| 
			 
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			
			  
			
			October 02, 2010 
			from 
			ProjectCensored Website 
			
			  
			
			  
			
				
					
						
							
							Student Researchers: Dimitrina Semova, Joan Pedro, and Luis Luján (Complutense University 
			of Madrid) Ashley Jackson-Lesti, Ryan Stevens, Chris Marten, and Kristy Nelson 
			(Sonoma State University) Christopher Lue (Indian River State College) Cassie Barthel (St. Cloud State University) 
							 Faculty Evaluators: Ana I. Segovia (Complutense University of Madrid) Julie Flohr and Mryna Goodman (Sonoma State University) Elliot D. Cohen (Indian River State College) Julie Andrzejewski (St. Cloud State University) 
						 
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			The US military is responsible for the most egregious and widespread 
			pollution of the planet, yet this information and accompanying 
			documentation goes almost entirely unreported.  
			
			  
			
			In spite of the 
			evidence, the environmental impact of the US military goes largely 
			unaddressed by environmental organizations and was not the focus of 
			any discussions or proposed restrictions at the recent UN Climate 
			Change Conference in Copenhagen.  
			
			  
			
			This impact includes uninhibited 
			use of fossil fuels, massive creation of greenhouse gases, and 
			extensive release of radioactive and chemical contaminants into the 
			air, water, and soil. 
			 
			The extensive global operations of the US military (wars, 
			interventions, and secret operations on over one thousand bases 
			around the world and six thousand facilities in the United States) 
			are not counted against US greenhouse gas limits.  
			
			  
			
			Sara Flounders 
			writes,  
			
				
				"By every measure, 
				the Pentagon is the largest institutional user of petroleum 
				products and energy in general. Yet the Pentagon has a blanket 
				exemption in all international climate agreements." 
			 
			
			While official accounts put US military usage at 320,000 barrels of 
			oil a day, that does not include fuel consumed by contractors, in 
			leased or private facilities, or in the production of weapons.  
			
			  
			
			The 
			US military is a major contributor of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse 
			gas that most scientists believe is to blame for climate change. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Steve Kretzmann, director of Oil Change International, reports,  
			
				
				"The 
			Iraq war was responsible for at least 141 million metric tons of 
			carbon dioxide equivalent (MMTCO2e) from March 2003 through December 
			2007... That war emits more than 60 percent that of all 
			countries...  
				  
				
				This information is 
				not readily available... because military emissions abroad are 
				exempt from national reporting requirements under US law and the 
				UN Framework Convention on Climate Change." 
			 
			
			According to Barry Sanders, author of 
			
			The Green Zone - The 
			Environmental Costs of Militarism,  
			
				
				"the greatest single 
				assault on the environment, on all of us around the globe, comes 
				from one agency... the Armed Forces of the United States." 
			 
			
			Throughout the long history of military preparations, actions, and 
			wars, the US military has not been held responsible for the effects 
			of its activities upon environments, peoples, or animals.  
			
			  
			
			During the 
			
			Kyoto Accords negotiations in December 1997, the US demanded as a 
			provision of signing that any and all of its military operations 
			worldwide, including operations in participation with the UN and 
			NATO, be exempted from measurement or reductions.  
			
			  
			
			After attaining 
			this concession, the
			
			Bush administration then refused to sign the 
			accords and the US Congress passed an explicit provision 
			guaranteeing the US military exemption from any energy reduction or 
			measurement. 
			 
			Environmental journalist Johanna Peace reports that military 
			activities will continue to be exempt based on an executive order 
			signed by President 
			
			Barack Obama that calls for other federal 
			agencies to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.  
			
			  
			
			Peace 
			states,  
			
				
				"The military 
				accounts for a full 80 percent of the federal government’s 
				energy demand." 
			 
			
			As it stands, the Department of Defense is the 
			largest polluter in 
			the world, producing more hazardous waste than the five largest US 
			chemical companies combined.  
			
			  
			
			
			Depleted uranium, 
			
			petroleum, oil, 
			
			pesticides, defoliant agents such as 
			
			
			Agent Orange, and lead, along 
			with vast amounts of radiation from weaponry produced, tested, and 
			used, are just some of the pollutants with which the US military is 
			contaminating the environment.  
			
