United States Militarism,
Global Instability and
Environmental Destruction
Richard
Wilcox
December,
2003
i. Cover page p.
ii.
Index p.
1.
Introduction p.
2.
The U.S. imperial alliance system p.
2.1
Socio-political background p.
2.2
Economic genocide
p.
2.3
Murdering the body politic p.
2.4
Building empire
p.
2.5
Social impacts
p.
2.6
Spreading like cancer
p.
3.
Environmental impacts: The case of Japan p.
3.1
Political background
p.
3.2
Okinawa: 'A great stationary aircraft carrier' p.
3.3
Depleted uranium
p.
3.4
Ui Jun, fighter for environmental justice p.
3.5
No nukes! p.
3.6 Making
noise p.
4.
Environmental impacts in the U.S. and abroad p.
4.1
Toxic pollution
p.
4.2
Undermining environmental protection laws p.
4.3
Depleted uranium
p.
4.4
Undermining global security p.
4.5 Toward
omnicide p.
5.
Conclusion p.
6.
References p.
1. Introduction
Everything worth saying about the American way of life I could put in
thirty
pages. Topographically the country is magnificent and terrifying. Why
terrifying? Because nowhere else in the world is the divorce between man
and nature so complete...To call this a society of free peoples is
blasphemous. What have we to offer the world beside the superabundant
loot which we recklessly plunder from the earth under the maniacal
delusion
that this insane activity represents progress and enlightenment?
--
Henry Miller, The Air-Conditioned
Nightmare (Miller, 2003)
oderint dum metuant: Let them hate so long as
they fear.
--
Roman emperor, Caligula (Parry, 2003)
We
will export death and violence to the four corners of the Earth in
defense of our great nation.
--
U.S. President George W. Bush, post 9/11
(Pfaff, 2003)
This paper will employ the concept of militarism in the
broadest sense. At the time of writing, the U.S. is not directly under military
control and is nominally under civilian rule. However, extensive military
operations are integral to the operations of empire, Pax Americana. Global
instability refers to many areas in the social and natural worlds that are
affected by the military empire. Environmental destruction will be
treated as the major and culminating theme of this paper since without a
thriving habitat, Homo sapiens will cease to exist.
2. The US imperial alliance system
The US imperial alliance system embodies the reign of terror,
genocide, plunder, and destruction
that began with Europe's conquest of the world 500 year ago. The system consists of the United
States at the hub of military and economic power. The
G7 nations fulfill the crucial role in the empire as the first
tier countries supported by the lesser rich OECD (Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development) countries at the second tier. Dictatorships in the
Third World help to insure U.S. hegemony by crushing domestic opposition. The
UN Security Council members of Russia, China, the United Kingdom and France now
support Pax Americana to varying degrees. The military alliances of NATO (North
Atlantic Treaty Organization) in Europe and AMPO (U.S.-Japan alliance) in East
Asia are crucial to U.S. military expansionism. Other ruling class mechanisms
include: the Bretton Woods institutions including the International Monetary
Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade Organization; the Trilateral
Commission; the Business Roundtable; the World Economic Forum, and numerous
other rich men's clubs. Elite lobbying groups play an increasingly powerful
role in controlling the U.S. congress these days while an array of
mega-corporations--whose assets tower over the collected wealth of most of the
world's countries--have a large role in constructing U.S. policies for their
own benefit.
2.1. Socio-political background
While the terrorism which is carried out by non state actors and
military dictatorships is treated with constant attention by the mainstream
media, terrorism's victims are small compared to the millions of people who die
from preventable hunger, disease and state sponsored war.
While unbelievably horrible in both their nature and scale, the attacks
on
September 11th were foreseeable, and, in many ways, inevitable-the
result
of
deepening structures and cultures of violence and increasing acts of
violence in nearly all parts of the world. The association which many
people
have between these trends and the practices and policies of the United
States' economic, political and military power made the choosing of the
United States as the target of these attacks something which many had
long
predicted, and warned of. U.S. economic, political and military policies
since
World War II have resulted in the impoverishment, marginalisation, and
devastation of hundreds of millions of people world-wide
(Brand-Jacobsen,
2001).
The socio-economic policy that causes millions of preventable deaths every
year is consciously constructed by the institutions of the U.S.
imperial alliance
system. This system is terrorism writ large, but it is not called
so by the corporate media.
2.2 Economic genocide
Chossudovsky (1997) notes that IMF/World Bank reform and structural
adjustment policy is 'Economic genocide...carried out through the conscious and
deliberate manipulation of market forces,' whose social impact is more
devastating than 'forced labour and slavery' (p. 37).
Chossudovsky documents U.S. foreign economic policy which pursues:
social polarization and concentration of wealth; intensification of the cheap
labor economy and financial instability in under developed and developing
countries; intensifying the process of turning the private debts of wealthy
corporations into public debt in the Third World; Third Worldization of the
former Soviet bloc countries; using debt as a mechanism for imposing structural
adjustment; structural adjustment as a means to transform and privatize the
common wealth into corporate profits; imposing fiscal crises upon states
thereby destroying national economies; spurring a global economic crisis;
'dollarising prices,' thus forcing global prices to rise even in poor
countries; manipulating statistics on poverty to diminish its perceived
severity, for example, by siting 'medium income' as a reliable indicator of a
nation's economic health; and destroying national currencies (pp. 16-43).
Another aspect of economic genocide is the funding for so-called Third
World development. Blum (1995) shows in his chart, 'This is How the Money Goes
Round' (pp., 442-3) the conduit by which funding flowed during the Cold War to
insure hegemony. Starting with the CIA, money is dispersed through a number of
foundations, funds and trusts. From there money goes to prominent
U.S. think tanks, research institutes and aid foundations. The money is then
dispersed further into smaller organizations in specific geographic locations
where it is finally dispersed to journalists, writers, educators, students,
lawyers, and research, labor and university receptacles. These funds are
nominally used to improve living standards, but in fact work to increase
corporate profits while destroying ancient cultures and inflicting poverty on
vast numbers of people (Sachs, 1992).
