INDEX - MILITARY

www.islandbreath.org ID# 0817-03


SUBJECT: POHAKULOA BOMBINGS

SOURCE: SHANNON RUDOLPH shannonkona@gmail.com

POSTED: 26 FEBRUARY 2008 - 7:30am HST

B-2 Stealth Bomber Crashes on Guam


image above: a B-2 Stealth Bomber on takeoff

[Editor's Note: Protests concerning planned B-2 bombing runs on the Big Island may have led to millitary's relocation of excerise to an island near Guam. This is likely linked to recent B-2 crash there. See following article.]

by The Associated Press on 22 February 2008 in The Huffington Post

A B-2 stealth bomber crashed at an air base on Guam but both pilots ejected safely and were in good condition, the Air Force said.

Thick black smoke could be seen billowing from the wreckage at Andersen Air Force Base, said Geanne Ward, a resident in the northern village of Yigo who was on the base visiting her husband.

Ward said she didn't witness the crash but noticed a rising plume of smoke behind the base's air control tower.

She said crowds began to gather as emergency vehicles arrived Saturday morning local time.

"Everybody was on their cell phones, and the first thing everyone wanted to know was did the pilots make it out in time," she said.

A board of officers will investigate the accident.

Each B-2 bomber costs about $1.2 billion to build. All 21 stealth bombers are based at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri but the Air Force has been rotating several of them through Guam since 2004, along with B-1 and B-52 bombers.

The rotations are designed to boost the U.S. security presence in the Asia-Pacific region while other U.S. forces diverted to fight in the Middle East.
The accident occurred 11 days after a Navy plane crashed into the ocean about 20 miles northeast of Guam's Ritidian Point. Four aircrew members ejected from the EA-6B Prowler electronic warfare aircraft and were rescued by helicopter.

Guam is a U.S. territory 3,700 miles southwest of Hawaii.


SUBJECT: POHAKULOA BOMBINGS

SOURCE: LISA LONG angelsfortruth@earthlink.net

POSTED: 26 FEBRUARY 2008 - 7:30am HST

Hawaiians prove that activism still works!

by Cathy Garger on 6 February 2008 in www.OpEdNews.com

Upset Hawaiians who love their land and people - and object to military bombings - remind us all just what dedicated activism can still accomplish!

I just learned something that is far too rich, far too juicy to keep to myself! A contact in Hawaii working on the demilitarization of the Aloha islands has shared some really great news!

Well, actually it’s better than awesome news for Hawaii. But rotten luck for another island…

As word has it, the Air Force’s B2 stealth bombers, that had been dropping 2,000 lb. bombs each month since September during “training” exercises into Depleted Uranium contaminated soils at the Pohakuloa Training Area, did not take place in the month of January.

Instead, it appears the B2 bombings exercises were moved last month to the Kwajalein Atoll, one of the Marshall Islands of Guam. Kwajalein’s Reagan Test Site has been a ballistic missile development and “test” site for the US Army for over 40 years.

The relocation of bomb drops out of Hawaii just goes to show that the actions of dedicated, vocal activists with respect for their land, environment, and health of their people can and do make a difference!

Stories like this Hawaiian victory remind us all that we are far more powerful than we even realize.

It kind of makes you wonder what we all could do if we were to really work together on the things most important to us (think health and well-being of our citizens for starters). Imagine what we could accomplish if we were to actually make our heartfelt opposition to the military’s rampant environmental degradation and toxic and radioactive contamination of our country be known!

The only down side to this whole deal is, what about the unfortunate 2,600 individuals who live on the Kwajalein island? Reportedly, the people who reside there do so with express permission from the US Army. Chances are more than good, therefore, that the vocal protests of the Kwajalein inhabitants - now being pelted with 2,000 lb. bombs dropped from higher than mountaintops - will, unlike the Hawaiian islanders’, be slim to none.

Sure hope those B-2 stealth bomb-dropping pilots have mighty good aim.