			  
			
			Flounders identifies key examples: 
			
				
					- 
					
					Depleted uranium: Tens of thousands of pounds of microparticles of 
			radioactive and highly toxic waste contaminate the Middle East, 
			Central Asia, and the Balkans.    
					- 
					
					US-made land mines and cluster bombs spread over wide areas of 
			Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East continue to spread 
			death and destruction even after wars have ceased.   
					 
					- 
					
					Thirty-five years after the Vietnam War, 
					
					dioxin contamination is 
			three hundred to four hundred times higher than "safe" levels, 
			resulting in severe birth defects and cancers into the third 
			generation of those affected.    
					- 
					
					US military policies and 
					
					wars in Iraq have created severe 
			desertification of 90 percent of the land, changing Iraq from a food 
			exporter into a country that imports 80 percent of its food.   
					 
					- 
					
					In the US, military bases top the Superfund list of the most 
			polluted places, as
					
					perchlorate and 
					
					trichloroethylene seep into the 
			drinking water, aquifers, and soil.    
					- 
					
					Nuclear weapons testing in the American Southwest and the South 
			Pacific Islands has contaminated millions of acres of land and water 
			with radiation, while uranium tailings defile Navajo reservations.   
					 
					- 
					
					Rusting barrels of chemicals and solvents and millions of rounds 
			of ammunition are criminally abandoned by the Pentagon in bases 
			around the world.  
				 
			 
			
			The United States is planning an enormous $15 billion military 
			buildup on the 
			
			Pacific island of Guam.  
			
			  
			
			The project would turn the 
			thirty-mile-long island into a major hub for US military operations 
			in the Pacific. It has been described as the largest military 
			buildup in recent history and could bring as many as fifty thousand 
			people to the tiny island. Chamoru civil rights attorney Julian Aguon warns that this military operation will bring irreversible 
			social and environmental consequences to Guam.  
			
			  
			
			As an unincorporated 
			territory, or colony, and of the US, the people of Guam have no 
			right to self-determination, and no governmental means to oppose an 
			unpopular and destructive occupation. 
			 
			Between 1946 and 1958, the US dropped more than sixty nuclear 
			weapons on the people of the Marshall Islands. 
			
			The Chamoru people of 
			Guam, being so close and downwind, still experience an alarmingly 
			high rate of related cancer. 
			 
			On Capitol Hill, the conversation has been restricted to whether the 
			jobs expected from the military construction should go to mainland 
			Americans, foreign workers, or Guam residents. But we rarely hear 
			the voices and concerns of the indigenous people of Guam, who 
			constitute over a third of the island’s population. 
			 
			Meanwhile, as if the US military has not contaminated enough of the 
			world already, a new five-year strategic plan by the US Navy 
			outlines the militarization of the Arctic to defend national 
			security, potential undersea riches, and other maritime interests, 
			anticipating the frozen Arctic Ocean to be open waters by the year 
			2030.  
			
			  
			
			This plan strategizes expanding fleet operations, resource 
			development, research, and tourism, and could possibly reshape 
			global transportation. 
			 
			While the plan discusses "strong partnerships" with other nations 
			(Canada, Norway, Denmark, and Russia have also made substantial 
			investments in Arctic-capable military armaments), it is quite 
			evident that the US is serious about increasing its military 
			presence and naval combat capabilities.  
			
			  
			
			The US, in addition to 
			planned naval rearmament, is stationing thirty-six F-22 Raptor 
			stealth fighter jets, which is 20 percent of the F-22 fleet, in 
			Anchorage, Alaska. 
			 
			Some of the action items in the US Navy Arctic Roadmap document 
			include: 
			
				
					- 
					
					Assessing current and required capability to execute undersea 
			warfare, expeditionary warfare, strike warfare, strategic sealift, 
			and regional security cooperation.  
					- 
					
					Assessing current and predicted threats in order to determine the 
			most dangerous and most likely threats in the Arctic region in 2010, 
			2015, and 2025.  
					- 
					
					Focusing on threats to US national security, although threats to 
			maritime safety and security may also be considered.  
				 
			 
			
			Behind the public façade of international Arctic cooperation, 
			Rob Heubert, associate director at the Centre for Military and Strategic 
			Studies at the University of Calgary, points out,  
			
				
				"If you read the 
			document carefully you’ll see a dual language, one where 
				they’re saying, ‘We’ve got to start working together’... and 
				[then] they start saying, ‘We have to get new instrumentation 
				for our combat officers’... They’re clearly understanding that 
				the future is not nearly as nice as what all the public policy 
				statements say." 
			 