2.3 Murdering the body politic
Far from bringing freedom and democracy to the down-trodden masses of
the world, Blum's classic work, Rogue State (2000), outlines U.S.
strategies which include but are not limited to: training terrorists;
assassinating democratically elected leaders; training foreign military and
police units in the arts of controlling unruly civilian populations through use
of torture and terror; hiring war criminals to spread aforementioned tactics;
giving haven to terrorists; supporting dictators and mass murderers in the
Third World; employing a massive array of weaponry, including mini-nukes,
depleted uranium tipped missiles, cluster bombs, and chemical and biological
weapons (CBWs); and the encouragement of the use of CBWs by other nations.
Other tactics have included innumerable direct military interventions abroad;
the perverting of elections; using 'trojan horse' aid agencies as a guise to
control domestic policies in foreign countries; the undermining and
manipulation of the U.N.; an elaborate high tech global surveillance system;
'kidnapping and looting' when appropriate; aiding the South African apartheid
regime; CIA money-making through global illegal drug sales; and controlling the
media and avoiding accountability (pp. 38-214).
Grossman (2001) provides a list of 134 U.S. military actions from 1890
to 2001, most of which took place in foreign countries but also domestically.
The list does not include other military actions such as:
...demonstration duty by military police, mobilizations of the National
Guard,
offshore shows of naval strength, reinforcements of embassy personnel,
the
use of non-Defense Department personnel (such as the Drug Enforcement
Agency), military exercises, non-combat mobilizations (such as replacing
postal strikers), the permanent stationing of armed forces, covert
actions
where the U.S. did not play a command and control role, the use of small
hostage rescue units, most uses of proxy troops, U.S. piloting of
foreign
warplanes, foreign disaster assistance, military training and advisory
programs not involving direct combat, civic action programs, and many
other
military activities.
In
the chart, 'The Sun and its planets: Countries using torture on an
administrative basis in the 1970's, with their parent-client affiliations,'
Chomsky & Herman (1979) document U.S. influence on 26 countries where funds
and military training were used to employ torture against political opponents
and prisoners. This compared with nine other countries including the Soviet
Union who employed torture on an administrative basis who were outside the U.S.
sphere of political influence.
Gerson & Birchard found that during the Cold War the U.S. was
involved in 'more than 200...military interventions in the Third World' (p.
12). Most of the intervention had little to do with fighting communism but was
mainly devoted to protecting U.S. corporate interests and crushing movements
toward political and economic independence (Chomsky, 1991).
Parenti (1995) states that the true nature of U.S. interventionism is a
desire to preserve the 'politico-economic domination and the capital
accumulation system' and at any time attack the 'designated 'enemy' [of the
U.S. which] can be a reformist, populist, military government...a Christian
socialist government...a social democracy...a Marxist-Leninist government...an
Islamic revolutionary order...or even a conservative military regime' (p. 39).
The permanent U.S. concern about ruthless adversaries is mainly a ruse
used to serve U.S. imperial goals. Enemies, either real, imagined, potential or
supported and
created by the U.S. itself, are crucial for justifying the
military system to public taxpayers. Given that the U.S. has consistently
opposed and undermined international treaties aimed at reducing or abolishing
conventional, chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, the latest 'war on
terror' against an 'evil axis' of formidable enemies, be they communists, drug
traffickers, Islamic fundamentalists
or marijuana smoking tree huggers, rings hollow indeed (Chomsky, 2001).
2.4 Building empire
Today, U.S. military and corporate power is unrivaled in the
history of the world
(Petras & Veltmeyer, 2001). U.S. military power is expanding
it's permanent bases to every region of the planet in order to secure crucial
natural resources such as fossil
fuels and oil. Every new war carried out by the U.S. is accompanied by a spate
of military base building as seen recently in South America, Eastern Europe and
Central Asia (Blum, 2002). As of September 30, 2002, the U.S. officially
acknowledged the existence of 703 'foreign military enclaves' (Johnson, 2003).
Gerson & Birchard (1991) present an authoritative study on
military bases. After the end of WWII, the U.S. began a 45 year build up of
half a million troops and 375 major foreign military bases around the world (p.
3). That trend changed at the end of the Cold War and saw some troop and base
reductions for a time, such as the withdrawal of bases from the Philippines.
However, the potential peace dividend with the end of the Cold War did not
occur after it became clear that the Cold War itself was mainly a ruse to
insure U.S. hegemony under the pretext of fighting communism. One of the
purposes of the 1991 Gulf War was to reaffirm the global U.S. military
presence, especially in the Middle East. After the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks, any lingering trend toward reducing overseas military presence has been
reversed.
As
of 1989 there were 525,000 U.S. troops stationed abroad with nearly half of
them in Western Germany. In Japan there were 48,000 troops and in South Korea,
44,000, thus, a strong U.S. presence had been maintained long after the end of
World War II (p. 6). By comparison to U.S. bases and their personnel during the
Cold War, in 1989, the 'Soviet Union had 627,000 troops deployed in 19 nations'
with more than half of them in East Germany (p. 9).
The actual number of U.S. military bases in the world is hard to
calculate with precision since they continue to grow in number, and in some
cases the functions of various institutions are ambiguous. As of 1993, a
conservative estimate for major bases (not including various smaller
installations placed in the area of a main base)
was 375 while one exhaustive study found the U.S.'s 'global
nuclear infrastructure'
contained 'more than 1,500...facilities involved in preparations
for nuclear war'
(Gerson & Birchard, p. 8).
In
addition, there are innumerable ports and airfields as well as air space which
the U.S. military regularly accesses. Wilkinson (2001) reports that:
a
great deal of Japan's airspace is controlled by the US military, and
Japanese civilian aircraft have to adjust their flights to fit the
complex
pattern of corridors surrounding the different bases and airports...the
airspace above Japan can be considered a separate 'invisible US base.'