SUBJECT: POHAKULOA BOMBINGS

SOURCE: LINDA HARMON harmonl001@hawaii.rr.com

POSTED: 24 JANUARY 2008 - 6:30am HST

Hawaiians Demand An End to Bombings

image above: B-2 stealth bomber with name "Grim Reaper" on belly readies for training mission

by Cathy Garger on 23 January 2008 in Axis of Logic

In a recent press release, a Hawaiian peace group, Malu Aina (“Land of Peace”) issued a public statement on the bombings of a military training area on the Big Island of Hawaii. The monthly exercises involve United States Air Force B-2 stealth aircraft dropping bombs on the Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA).

The B-2 “Spirit” bombers are equipped with “low-observable stealth technology” deployed to Hawaii from as far away as Andersen Air Force Base in Guam. These military exercises called “Koa Lighting,” occasionally conducted in conjunction with the US Navy and Marines, often exceed 18 hours of continuous flight for the 6,880-nautical mile training missions.

Boeing, the company that built the weapons delivery system for the stealth bombers, explains on its website that B-2s possess nuclear weapons firing capability and have been used in nonstop missions to Afghanistan from Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri.

According to a recent Associated Press article, “B-2 Stealth Bombers Hit US Targets,”(1) the aircraft fly 18,000 feet above the mountains over the main island of Hawaii. In September, the B-2s began monthly 2,000-pound bomb-dropping exercises on the Pohakuloa military range.

Although the Air Force has stated that the bombings involve dropping inert or “dummy” bombs that do not explode, increasing numbers of Hawaiians have begun a public crusade against the tropical island being used for target practice.

One concern held by Big Island activists is that B-2 pilots are not using the technology of the bombers’ weapons guidance systems that typically release bombs with precision and accuracy. Instead, pilots over Hawaii rely on gravity and wind alone to navigate the bomb drops.

The danger of un-guided bombs landing other than where intended concerns weapons expert, Bob Nichols, Project Censored Award winner, of The San Francisco Bay View. In written correspondence Nichols stated, "It is just a matter of time till the 376,000 lb heavy bombers hit a school playground or someone's house with the equivalent of a small car at 160 mph and kill no telling how many people.

In an interview with Malu Aina’s President, Jim Albertini, the peace group leader shared his concern that, beyond the threat of wayward bombs missing targets, another serious hazard concerning the grounds upon which the bombs are dropped exists. Albertini begins, “The issue is more than computer guided systems. The issue is that bombing and shelling at PTA has been going on for more than 50 years. For most people it appears to be a non-issue. It is out of sight and out of mind.”

For the people of Hawaii, the basis for concern is rooted in public health. As Albertini explained, “Perhaps if cancer stats show high rates and it can be linked to DU at PTA, it will start to grab people. The problem is that neither Hawaii State, County, or Federal officials want to confirm a problem with military contamination, DU - or any kind. They appear to want to keep the lid on the issue because of the negative impacts it may have on the tourist industry.”

In August, just one month before B-2s began dropping bombs on radioactively contaminated soils at Pohakuloa, the Army released a report of an aerial survey confirming the presence of what they maintain is former use of Depleted Uranium on the military site.(2)

Radioactive contamination had previously been confirmed on Kahoolawhe Island, and Schofield Barracks, Ohau. The military has mentioned Makua Military Reservation, Oahu, as another suspected radioactive contamination site.(3) On December 3, Makua Military Reservation was the location of several detonations of unexploded ordnance from years of live-fire weapons use at that site beginning in WWII.(4)

The admission of Depleted uranium (DU) in weapons training on the Hawaiian Islands came after years of the military denying its use and presence on the islands. As stated in the Malu Aina press release, “The full extent of military radiation contamination is unknown due to the extensive size of firing ranges in Hawaii, poor record keeping by the military, and incomplete testing to date.”