			
			Beyond the concerns about human conflicts in the Arctic, the 
			consequences of militarization on the Arctic environment are not 
			even being considered. Given the record of environmental devastation 
			that the US military has wrought, such a silence is unacceptable. 
			  
			
			  
			
			
			 
			
			Update by Mickey Z. 
			
			
			 
			As I sit here, typing this "update," the predator drones are still 
			flying over Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan, the oil is still 
			gushing into the Gulf of Mexico, and 53.3 percent of our tax money 
			is still being funneled to the US military.
			 
			
			  
			
			Simply put, hope and 
			change feels no different from shock and awe... but the 
			mainstream media continues to propagate the two-party lie.
			Linking the antiwar and environmental movements is a much-needed 
			step.  
			
			  
			
			As Cindy Sheehan recently told me,  
			
				
				"I think one of the best 
			things that we can do is look into economic conversion of the 
			defense industry into green industries, working on sustainable and 
			renewable forms of energy, and/or connect[ing] with indigenous 
				people who are trying to reclaim their lands from the pollution 
				of the military industrial complex. The best thing to do would 
				be to start on a very local level to reclaim a planet healthy 
				for life." 
			 
			
			It comes down to recognizing the connections, recognizing how we are 
			manipulated into supporting wars and how those wars are killing our 
			ecosystem.  
			
			  
			
			We must also recognize our connection to the natural 
			world. For if we were to view all living things, including 
			ourselves, as part of one collective soul, how could we not defend 
			that collective soul by any means necessary? 
			 
			We are on the brink of economic, social, and environmental collapse. 
			 
			
			  
			
			In other words, this is the best time ever to be an activist. 
			  
			
			  
			
			
			 
			Update by Julian Aguon 
			
			 
			In 2010, the people of Guam are bracing themselves for a cataclysmic 
			round of militarization with virtually no parallel in recent 
			history.  
			
			  
			
			Set to formally begin this year, the military buildup comes 
			on the heels of a decision by the United States to aggrandize its 
			military posture in the Asia-Pacific region. At the center of the US 
			military realignment schema is the hotly contested agreement between 
			the United States and Japan to relocate thousands of US Marines from 
			Okinawa to Guam.  
			
			  
			
			This portentous development, which is linked to the 
			United States’ perception of China as a security threat, bodes great 
			harm to the people and environment of Guam yet remains virtually 
			unknown to Americans and the rest of the international community. 
			 
			What is happening in Guam is inherently interesting because while 
			America trots its soldiers and its citizenry off to war to the tune 
			of "spreading democracy" in its own proverbial backyard, an entire 
			civilization of so-called "Americans" watch with bated breath as 
			people thousands of miles away - people we cannot vote for - make 
			decisions for us at ethnocidal costs.  
			
			  
			
			Although this military buildup 
			marks the most volatile demographic change in recent Guam history, 
			the people of Guam have never had an opportunity to meaningfully 
			participate in any discussion about the buildup. To date, the scant 
			coverage of the military buildup has centered almost exclusively 
			around the United States and Japan.  
			
			  
			
			In fact, the story 
			entitled "Guam 
			Residents Organize Against US Plans for $15B Military Buildup on 
			Pacific Island" on Democracy Now! (below video) was the first bona fide US 
			media coverage of the military buildup since 2005 to consider, let 
			alone privilege, the people’s opposition. 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			 
			The heart of this story is not so much in the finer details of the 
			military buildup as it is in the larger political context of 
			real-life twenty-first-century colonialism. Under US domestic law, 
			Guam is an unincorporated territory.  
			
			  
			
			What this means is that Guam is 
			a territory that belongs to the United States but is not a part of 
			it.  
			
			  
			
			As an unincorporated territory, the US Constitution does not 
			necessarily or automatically apply in Guam. Instead, the US Congress 
			has broad powers over the unincorporated territories, including the 
			power to choose what portions of the Constitution apply to them.  
			
			  
			
			In 
			reality, Guam remains under the purview of the Office of Insular 
			Affairs in the US Department of the Interior. 
			 