In
1996 and 1997 alone, according to Japan's major pilot union, there were
105
instances where military jets activated the collision avoidance systems
of
civilian airliners. In 1998, the Ministry of Transport finally got
around to
sending a note to the US military command in Japan indicating its concern,
but nothing has changed.
2.5 Social impacts
Gerson & Birchard (1991) provides a broader perspective to this
usurpation of sovereignty:
Numbers [of bases fails] to communicate the deeper meanings of foreign
military bases...[which] bring insecurity; the loss of self
determination,
human rights, and sovereignty; as well as the degradation of the
culture,
values, health, and environment of host nations. Foreign military bases
are
designed to integrate host nations into U.S. military strategies and
structures...While the toll of U.S. bases on the people and societies of
host
nations is more immediately visible than its toll on the people of the
United
States, there are many similarities. Military bases corrupt what remains
of
our national commitment to democratic values, and they alienate us from
people with whom we share the planet. Military forces endanger our lives
by
increasing the likelihood that conflicts will escalate into wars, and they
drain
our national economic, ecological, and spiritual resources' (9 -10).
The training of troops at foreign bases cause can cause severe
disruption to local
residents in the vicinity of bases due to noise, air, water and
land pollution, and from danger by accidents from fighter jets and other
activities. Johnson (2003) notes:
Stationing several thousand eighteen-to-twenty-four year-old American
youths in cultures that are foreign to them and about which they are
utterly
ignorant is a recipe for the endless series of 'incidents' plaguing
nations
that have accepted U.S. bases...[furthermore] All servicemen in Okinawa
know that if after committing a rape, a robbery, or an assault, they can
make it back to the base before the police catch them, they will be free
until
indicted even though there is a Japanese arrest warrant out for their
capture.
An
age-old symptom of the social degradation surrounding military bases is
prostitution. 'The town of Olongapo next to the U.S. base at Subic Bay was
devoted entirely to 'rest and recreation' for U.S. troops and housed more than
fifty thousand prostitutes' ('US military bases,' 2002). The behavior of off
duty troops stationed at bases can have devastating consequences, such as the
legacy of criminal acts committed by soldiers against civilians in Okinawa,
Japan. In the 1995 case of three U.S. marines who were found guilty of raping a
twelve year old girl, the soldiers were only arrested and turned over to the
Japanese police after public outrage. At the time, a U.S. Admiral familiar with
the case told the press 'I think that [the rape] was absolutely stupid. For the
price they paid to rent the car, they could have had a girl.' In other words,
while rape is deemed unacceptable, prostitution is considered by many in the
military, including top brass, to be standard operating procedure.
Okinawa Women Act Against Military Violence, were not [reacting]... just
in
response to this single rape, brutal though it was. Between 1972 and
1995,
U.S. servicemen were implicated in 4,716 crimes, nearly one per day,..
The Japan-U.S. agreement that governs the Okinawa base allows U.S.
authorities to refuse Japanese requests for military suspects, and few
indeed
have suffered any
inconvenience for their crimes ('US military bases,' 2002).
Johnson (2003) cites the opinions of two SoFA experts, 'Most SOFAs are
written so that national courts cannot exercise legal jurisdiction over U.S.
military personnel who commit crimes against local people, except in special
cases where the U.S. military authorities agree to transfer jurisdiction.'
2.6 Spreading like cancer
Today, the U.S.
International Military Education and Training program (IMET) offers US military
and police aid to 26 countries in the Western hemisphere alone.
International Military Education and Training (IMET) pays for the
training or
education of foreign military and a limited number of civilian
personnel. IMET
grants
are given to foreign governments, which choose the courses their
personnel will attend...IMET funding for Latin America was used to send
students
to approximately 150 U.S. military training institutions throughout
the
United States. A wide variety of courses for U.S. personnel Ð some 2,000,
including topics ranging from counterintelligence to helicopter repair
to
military
justice systems Ð qualify for IMET funding' (International Military
Education and Training, 2003).
Lumpe (2002) found that over the past decade 'the U.S. has interacted
with almost all governments in the world' while training foreign militaries at
a rate of 'approximately 100,000 foreign soldiers annually... This training
takes place in at least 150 institutions within the U.S. and in 180 countries
around the world.'
IMET is a key institution that has partially justified its mission
based on strengthening human rights and democracy. 'In truth, most of the
programs have had no discernible focus on human rights and have been carried
out in a highly, if not completely, unaccountable manner.'
While it is well known that the CIA is actively meddling in the
affairs of foreign countries, it is perhaps surprising that a domestic U.S.
police agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is active abroad in
the FBI's Office of International Operations ('Federal Bureau,' 2003). As of
2003, pending congressional approval for funding, new FBI offices are to 'be
established in Sarajevo, Bosnia; Jakarta, Indonesia; Tashkent, Uzbekistan;
Kabul, Afghanistan, and Belgrade, Serbia. Existing offices would be expanded in
Ottawa, Seoul, London, Berlin and Moscow," the FBI has reported. Justified
by the war on terror there may soon be about 250 FBI personnel and agents
'stationed at 46 locations around the world.'
Monthly
Review (2002) recently provided an informative essay on the U.S. military
base issue. Despite an immediate decrease in deployments directly after the
WWII, the following quotes illustrate that the creation of U.S. military bases
abroad have steadily increased in number and global scope of operations. The
Monthly Review reported that:
1)
The United States emerged from the Second World War with the most
extensive system of military bases that the world had ever seen...at the
end
of
the Second World War consisted of over thirty thousand installations
located at two thousand base sites residing in around one hundred
countries
and areas...
2)
Many current U.S. bases were acquired in...the Second World War, the
Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and the war in Afghanistan.
U.S. military bases in Okinawa, formally part of Japan, are a legacy of
the
U.S. occupation of Japan during the Second World War.
3)
Like all empires, the United States has been extremely reluctant to
relinquish any base once acquired.
4)
Bases obtained in one war are seen as forward deployment positions for
some future war.
5)
The majority of U.S. bases were justified as... 'containing' Communism.
