What Are You Going to Do About U.S. Bases?
The Indo-Pacific
Bottlenose Dolphins (114 left as of last count in 2009) used to swim around Jeju
Island, South Korea every
day but since the
Navy base construction in Gangjeong village has polluted the water so badly the
dolphins now avoid the area.
My Op-Ed about our recent VFP trip to
Jeju Island and Okinawa was printed in the Opinion section of our local
newspaper today. The Times Record editor though decided
he didn't want people to read one paragraph (see it below in red) and took it
out before publishing the piece in the paper and at their web site. I forwarded
evidence from American University Professor David Vine that the U.S.
has 1,000 bases around the world so I was even low-balling the numbers with my
figure of 800 bases. It really burns me up to have those who tout 'freedom of
the press' censor words that they feel might 'dishonor our troops' - especially
in a piece on the 'Opinion' page that is giving voice to people all over the
world who suffer from US bases..
Op-Ed
Imagine building a set of twin military runways out
into a pristine bay among the beautiful coral reefs and endangered sea mammals
(dugong). Imagine 3.5 million 10-ton dump truck loads of landfill being dumped
into the bay to build the runways. Imagine the howls of protests if this was
being done here in Maine.
This story is real, and the plan is to do this on
Okinawa at Oura Bay in order to build a new US Marine airfield. Few in America
have heard about this calamity, but for more than 450 days people in Okinawa
have been protesting by blocking the gates of a US Marine base called Camp
Schwab.
In early December I co-led a national Veterans For
Peace (VFP) delegation to Jeju Island, South Korea where a new Navy base is
being built that will port US warships – including the Aegis destroyers built at
BIW. Twelve members of VFP went on the
trip – three of us from Maine. For the
first week we sat with Gangjeong villagers on Jeju Island blocking the
construction gate only to be picked up and carried out of the way by police
several times each day.
During the second week of the trip our VFP delegation
traveled to Okinawa where the US today has 30 bases. One out of every four
Okinawans was killed during the American “liberation” of the island from the
Japanese in 1945. We’ve had bases there ever since. At two museums we visited I
was astonished to see that since 1953 there have been regular protests against
our bases.
On three occasions we went to the gates of Camp Schwab
in order to join the daily human blockades. Most of the people being dragged off
by Japanese police for sitting in the road were senior citizens. The women were
particularly amazing as they held on to one another and cried aloud demanding
that this environmental catastrophe be stopped.
The VFP delegation met with the mayors of two Okinawan
cities that will be directly impacted by the new Marine airfield. One evening we
were invited to attend an event inside a huge auditorium that drew 1,300 people.
At this convocation Okinawan Governor Takeshi Onaga and other leading politicians spoke out
in opposition to the construction of the controversial runway. Gov. Onaga has
pulled the airfield construction permit, but the right-wing government in Tokyo,
which controls Okinawa, overruled him under the clear direction of US Ambassador
Caroline Kennedy (she has repeatedly told the Okinawan people to get over it).
Gov. Onaga has gone to the Japanese Supreme Court seeking a ruling that respects
their local autonomy. In fact, 80% of the people of Okinawa oppose the new
Marine airfield.
The Pentagon
today has more than 800 military bases scattered around the world. It’s well
known that due to the rapes, drinking and violence toward the host people, US
troops are not wanted in most of these places.
As the Obama administration ‘pivots’ 60% of US
military forces into the Asia-Pacific region in order to ‘control’ China, people
in Okinawa and South Korea understand they are key targets if and when a war
breaks out between Washington and Beijing.
Not only is a looming war causing such active
resistance today, it is the US’s utter disregard for local sovereignty and
democracy that inflames people against Washington. The bases being built on Jeju
Island and in Okinawa are environmental nightmares. The people are watching
their life source – the ocean where their food and livelihood comes from – being
torn apart to satisfy the Pentagon’s demand for ‘one more
base.’
When our VFP delegation left both of these islands the
people asked us the same questions: What are you going to do when you go
home? When are the American people going
to stand up and stop this madness that is killing our environment, our culture,
and our peaceful way of life?
On Sunday, February 7 PeaceWorks will host my talk
about these trips at the Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick, Maine at 4:00 pm.
The public is invited.
~ Bruce
K. Gagnon lives in Bath and is a member of PeaceWorks and Veterans For Peace
|
Global
Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 652
Brunswick, ME 04011
(207) 443-9502
http://www.space4peace.org
http://space4peace.blogspot.com (blog)
Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth. - Henry David Thoreau
PO Box 652
Brunswick, ME 04011
(207) 443-9502
http://www.space4peace.org
http://space4peace.blogspot.com (blog)
Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth. - Henry David Thoreau
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