To address citizen concerns, on November 16, the Army and State of Hawaii Health Department held a public information meeting on DU contamination of PTA. Lorrin Pang, M.D., State of Hawaii District Health Officer, spoke as a private citizen, comparing DU to a cigarette, explaining that “a cigarette by itself is harmless but when burned and inhaled it becomes dangerous, so with DU when it is weaponized, burned (oxidized), and inhaled it becomes dangerous.”(5)

Epidemiologist Sister Rosalie Bertell, Ph.D., founder of International Institute of Concern for Public Health, has spoken out extensively on the serious health affects of the radioactive munition. “Radiation, heavy metals (DU is a heavy metal), and other toxic chemicals,” Bertell has stated, “can destroy the functionality of the cellular respiratory system (the mitochondria, which is the powerhouse of the cell), disrupt the chemistry of enzymes and hormones, frustrate normal cellular detoxification and repair, and leave the person alive but chronically ill”.

Adverse health effects of DU contamination, according to Dr. Bertell, include cancers and tumor formation, chronic disease, neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s Disease and Alzheimer’s, muscular and skeletal problems, anemia, rashes, irritability, high blood pressure, thyroid problems, loss of cellular immunity, autoimmune system diseases, joint diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, diseases of the kidneys, circulatory system, and nervous system.(6) In addition, radiation from the use of Uranium weapons is also implicated in the dramatic rise of diabetes in the US.(7)

As Lance Holter reported for the The Haleakala Times, “The hearings were the result of Big Island citizens monitoring high background levels of radiation downwind from the Pohakuloa gunnery range during Army Stryker maneuvers at the range, April 22. Normal background levels are in the area of 10 to 20 counts per minute (CPM) but on April 22nd the citizens' measurements went as high as 93 CPM. Public outcry and concerns over dangers from radiation prompted two front page stories in the Honolulu Advertiser.”(8)

Echoing concern of Hawaiian citizens monitoring radiation there, Malu Aina spokesperson Albertini said, “It was only in August, 2007 that the Army confirmed that the 133,000-acre Pohakuloa base is contaminated with DU.” Albertini continued, “To date, they have done very limited research and testing to see the extent of the contamination or whether or not the Navy, Marines, Air Force may also have used radiation weapons in training there. “

The Army has admitted the use of one type of Uranium weapon used in Hawaii, in rounds associated with the Davy Crockett, a nuclear weapon with a warhead weighing 51 pounds.(9) As Albertini explains, “The Davy Crockett was only one of approximately 60 different kinds of nuclear weapons in the arsenal back in the 60s and 70s. Who knows how many other radiation spotting rounds might have been used? To bomb a site with known contamination shows a complete disregard for the health and safety of ground troops who train there and island residents and visitors alike.”

The term DU or Depleted Uranium refers to munitions made from natural Uranium that has some of the more fissile U-235 removed for use in bombs and nuclear power plants. The term “Depleted,” as used by the military to describe the US arsenal of “conventional” radioactive weapons, is often contested, as the isotope ratio of U235 is merely reduced – not depleted - by .5% (one-half of one percent). Furthermore, according to the Uranium Medical Research Centre website, after the extraction of some of the U-235, the amount of radioactive U-238 is actually increased from 99.27% in natural Uranium to a higher 99.79% in Depleted Uranium.(10)

Trace amounts of plutonium, neptunium, americium and fission products are also added to Depleted Uranium during the enrichment process, rendering it even more hazardous to human health.(11) With a radioactive half-life of 4.5 billion years, DU is a serious threat to the environment and a costly prospect for future remediation on a number of contaminated military sites throughout Hawaii.(12)

The chemically toxic and radioactive material, used in testing and training on federal properties in the United States since the 1940’s, Uranium weapons have been used overseas in combat since at least 1991 in the first Gulf War. When a weapon containing DU is fired, a fine aerosol of ceramic uranium oxide is formed. Most particles are less than 10 microns in size and are easily inhaled into the lungs.

The majority of DU is insoluble and can remain inside the body for decades. Once lodged inside the lungs, DU slowly spreads, primarily into the lymph nodes and bone. The excretion of these particles from the body is a very slow process.

The use of Uranium-238, the primary component of DU munitions, is particularly hazardous for use in combat and military training because fine particles can be spread by the wind and are readily re-suspended. Disturbances of contaminated soils can occur through movement of military vehicles as well as bombs dropped from the sky that hit the ground with tremendous impact. This can cause the transport of invisible Uranium oxide aerosols throughout the environment.