Yet, upon the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States sought to
retain its entire basing system on the grounds that this was necessary
for
the global projection of its power and the protection of U.S. interests
abroad.
6)
Although the Clinton administration was to insist more strongly than the
Bush administration that preceded it on the need to diminish U.S.
foreign
military commitments, no attempt was made to decrease the U.S. 'forward
presence' abroad represented by its far-flung military bases. The main
shift
rather was to reduce the number of troops permanently stationed overseas
by
deploying troops more frequently but for shorter stays...bases were to be
used
for pre-positioning equipment for purposes of rapid deployment.
7)
On any given day before September 11, according to the Defense
Department, more than 60,000 military personnel were conducting
temporary operations and exercises in about 100 countries.
8)
According to the Defense Department's Base Structure Report, 2001, the
United States currently has overseas military installations in
thirty-eight
countries and separate territories.
9)
Since September 11, the United States has set up military bases housing
sixty thousand troops in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan,
and
Tajikistan, along with Kuwait, Qatar, Turkey, and Bulgaria. Also crucial
in the
operation is the major U.S. naval base at Diego Garcia in the Indian
Ocean.
10) All told, the United States now has overseas military bases in
almost sixty
countries and separate territories.
11) In some ways this number may even be deceptively low. All issues of
jurisdiction and authority with respect to bases in host countries are
spelled
out in...status of forces agreements. During the Cold War years these
were
normally public documents, but are now often classified as secretÑfor
example, those with Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, and in
certain
respects Saudi Arabia. According to Pentagon records, the United States
now
has formal agreements of this kind with ninety-three countries.
In
other words, between actual bases, the ability to move from one base into
another country (forward bases) and the penetration of international air spaces
and agreements with foreign militaries and police forces, the U.S. military is
almost global in expanse. Other important aspects of the global presence are
the encirclement of Russia and China; the use of bases to secure valuable
fossil fuel pipelines in areas such as Central Asia; the intrusion on the sovereignty of host nations such as
Japan where joint military exercises enmesh the host into the U.S. empire; the
use of bases as an extra political threat to countries who dare to 'chart an
independent course that is perceived as threatening U.S. interests...There can
be no doubt, therefore, that the last remaining superpower is presently on a
course of imperial expansion, as a means of promoting its political and
economic interests...'
3. Environmental impacts: The case of Japan
3.1 Political background
Japan is the junior partner in the U.S. imperial alliance system. In
2001, Japan was fourth in the world in military spending ($38.5 billion) behind
the US ($280 billion),
Russia ($43.9 billion) and France ($40 billion) ('World military
marketplace,' 2002).
Kan (2002) warns that 'Under the Koizumi Administration, Japan is
advancing headlong on a course toward militarization.' Given Japan's
astonishing record of war crimes in the past century, the present trend is
frightening, as the U.S. nurtures those elements of indigenous fascism in the
ultra right wing conservatives who govern the country. The 'headlong' plunge
into another century of bloodbaths is not an act of madmen; rather, it is a
carefully calculated plan of action which began after the end of WWII. After
patiently bidding their time and whittling away at Japan's post war peace culture,
Japan's rulers today seek: to 'activate military powers without restraint';
'the preparation of the legal, political, social background for ensuring'
remilitarization; to create 'social systems to punish, expel, and retaliate
against opposition, resistance, and obstructive groups within and without
Japan.' The recent policy of the U.S. of carrying out preemptive strikes
against states (such as Afghanistan and Iraq) who it deems as potential threats
bolsters Japan's plan 'to propagate the ideology that it is 'just' to eradicate
the 'enemies' of war, national security and the nation state.'
The re-militarization policy includes legislation that has been passed
by the Japanese Diet since the mid-1990s: 'revision of the Defense Guideline
for the Japan-U.S Security Treaty; the Law for Military Emergencies in Areas
Surrounding Japan, passed in August 1999; the Anti-Organized Crime Law, The
Basic Resident Register Law; and the National Flag and Anthem Law.' All of
these laws represent a strengthening of state power and a diminishing of civil
liberties. According the the Japan Communist Party newspaper, the November
election of the right-wing Liberal Democratic Party (which has held power for
the last fifty years with almost no interuption) and the slightly less hawkish
Democratic Party of Japan, will hasten the decline of Japan's vaunted social
safety net while plunging the nation into an uncontrolled arms race. The JCP
notes that while the two parties are presented to the public as opposition
parties, in fact, both parties are strongly supported by
Keidanren, Japan's most powerful
association of business elites. The JCP has been one of the few parties to warn
against sending American and Japanese troops to Iraq, stating that the U.S. war
in Iraq is an 'aggression' and that 'If Japan dispatches SDF [troops] to Iraq,
Japan will be dragged into hell' ('War of aggression,' 2003; 'Who is [the]
defender,' 2003).
A
crucial step toward remilitarization is to revise Japan's peace constitution
and once and for all rid itself of the pesky 'Article 9' which prohibits
Japan's involvement in international war making. Article 9 unambiguously
states: 'The Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the
nation...Land, sea, and air forces, as well as other war potential, will never
be maintained.' However, beginning as far back as 1951, the clause has steadily
been eroded by military spending that exceeded reasonable requirements for
defense.
Today, Japan has 240,000 men and woman under arms. Having spent
nearly $50-billion (U.S.) a year on defense for each of the past five
years,
Japan has a force, at least in terms of funding, second only to the U.S.
(Russia can no longer afford a modern military). Yet Japan does all this
While preserving a constitution that states: 'The right of belligerency
of the
state will not be recognized' (Victoria, 2003).
Japan's chief cabinet secretary in the Koizumi administration, Fukuda
Yasuo, has even called for Japan to rethink it's stance on nuclear weapons and
consider adopting a nuclear arsenal. (Victoria). Tokyo's right wing Governor,
Shintaro Ishihara is also well known for his racist and militaristic comments
but continues to gain support from the public due to their widespread ignorance
on foreign affairs and the largely manufactured threats from China and North
Korea. For example,
Naoyuki Agawa, the minister for public affairs and director of the
Japan
Information and Culture Center at the Embassy of Japan, publicly endorsed
the concept of "regime change" in North Korea as
"ultimately the solution"
for the nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula' (Shorrock, 2003).
