned for military construction projects in Hawai’i. It is costing the government nearly $1 million every month for the delays caused by the work stoppage. And it is costing jobs as layoffs of Hawai’i residents are beginning to occur.

Some contend that we could train the Stryker brigade elsewhere. While it is possible to relocate the Stryker brigade, that also may require lengthy environmental analyses to be conducted and the expenditure of millions of dollars. Additional delays in relocating the brigade will only increase the pressure on our overworked military. Furthermore, base and training space are limited. If we have to devote facilities and ranges outside of Hawai’i which are currently being used by other units, we will not be able to efficiently and effectively train our military forces.

In 2002, I voted against providing President Bush with the authority to attack Iraq. I continue to believe it was an error. However, I have and will continue to do everything I can to support our troops. This issue on the Stryker brigade should not be a referendum on the Iraq war.

Today, less than 1 percent of Americans are willing to make the sacrifice to wear our nation’s uniform. They deserve our support.
They deserve the best equipment and the best training we can provide to prepare them for battle. They serve to preserve our democracy. But for our democracy to continue to flourish, all Americans must do their part.

Hawai’i’s strategic location makes it critical that we base a large number of forces here to ensure our nation’s security. We do our part to serve our country by welcoming our Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard and Air Force personnel into our home.

The Army must complete the supplemental environmental work as requested by the appeals court. However, as these studies are ongoing, our soldiers should not be penalized and placed in harm’s way in faraway, dangerous lands without receiving the training they need to protect themselves, and get the job done. We also should not extend their deployment and time away from their families because they are forced to receive their training and equipment in another state. They should not have to make this further sacrifice.

We have asked enough from these warriors. It’s our turn to support them and their need to adequately train in Hawai’i. It should be our duty.

Daniel K. Inouye is Hawai’i’s senior U.S. senator. He wrote this commentary for The Advertiser.

Hawai’i participates in the Asia-Pacific Consultation of Movements against U.S. Military Bases, Tokyo

November 25 – 28, 2006

The Asia-Pacific Consultation of Movements against U.S. Military Bases, Tokyo

A significant step toward the creation of regional anti-base movement linkages

On November 25-28, 2006, around fifty peace activists from the Southeast-East Asia and Pacific region in struggle against U.S. military bases gathered in Tokyo in the first subregional encounter ever held on the specific topic of American military bases. Titled the Asia-Pacific Consultation of Movements against U.S. Military Bases, Tokyo, the gathering was called to facilitate exchange of experiences in anti-base struggles and to work out common strategies to resist and defeat the U.S. defense transformation process that is being carried out to further militarize this region violating the interest of the local grassroots people. It was held also as a sub-regional preparatory step toward the inaugural conference of Global Network to Abolish Foreign Military Bases scheduled in March 2007 in Ecuador.

The Consultation was convened jointly by an ad hoc Japanese national organizing committee composed of about 40 groups and individuals, the Stop the War Coalitions Philippines, and the Focus on the Global South. The Japanese committee comprised anti-base groups based in communities affected by the U.S. base reorganization plans as well as national peace networks. Among the organizing committee members are the progressive trade union-based Peace Forum, National Christian Council of Japan, Catholic Justice and Peace Commission, and the Asian Peace Alliance-Japan. The participants were from Australia, Guam, Hawaii, Okinawa, mainland Japan, Korea, the Philippines, and Mindanao, all dedicated activists fighting against the U.S. military presence. The presence of activists fresh from struggle scenes in Pyongtaek (South Korea), Okinawa, Kanagawa prefecture (Camp Zama, Yokosuka), Yokota (Yokota airbase), Hiroshima-Iwakuni (Iwakuni airbase), and Yufuin (Hijudai exercise ground) as well as Mindanao and Australia made the discussion concrete and down to earth.

Read the Report from the Tokyo C onsultation

Court Rules that Army Stryker Brigade decision was illegal

October 2006

A Win for Hawai’i! – Court Rules that Army Stryker Brigade decision was illegal

A federal appeals court ruled that the Army violated the National Environmental Policy Act by not considering alternative sites for the proposed Stryker Brigade expansion. This should halt all Stryker related projects in Hawai’i until another environmental impact statement can be prepared. This is an important win for the people of Hawai’i and the ‘aina, but the Stryker Brigade threat is not over.

Court of Appeals Rules: Army Violated Law In Bringing Stryker Brigade To
Hawai`i
EarthJustice Press Release (October 5, 2006)

Stryker base here is found illegal Honolulu Star Bulletin (October 6, 2006)

Ruling holds up Stryker Brigade Honolulu Advertiser (October 6, 2006)

America’s Africa Corps

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/HI21Aa01.html

America’s Africa Corps

By Jason Motlagh

September 21, 2006

The United States is moving closer to setting up an Africa Command to secure the rear flank of its global “war on terrorism”, with eyes trained on vital oil reserves and lawless areas where terrorists have sought safe haven to regroup and strike against its interests.

At a Monday briefing on plans to restructure US defense policy, Under Secretary of Defense Eric Edelmen disclosed that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and top military brass were close to a decision over a proposal to anchor US forces on the African continent, creating a new command to encompass all security operations.

Analysts said the move would herald a fundamental shift in US policy that champions an active approach toward fledgling states prone to breed extremism, though more tangible needs are also at stake.