Metallic particles smaller than 5 microns in size are so light as to remain suspended in the atmosphere, contaminating the environment through the wind and precipitation for billions of years into the future. When fired, some of the Uranium becomes nano-sized particles a billionth of a meter in size. Smaller than microns, these Uranium particles act like a gas. The radioactive alpha nanoparticles can cross the lung-blood barrier and can impact cells up to six cells away.(13)

With regard to concern for health effects of the bombing of contaminated soils, Malu Aina spokesperson Albertini stated, “This, along with other training at PTA, is an outrage given the presence of Depleted Uranium (DU) confirmed at PTA. The full extent of the contamination is not yet known but the military is taking action that risks spreading the stuff around. It shows the complete disregard for the health and safety of Hawaii residents and the military people who train on the ground there.”

Malu Aina is asking the military to install monitors around range impact areas with live data available on-line for public viewing.(14) In addition, citizens are requesting that the military provide testing for Uranium exposure of military personnel and civilians who believe they may have been exposed to Depleted Uranium on any of the toxic sites across the Hawaiian Islands.(15)

With a history of military presence going back to the 19th century, discoveries of toxic and radioactive contaminants on Hawaii’s 161 military installations are expected to continue.(16) Hawaiians, in ever increasing numbers, are calling for the demilitarization of their state. In particular, concerned citizens are demanding the immediate end to military training exercises which spread toxic and radioactive contamination for residents and visitors and the unique, fragile, and sensitive tropical Hawaiian ecosystems.(17)

Despite these concerns, 161 military installations in Hawaii have received ongoing and enthusiastic support and funding from US Congress for military testing and training operations in a wide number of chemical, radiological(18) and biological weapons on several islands in the Aloha state.(19)

Ten years before B-2s began dropping bombs on the Big Island of Hawaii, current Chairman of the US Senate Subcommittee on Defense, US Senator Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, had appealed for funding of the B-2 stealth bombing on April 14, 1997, stating, “I believe the B-2 is the most vital weapon of our future.”

Senator Inouye had defended the stealth bombing system well in advance of welcoming the bomb drops in his state, maintaining that, “there is a need for the B-2 bombings: It is a long-range-strike aircraft, capable of reaching anywhere in the world and releasing highly sophisticated, explosive weapons.” Furthermore, Sen. Inouye had remarked, “It is the only system that is capable of operating beyond the range of weapons of mass destruction.”(20)

Further information can be obtained by contacting DMZ Hawaii/Aloha Aina
info@ dmzhawaii.org or Malu Aina at ja@interpac.net.

Resources
http://
(1)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-7095987,00.html

(2) http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Aug/21/ln/hawaii708210343.html/?print=on
(3)
http://starbulletin.com/2007/09/23/news/story04.html
(4)
http://www.25idl.army.mil/pressrelease/20071201.pdf
(5)
http://www.haleakalatimes.com/story2737.aspx
(6)
http://www.bandepleteduranium.org/en/a/82.html
(7)
http://www.politicsfromtheheart.com/2007/06/global-nuclear-cover-up-earnest_01.html
(8)
http://www.haleakalatimes.com/story2737.aspx
(9)
http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/davyc.aspx
(10)
http://www.umrc.net/du_and_ndu.aspx
(11)
http://www.hpa.org.uk/radiation/faq/du/du2.htm
(12)
http://www.nohohewa.com/map/
(13)
http://www.uraniumconference.org/dok/Bertell%2006.pdf
(14)
http://maluaina888.blogspot.com/
(16)
http://www.dmzhawaii.org/ overview_military_in_hawaii.pdf
(17)
http://maluaina888.blogspot.com/2007/12/press-release-on-b-2-bombing-of.html
(18)
http://www.dmzhawaii.org/overview_military_in_hawaii.pdf
(19)
http://starbulletin.com/2002/10/09/news/story1.html
(20)
http:// www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/report/1997/970414-cr.htm

see also:
Island Breath: DU found at Pohakuloa Range 8/21/07
Island Breath: Navy Expansion Plan for PMRF 8/7/07

Island Breath: Militarism in Hawaii 5/ 17/07


Pau
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