Shorrock cites Korean affairs expert, John Feffer, who believes that
"The specter of a North Korean attack is the only thing that can uproot
Japan's deeply seeded pacifism.' Thus, there are no immediate plans to restrict
the activities of the U.S. military stationed in Japan which is thought of as a
protector from the hordes of marauding Asian's who are surely ready to descend
upon Japan's pristine shores from the mainland. The fact that North Korea
admitted to (and publicly apologized for) kidnapping several people from Japan
in the 1970s is repeated ad nauseam by the media to prove the North Korean's
inherent devilishness.
On
the other hand, the details by which Japan enslaved and killed several million
Koreans and other Asians during the Pacific War, an atrocity which rivals any
in human history in its level of barbarity, are not well known or are ignored
by most Japanese (Seagrave & Seagrave, 2003; Asano, 2003). The hypocrisy is
jaw dropping.
3.2 Okinawa: 'a great stationary aircraft carrier'
Dower (2003), the authoritative historian of World War II in the Pacific
region
notes:
Okinawa and South Korea are instructive...reminders that where
security
concerns were paramount from the start, the United States turned its
back
on
serious "democratization" of the sort initially introduced to the
greater
part of Japan. Coveted by military strategists as a great stationary
aircraft
carrier off the coast of Asia, Okinawa, Japan's southernmost prefecture,
was
immediately turned into an enormous U.S. military installation. Although
the
occupation of Japan formally ended in April 1952, Okinawa remained a
U.S.
colony until the early 1970s, when sovereignty over it was returned to
Japan.
The sprawling, grotesque complex of U.S. bases remains.
For the fiscal year 2003, Japan paid the U.S. government about $6
billion toward the costs of stationing U.S. troops in Japan. According to the
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), 39,691 troops are stationed in Japan. In a
recent report, the DoD praises Japan's 'host-nation support' as being the most
generous of any allies. 'Japan pays more than the top 25 U.S. allies
combined...[and] 5.4 times what the second largest contributor, Germany, pays'
('Japan pays,' 2003). Not surprisingly, Okinawa has long been exploited by both
Americans and mainland Japanese. Okinawa is:
...a culturally heterogeneous part of the country that Japan forcibly
annexed
in
1879 and that has long been subject to official and popular discrimination
by
mainland people and authorities. The Japanese press refers to...base-
support payments as the omoiyari yosan (sympathy budget), meaning
sympathy for the poor Americans who cannot afford their expansive
foreign
policy. The SOFA covering American forces in Japan says that the United
States will cover all costs of the deployments (art. xxiv) but since
1978,
when the omoiyari yosan came into being, the Japanese government
has in
fact paid more than half. No other nation offers such lavish 'host
nation
support' to the United States (Johnson,
2003).
In
addition to the Cold War aspect of U.S. bases, Okinawa and the rest of the
South Pacific stretching from Guam to the Philippines have long offered U.S.
air and naval forces strategic positioning to protect natural resources
destined for U.S.
markets or to threaten and potential competitors. Gerson (1991)
found that U.S. bases in Guam just happen to occupy the 'locations of the best
farmland, fishing areas, and drinking water' (p. 19).
In
Japan, there are some 105, large and small, U.S. military installations. Since
at least 1986 the unfortunate inhabitants in the town Zushi, near Yokohama,
have been fighting the bilateral decision of the U.S. military and the Japanese
government to build a housing complex for military personnel and their
dependents in the Ikego forest, 'one of the few remaining areas of greenery in
the Tokyo-Yokohama megapolis' (p. 19). 'Construction of housing units for the
U.S. military at the Ikego district began in 1993. At that time the central
government reached an agreement with the city of Zushi...that there would be no
construction of additional...units' ('Mayor to quit,' 2003). In the last year
the government has decided to build additional housing for the U.S. military
claiming the new decision did not violate the 1993 agreement. The mayor of
Zushi however claims that the central government 'has snubbed my repeated
requests for a meeting with the agency chief in this matter.' That the majority
of citizens of Zushi oppose the housing units is of little
consequence to the central government who change the rules as it
suites them and ignore the concerns of democratically elected leaders.
In
another example of an environmental threat originating from the military, a
wildlife rich area targeted for use by the military was the case of Miyake
island. The island is known as a bird refuge, yet the military wanted to
convert it to a practice runway for night landings for fighter pilots. Only
after international outrage were the plans questioned and compromises worked
out (Gerson & Birchard, p. 20).
One of the major worries of residents living adjacent to U.S. bases is
the sheer amount of hazardous waste that is produced.
Because scientists in host nations have extremely limited access to U.S.
bases, it has been difficult to monitor the environmental destruction
they
cause...with the US military generating more than 400, 000 tons of
hazardous waste in the United States (much of it illegally), it should
come as
no
surprise that U.S. overseas bases are heavy polluters...Acids,
ammunition wastes, organic solvents, chemical warfare agents, industrial
sludge, and PCBs are released into the environment surrounding U.S.
bases.
These wastes 'migrate,' contaminating aquifers, poisoning soil, and
threatening human and animal life (p. 20).
In
addition to conventional pollution, there are nuclear blunders called 'broken
arrows' by the military. 'In 1968, a hydrogen bomb was lost over the side of
the USS Ticonderoga as the ship passed within 40 miles of Okinawa. The details
of the accident, and the fact that the pressure of the ocean probably destroyed
the bomb's casing and dispersed its radioactive plutonium, were kept a state
secret for more than 20 years' (20-21). One wonders how many other state
secrets have covered up accidents in addition to the already published blunders
which have contaminated our planet's oceans and skies.