			Under international law, Guam is a non-self-governing territory, or 
			UN-recognized colony whose people have yet to exercise the 
			fundamental right to self-determination.  
			
			  
			
			
			
			Article 73 of the United 
			Nations Charter, which addresses the rights of peoples in 
			non-self-governing territories, commands states administering them 
			to, 
			
				
				"recognize the 
				principle that the interests of the inhabitants are paramount."  
			 
			
			These "administering powers" accept as a 
			"sacred 
			trust" the obligation to develop self-government in the territories, 
			taking due account of the political aspirations of the people.  
			
			  
			
			As a 
			matter of international treaty and customary law, the colonized 
			people of Guam have a right to self-determination under 
			international law that the United States, at least in theory, 
			recognizes. 
			 
			The military buildup, however, reveals the United States’ failure to 
			fulfill its international legal mandate. This is particularly 
			troubling in light of the fact that this very year, 2010, marks the 
			formal conclusion of not one but two UN-designated international 
			decades for the eradication of colonialism. In 1990, the UN General 
			Assembly proclaimed 1990 - 2000 as the International Decade for the 
			Eradication of Colonialism.  
			
			  
			
			To this end, the General Assembly 
			adopted a detailed plan of action to expedite the unqualified end of 
			all forms of colonialism. In 2001, citing a wholesale lack of 
			progress during the first decade, the General Assembly proclaimed a 
			second one to effect the same goal.  
			
			  
			
			The second decade has come and 
			all but gone with only Timor-Leste, or East Timor, managing to 
			attain independence from Indonesia in 2002. 
			 
			In November 2009 - one month after "Guam Residents Organize Against US 
			Plans for $15B Military Buildup on Pacific Island" aired - the US 
			Department of Defense released an unprecedented 11,000-page Draft 
			Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS), detailing for the first time 
			the true enormity of the contemplated militarization of Guam.  
			
			  
			
			At its 
			peak, the military buildup will bring more than 80,000 new residents 
			to Guam, which includes, 
			
				
					- 
					
					more than 8,600 US Marines and their 9,000 
			dependents  
					- 
					
					7,000 so-called transient US Navy personnel 
					 
					- 
					
					600 to 
			1,000 US Army personnel  
					- 
					
					20,000 foreign workers on military 
			construction contracts  
				 
			 
			
			This "human tsunami," as it is being called, 
			represents a roughly 47 percent increase in Guam’s total population 
			in a four-to-six-year window.  
			
			  
			
			Today, the total population of Guam is 
			roughly 178,000 people, the indigenous Chamoru people making up only 
			37 percent of that number. We are looking at a volatile and 
			virtually overnight demographic change in the makeup of the island 
			that even the US military admits will result in the political 
			dispossession of the Chamoru people.  
			
			  
			
			To put the pace of this 
			ethnocide in context, just prior to World War II, Chamorus comprised 
			more than 90 percent of Guam’s population. 
			 
			At the center of the buildup are three major proposed actions:  
			
				
					- 
					
					the construction of permanent facilities and infrastructure to 
			support the full spectrum of warfare training for the thousands of 
			relocated Marines  
					- 
					
					the construction of a new deep-draft wharf in 
			the island’s only harbor to provide for the passage of 
			nuclear-powered aircraft carriers  
					- 
					
					the construction of an 
			Army Missile Defense Task Force modeled on the Marshall 
			Islands - based Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test Site, for 
			the practice of intercepting intercontinental ballistic missiles. 
					 
				 
			 
			
			In terms of adverse impact, these developments will mean, among 
			other things,  
			
				
					- 
					
					the clearing of whole limestone forests and the 
			desecration of burial sites some 3,500 years old  
					- 
					
					the restricting of 
			access to areas rich in plants necessary for indigenous medicinal 
			practice  
					- 
					
					the denying of access to places of worship and traditional 
			fishing grounds  
					- 
					
					the destroying of seventy acres of thriving coral 
			reef, which currently serve as critical habitat for several 
			endangered species  
					- 
					
					the over-tapping of Guam’s water system to 
			include the drilling of twenty-two additional wells  
				 
			 
			
			In addition, 
			the likelihood of military-related accidents will greatly increase. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Seven crashes occurred during military training from August 2007 to 
			July 2008, the most recent of which involved a crash of a B-52 
			bomber that killed the entire crew. The increased presence of US 
			military forces in Guam also increases the island’s visibility as a 
			target for enemies of the United States. 
			 