A Pentagon spokesman tempered the announcement with the caveat that such a move required an official process that would take time and had yet to begin. But one official noted that talks were “intense” and another stressed that internal debate was stronger than it was six months ago and appeared to be on the verge of a positive verdict.

The United States at present oversees five separate military commands worldwide, and Africa remains divided among three of them: European Command covers operations spanning 43 countries across North and sub-Saharan Africa; Central Command oversees the restive Horn of Africa; and Pacific Command looks after Madagascar. All three maintain a low-key presence, largely employing elite special operations forces to train, equip and work alongside national militaries. A perceived vulnerability to al-Qaeda and other transnational terrorist organizations, however, has fueled calls for a more aggressive security posture in Africa.

“We do have a strategic interest in Africa, and we have been attacked,” a leading US government Africa specialist told Asia Times Online on condition of anonymity. “Whether you have 1,000 people or 10,000, what we’re doing requires our active presence both from training special forces, coordination and tracking down some of the extremist elements … That requires really having a physical presence and the ability to deploy.”

CentCom commander General John Abizaid last March spelled out to the Senate Armed Services Committee the burgeoning security threats facing Horn of Africa and the dire need for robust action. Emblematic of most of the continent at large, they include extreme poverty, corruption, internal conflicts, uncontrolled borders and territorial waters, weak internal security, broken infrastructure and natural disasters, among others. “The combination of these serious challenges,” he said, “creates an environment that is ripe for exploitation by extremists and criminal organizations.”

Just months later, the decision was made to raise the military profile in Africa in what may prove a precursor to an all-encompassing command. Washington has committed to spend US$500 million on the Trans-Saharan Counter-Terrorism Initiative (TSCTI ), an expanded program headed by EuCom that provides military and development aid to nine Saharan countries deemed to be fertile ground for groups – such as the deadly Algeria-based Salafist Group for Call and Combat (GSPC) – looking to establish Afghanistan-style training grounds and carry out other illicit activities. The TSCTI represents a colossal upgrade from the Pan-Sahel Initiative, its $7 million forerunner.

But critics counter that military-centric policies could backfire and breed radicalism where it hardly exists by sustaining despotic regimes that usurp funding and military hardware to tighten their grip on power. A report by the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think-tank, said the Saharan region is “not a terrorist hotbed” and warned that certain Saharan governments try to elicit US aid while using the “war on terror” to justify human-rights abuses.

CentCom, for its part, operates the Djibouti-based Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, a discreet hub formed in the aftermath of the August 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam that killed at least 301 people and put Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network on the map.

A number of al-Qaeda operatives are said to be hiding in the Horn, Somalia specifically, and they continue to pose a grave threat to US interests in the region, which demands the presence of some 1,800 troops tasked with detecting and disrupting terrorist schemes. US intelligence has also used the base to coordinate activities around the Horn; the Central Intelligence Agency allegedly bankrolled an alliance of warlords that were driven out of the capital, Mogadishu, by Islamist militia this summer.

Somalia, a special case, has been without a functioning government for the past 14 years and is known beyond a doubt to have harbored members of al-Qaeda. Still, the unnamed government analyst, who just returned from an extensive fact-finding mission to the failed state, insists that the vast majority of Somalis are not hostile toward the United States despite the infamous Black Hawk Down disaster of 1993 and the recent Islamist takeover. “Somalis are not anti-American by nature, they are pro-West,” he said. “Engagement is vital as it helps gather better intelligence, understand people, and it’s cheaper.”

Other observers say that thirst for another kind of security is the driving force behind a probable Africa Command: energy.

Nigeria already stands as the fifth-largest supplier of oil to the United States, and energy officials say the Gulf of Guinea will provide a quarter of US crude by 2010, placing the region ahead of Saudi Arabia (other major producers include Equatorial Guinea, Angola, Gabon and the Congo Republic). A surging demand for fossil fuels in Asia and an unpredictable political climate in the Middle East prompted the administration of US President George W Bush four years ago to call West African oil a “strategic national interest” – a designation that reserves the use of force to secure and defend such interests if necessary.

The question then arises as to where exactly the new command would be best headquartered. The answer may be Sao Tome and Principe, one of Africa’s smallest countries, consisting mainly of two islands at the western bend of the continent. Concerns over fanning anti-Americanism, proximity to oil reserves – some of which are said to be untapped beneath its own waters – and overall security make this the obvious choice, John Pike, director of military studies group GlobalSecurity.org, told Asia Times Online. “This island seems destined to be America’s unsinkable aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Guinea, much like Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean and Guam in the Pacific.”

Military planners like the idea of an offshore presence since its reduces the impression of a neo-colonial maneuver, Pike said, adding that so far there has been a clear preference within EuCom and CentCom to lie low and work through African institutions to train troops and strengthen security. According to Pike, the coup-wary Sao Tome government likes the idea of a US presence, and the two sides have been “playing footsie for a number of years now”. The Defense Department declined comment.

While odds are against the price of oil ever going back down significantly, today it remains a freely traded commodity on the international market with no strings attached as to who owns concessions. But some experts are convinced this arrangement will come to an end in the not so distant future, making military power and leverage paramount.

“We can see how the US would want to move and make preparations for that day when it matters whom states will turn to for protection,” Pike said. “When that day comes, the US wants to ensure key states are looking its way.”

Jason Motlagh is deputy foreign editor at United Press International in Washington, DC. He has reported freelance from Saharan Africa, Asia and the Caribbean for various US and European news media.