3.3 Depleted uranium
The illegal testing of highly toxic and radioactive depleted uranium
(DU) munitions occurred in Okinawa prefecture in 1995 and 1996 when aircraft
fired 1,520 rounds of DU ammunition on an islands located to north of Okinawa
and to the
west of Kume Island ('Nuclear Policy,' 2003; Ui, 2003).
This was a violation of the Law for the Regulation of Nuclear Power in
Japan
...the Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not pass on this information to
the
prefectural government of Okinawa and the citizens of Okinawa prefecture
only learned about the problem through an article in the Washington
Times
(Ui, 2003).
The military first denied responsibility, ignoring the violation until
1997, and only then apologizing that 'they didn't see any threat to the
environment...[or] to people.' Later, only one percent of the discharged shells
were recovered in a sloppy clean up operation ('Nuclear Policy'). Shishin &
Wilkinson (2001) note the following occurrences from the year 2000:
Casings from DU shells were found in a private scrapyard in Okinawa; the
owner had bought the metal from the US military. US officials claimed at
the
time that the casings were not from the Torishima firing, but might have
come from shells used during the Gulf War...DU shells were still being
stored
at
Kadena, a major air base (and munition storage area) on
Okinawa...several Navy ships which dock at Yokosuka, a major naval base
near Tokyo, [were] equipped with guns, called 'Phalanxes,' that fire DU
shells.
The dangers to the environment in Torishima and elsewhere have not been
adequately addressed by the U.S. military or the Japanese government, in fact,
'The truth of this complicity might have remained hidden were it not for the
efforts of Japanese citizen groups working to eliminate DU weapons.'
Another aspect of the problem is that 'Japan may be very clearly, albeit
indirectly, linked to the production of [DU] weapons.' Japan is a major
producer of nuclear energy with about 50 power plants in operation. The U.S.
and France are two of the main countries who process enriched uranium to sell
to Japan. 'When the Japanese uranium is enriched' for use as fuel in nuclear
power plants, 'it leaves a residue of DU. This residue is not shipped back to
Japan, but is left in the country where the enrichment is done (Shishin &
Wilkinson, 2001).' Therefore, the
nuclear power industry in Japan is directly contributing to the accumulation of
DU residue. Some of Japan's DU residue may be manufactured into DU munitions by
the U.S. and France.
3.4 Ui Jun, fighter for environmental justice
The issue of environmental pollution and destruction caused by bases
should be seen within the broader context of the U.S. military's continued
efforts to exempt itself from environmental regulations in both the U.S. (see
chapter 4) and abroad. Okinawa offers a stark example of environmental racism
and class exploitation. This takes place due to the unequal alliance between
the United States and Japan, and with the complicity of Japanese elites who
benefit from the arrangement.
Since the 1970's, Ui Jun (2003) has been one of Japan's most well known
fighters against industrial pollution. I will refer to his recent report in
English which offers one of the most detailed studies available of
environmental problems at U.S. bases in Okinawa.
Ui
is one of the pioneers of the field of critical environmental science in Japan.
Both on Japan's main island of Honshu, where he delivered very popular
lectures to the general public from the engineering department at Tokyo
University (where he was never to gain tenure due to his exposing the dark side
of industrial society), and now for the last sixteen years in Okinawa where he
has worked with the Okinawa Environment Network (OEN). Ui was beckoned
to relocate in Okinawa because it held 'three of Japan's five most polluted
rivers' and his expertise was valued by anti-U.S. base citizen groups there
(Ui, 2003).
The U.S. military empire has not brought prosperity to Okinawa, Japan's
poorest prefecture. In fact, the 'worst water pollution' in Japan has been
caused by the military presence there (Ui). The U.S. military occupies 'some
23,700 hectares or 19 percent of the choicest territory of the main island'
(Johnson, 2003). Ui elaborates:
The overall picture is quite clear. Okinawa, which makes up just Ê0.6
per cent
of
Japan's land, contains more than 70 per cent of the U.S. military bases. If
the U.S. bases were spread out evenly, Okinawa would have more or less
0.6 per cent of them, but it has more than one hundred times that share.
The political economy of Okinawa is based on the money that the central
government of Japan receives from the U.S. for leasing lands in
Okinawa. Whenever a crisis emerges, such as the 1995 rape case (discussed
above), the government subdues outrage by pouring money into public works
projects. This solution serves the duel purpose in Okinawa of creating jobs
while politicians arrange sweetheart construction contracts with their friends
in the notorious Doken Kokka, the economically wasteful and
environmentally destructive 'construction state.' Throughout Japan, this system
primarily benefits Japan's top politicians, bureaucrats and construction
companies and organized crime syndicates, the yakuza (Kerr, 2001;
McCormack, 2002).
Not only is this an irresponsible way to deal with social problems
created by the presence of bases, but it leads to the destruction of Okinawa's
subtropical coral reefs and primeval forests. The huge construction projects
that are part of the 'compensation' are inappropriate for Okinawa's small,
fragile and unique environment.
Fighting the destructive 'development' projects which are direct consequences
of the political economy of the U.S. bases has consumed much of the time and
effort of anti base activists such as Ui and OEN.
Ui
complains that what happens on the bases themselves is a topic that has hardly
been dealt with. Only when environmental problems spill over the border of
bases onto communities can they not be ignored, such as 'when waste oil flows
outside a base as a result of accidents.' Decades after knowing about the
dangers of synthetic substances released into the environment, there is still a
dearth of data regarding the contamination of soils from U.S. bases. It seems
obvious that foot dragging, incompetence, indifference and a lack of courage on
the part of the Japanese government bears some blame since information has been
withheld that would have helped community activists address this problem. Ui
notes that the greater problem is the unequal relationship between the U.S.
military and the Japanese government, with the former having the upper hand.
The following points raised by Ui are worth noting in detail as they
highlight the political ecology of U.S. bases in Okinawa:
1) There is a dearth of data of 'what goes on at U.S. military
bases' and contamination of soils from 'high concentrations of harmful
substances including mercury, cadmium, arsenic and PCBs.'