			Finally, an issue that has sparked some of the sharpest debate in 
			Guam has been the Department of Defense’s announcement that it will, 
			if needed, forcibly condemn an additional 2,200 acres of land in 
			Guam to support the construction of new military facilities. This 
			potential new land grab has been met with mounting protest by island 
			residents, mainly due to the fact that the US military already owns 
			close to one-third of the small island, the majority of which was 
			illegally taken after World War II. 
			 
			In February 2010, upon review of the DEIS, the US Environmental 
			Protection Agency (EPA) rated it "insufficient" and "environmentally 
			unsatisfactory," giving it the lowest possible rating for a DEIS. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Among other things, the EPA’s findings suggest that Guam’s water 
			infrastructure cannot handle the population boom and that the 
			island’s fresh water resources will be at high risk for 
			contamination. The EPA predicts that without infrastructural 
			upgrades to the water system, the population outside the bases will 
			experience a 13.1 million gallons of water shortage per day in 2014.  
			
			  
			
			The agency stated that the Pentagon’s massive buildup plans for Guam 
			"should not proceed as proposed."  
			
			  
			
			The people of Guam were given a 
			mere ninety days to read through the voluminous 11,000-page document 
			and make comments about its contents. The ninety-day comment period 
			ended on February 17, 2010. The final EIS is scheduled for release 
			in August 2010, with the record of decision to follow immediately 
			thereafter. 
			 
			The response to this story from the 
			
			mainstream US media has been deafening silence. Since the military buildup was first announced in 
			2005, it was more than three years before any US media outlet picked 
			up on the story.  
			
			  
			
			In fact, the October 2009 Democracy Now! interview 
			was the first substantive national news coverage of the military 
			buildup. 
			  
			
			  
			
			
			 
			For more information on the military 
			buildup 
			
				
				- 
			We Are Guahan, http://www.weareguahan.com - 
			Draft Environmental Impact Study Guam & Commonwealth of the Northern 
			Mariana Islands Military Relocation, www.guambuildupeis.us - 
			Center for Biological Diversity Response to DEIS, 
			www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/center/articles/2010/los-angeles-times-02-24-2010.html 
				- 
			EPA Response to Guam DEIS, www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=68298 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			For more information on Guam’s movement to resist militarization and 
			unresolved colonialism 
			
				
				- 
			The Guahan Coalition for Peace and Justice: Lisa Linda Natividad, 
			lisanati@yahoo.com; Hope Cristobal, ecris64@teleguam.net; Julian 
			Aguon, julianaguon@gmail.com; Michael Lujan Bevacqua, mlbasquiat@hotmail.com; 
			Victoria-Lola Leon Guerrero, victoria.lola@gmail.com - 
			We Are Guahan - We Are Guahan Public Forum: www.weareguahan.com - 
			Famoksaiyan: Martha Duenas, martduenas@yahoo.com; 
			famoksaiyanwc.wordpress.com 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Sources 
			
				
				Sara Flounders, "Add Climate Havoc to War Crimes: Pentagon’s Role in 
			Global Catastrophe," International Action Center, December 18, 2009, 
			http://www.iacenter.org/o/world/climatesummit_pentagon121809. 
				 Mickey Z., "Can You Identify the Worst Polluter on the Planet? 
			Here’s a Hint: Shock and Awe," Planet Green, August 10, 2009, 
			http://planetgreen.discovery.com/tech-transport/identify-worst-polluter-planet.html. 
				 Julian Aguon, "Guam Residents Organize Against US Plans for $15B 
			Military Buildup on Pacific Island," Democracy Now!, October 9, 
			2009, http://www.democracynow.org/2009/10/9/guam_residents_organize_against_us_plans. 
				 Ian Macleod, "U.S. Plots Arctic Push," Ottawa Citizen, November 28, 
			2009, http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/navy+plots+Arctic+push/2278324/story.html. 
				 Nick Turse, "Vietnam Still in Shambles after American War," In These 
			Times, May 2009, http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/4363/casualties_continue_in_vietnam. 
				 Jalal Ghazi, "Cancer - The Deadly Legacy of the Invasion of Iraq," New 
			America Media, January 6, 2010, http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=80e260b3839daf2084fdeb0965ad31ab. 
			 
			
			   |