2) Large amounts of unused munitions were abandoned in the forest
surrounding the Fukuchi Dam where U.S. armed forces have run training
exercises. 'The dam provides most of the water to the main island of Okinawa.'
To what extent toxic effluents from munitions may have reached the general
population's drinking water is unclear. What is clear is the profound
disregard for the Okinawan
people's public health by the U.S. military and the Japanese government.
3) Ui notes that researching polluted sites takes 'high-level
experience in sample taking' and access to the appropriate maps in order to
determine whether bases that have been returned to the government of Okinawa
are contaminated or not.ÊHowever, the U.S. military has not provided such
assistance, making it very difficult for researchers to locate contaminated
sites. The reason is simple: 'Regarding the return of land that has been
polluted, Paragraph 1 of Article 4 of the Status of the United States Armed
Forces Agreement clearly states that the responsibility for the reestablishment
of status quo ante does not lie with the United States...Article 4 as a whole
is utterly unilateral and no doubt disadvantageous for Japan.'
4) 'In cases where there is pollution, the Japanese government is
burdened with the fees for its removal, and it already knows that removing
pollution and restoring the land is no easy task from its experience with
environmental pollution. If it does not admit the damage or underestimates it,'
then the Ministry of Foreign Affairs can save money on budget expenditures.
5) Though 'The Communist Party took a leading part in conducting
empirical research on the problems of the Japan-U.S. Security Treaty Status
Agreement which was published in A Point by Point Critique of the Japan-U.S.
Status Agreement...there is little mention of pollution in the analysis of Article
4.' Ui considered this to be an unfortunate oversight in the process.
Ê
6) The published joint statement of "Environmental
Principles" agreed upon by the U.S. and Japan was not included in
Okinawa's Basic Environmental Regulations in 1999. Amazingly, the Bureau for
the Environment and the Council for the Environment didn't know of the joint
statement. An Okinawan environmental law which does not address U.S. military
pollution is like passing a law to prohibit
larceny without including punishment for robbers!
7) 'The Official Announcement of the 1973 Japanese-American Joint
Council Agreement on the Environment' was kept unpublished for thirty years by
the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Had that document been available to
Japanese scientists it 'would have been possible to request for inspections and
publication of the results, and...[to obtain] samples' to measure contamination
at U.S. bases. Whether this document was kept secret intentionally, or, as Ui
characterizes it, due to a 'lack of sense of responsibility' on the part of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the appalling results are the same.
8) For the purpose of comparing experiences, OEN is holding
workshops with
NGOs from the Philippines, Vietnam and South Korea. Currently
South Korea suffers under the unequal status agreement similar to Japan's,
while the Philippines is hosting a renewed U.S. military presence after a
respite in the 1990s after having closed down of bases there. This type of
networking is important for understanding the political ecology of the bases.
For example, Ui reported that 'the defoliant Agent Orange containing dioxin
that had caused huge problems during the Vietnam War had been transported from
Okinawa and had caused serious injuries to both the Vietnamese people who were
sprayed with it and the American soldiers who had carried out the spraying.
Depending on where and how the defoliant was stored in Okinawa, there is a
possibility of strong dioxin pollution existing today.'
9) The sad fact is that Japan's ruling parties are perfectly happy
to host U.S. military bases since this serves their interests, even while
harming the public welfare. Although a 'renegotiation of the unequal and
unilateral status agreement was strongly demanded within Japan, among the Foreign
Ministers and bureaucrats of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs only former
Foreign Minister Tanaka Makiko responded that she would look into the matter.'
Ms. Tanaka was booted out of the LDP after challenging their corrupt, old boy
network in the Diet.
3.5 No nukes!
As
Ui notes, the urgent work that should have begun thirty years ago of addressing
U.S. base pollution is now slowly unfolding thanks to the hard work of NGOs
such as the Okinawa Environment Network. Meanwhile, groups like Peace Depot
based in Yokohama are addressing the danger of the U.S. 'nuclear umbrella'
which violates Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution and in fact
acts as a 'nuclear magnet.' As the
war in Iraq has shown, violent retaliation is being carried out against U.S. soldiers
and U.S. allies in response to the occupation. U.S. bases in Japan are often
located near densely populated urban areas. If such retaliation occurred
against a U.S. base or civilian population in Japan it could result in
catastrophe.
In
response to this precarious situation, Peace Depot ('Report card,' 2002;
Umebayashi, 2003) has made the following demands regarding the U.S.-Japan
military alliance: 'eliminate dependence on nuclear umbrella; work toward
nuclear weapon free zone in NE Asia; press US and Russia for disarmament;
enforce Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.'
Furthermore they call for 'South Korea, North Korea and Japan to form
the core of the zone as nonnuclear states.' This proposal relies on a sensitive understanding of the
history of the region where many people are 'painfully aware of what horrors'
occurred when 'several hundred thousand Japanese and another 100,000 ethnic
Koreans mostly displaced from the Korean Peninsula ended up as atomic bomb
victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.' Peace Depot became the first Japanese NGO
to be able to present it's proposals to The Preparatory Committee for the
Review Conference of the Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons in
Geneva in 2002. Unfortunately, the demonization of North Korea by hawks in the
U.S. and Japan has disrupted the process toward creating a Northeast Asian
nuclear free zone. Amidst such instability, Peace Depot felt it was 'highly
significant' that they were able to propose a 'concrete vision for bringing
peace' to the region 'in the presence of the various government
representatives.' Peace Depot's position is bolstered by the International
Court of Justice which stated in 1996 that the world's nuclear nations have an
'obligation to bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear
disarmament.'
In
addition, the No Nuclear Weapons on Okinawa! Organizing Committee ('No
Nuclear,' 2003)Êrecently sent a letter to the President of the U.N. Security
Council. They requested that since U.N. weapons inspectors had finished with
their work in
Iraq they should proceed to Okinawa 'to determine if there are any
weapons of mass destruction, and in particular nuclear weapons, stored in any
of the U.S. military bases.' Their letter highlighted the blatant hypocrisy of
the Bush Administration's policy to demand weapons inspections in Iraq when the
U.S. government itself is the world's largest holder of weapons of mass
destruction. Some of the points they raised were as follow:
Of
all weapons of mass destruction, nuclear weapons are the most
devastating; It is common knowledge that before Okinawa was reverted to
Japan, nuclear weapons were kept on U.S. bases here; Under the Japanese
government's 'three non-nuclear principles', nuclear weapons may not
enter
Japanese territory; Despite this, the United States Government has
consistently refused to say whether it has removed its nuclear weapons
from
Okinawa. Few Okinawans believe they have been removed. The United
States is the only country in the history of the world to have actually
used
these worst of all weapons of mass destruction.
3.6 Making noise
The distress caused by U.S. military activities, especially the noise
and danger from aircraft which carry out dare devil 'low flight' and 'night
landing' missions is significant around bases in Japan. Wilkinson (2001)
reports that:
The earliest recorded incident came in August 1987, when a plane on a
low-
flight mission broke a cable in Nara Prefecture that, fortunately, was
used for
hauling logs. In August 1995, a woman was thrown from a horse when a
low-
flying plane passed overhead, and broke a vertebra. In the years since,
there have been a series of crashes, but none of them resulted in any
injuries to local residents (though there were fatalities among the
pilots)...these flights regularly take place in at least 26 out of
Japan's 47
prefectures, showing that the effects are widespread..between 1995 and
1999, there were 42 cases of windows being broken by low-flying
jets...however, the central government has shown great reluctance to do
anything to deal with the concerns of local residents.
Growing dissatisfaction amongst the public could be witnessed when 'the
mayors of five cities in Japan that play host to US military airports...issued
a document calling for the US to end' the dangerous and noisy practice of
night-
landings in their cities. Wilkinson believes that, 'Opposition to
the arrogance of US forces may be on the increase. In both Korea and Japan,
there is great opposition to the Status of Forces Agreements.'
However, due to the enormous influence that the reactionary education
system and mainstream media have over people's thinking ability, some observers
are pessimistic about the hopes for grassroots democracy and the removal of
U.S. bases in the near future.
[The] propaganda seems to be working well. One would be hard-pressed to
find
any large demonstrations against U.S. bases in Japan by Japanese
students or
Japanese workers. One can find an active anti-U.S. base movement only in
the
southern island of Okinawa...Extremely weak trade unions and university
student
bodies in our country make it very easy for the ruling class to control
people. The
Japanese, I would say, have politically changed very little since 1868,
when the
shogun-ruled Edo period ended and the Western- leaning Meiji period
began
(Asano, 2003).
In
contrast to Asano's pessimism, there are many young people involved in cultural
change movements to make Japan a more liberal society. This is an improvement
over the subservient behavior of Japanese in 19th century. But his point is
well taken. In the build up to the war in Iraq in 2003, the largest anti-war
demonstration was estimated to include 40,000 people. In general, the Tokyo
peace movement consists of only about 5,000 hard core members in a country of
over 127 million people. Though a majority of Japanese say they are anti-war,
they have done little to substantively challenge their government's
trajectory toward remilitarization.
4. Environmental impacts in the U.S. and abroad
Setting aside the tragic human cost, the environmental effects of the
1991 U.S. led
Gulf war were a catastrophe. Landsberg (2003) reminds us of the
effects when 'the sky over the Persian Gulf went dark for months after Iraqi
soldiers set fire to 600 of Kuwait's oil wells and dumped four million barrels
of oil into the gulf... The sooty clouds contained half a billion tons of
greenhouse gases...Several million birds [including] curlews, plovers, terns,
grebes, egrets, [and] spoonbills' who inhabit the regions during parts of the
year were severely affected. Most people don't know that, 'The Gulf is one of
the world's most important habitats for marine turtles, hosting four endangered
species, [and for] otters, dolphins and dugongs which were harmed by the oil
spills.'
In
the so-called Drug war in Colombia, the U.S. has unleashed highly toxic
herbicides meant to kill coca crops, but which have also polluted
rivers and contaminated peasant food crops (Gedicks, 2002). U.S. military
involvement in the region is having devastating effects on the socio-ecological
system and threatens one of the most biologically rich and diverse habitats in
the world.
The contamination from U.S. led wars has harmed people, habitats and
wildlife in Afghanistan; in Europe and in the Balkans: Serbia, Bosnia, Kosovo,
Albania, Macedonia, Greece, Italy, Austria and Hungary. 12 tons of depleted
uranium munitions were used in the 1999 war in Yugoslavia which 'caused
irreparable damage to the Yugoslavian environment, with agriculture, livestock
air and water, and public health all profoundly damaged' (Worthington, 2003).
Parenti (2000) cites the testimony of a NATO coalition captain from Spain who
criticized NATO's indiscriminate bombing policy in Yugoslavia:
They are destroying the country, bombing it with novel weapons, toxic
nerve
gases, surface mines dropped with parachute, bombs containing uranium,
black napalm, sterilization chemicals, sprayings to poison the crops,
and
weapons of which even we still do not know anything. THE NORTH
AMERICANS ARE COMMITTING THERE ONE OF THE BIGGEST BARBARITIES
THAT CAN BE COMMITTED AGAINST HUMANITY [emphasis added].'
Parenti's conclusion, which offers a good summary of the social and
environmental effects of modern warfare:
[there is] no justification for bombing fifteen cities in round-the-clock
raids
for over two months, spewing hundreds of thousands of tons of highly
toxic
and carcinogenic chemicals into the water, air, and soil, poisoning
agricultural
fields and rivers, maiming and killing thousands, exposing millions to
depleted uranium, and obliterating the
productive capital of an entire nation.
4.1 Toxic pollution
Relying on government reports, Savage (2000) found that the U.S.
military 'produces nearly a ton of toxic pollution a minute...500,000 tons of
toxics annually -- more than the five leading chemical companies combined' (p.
5). With the recent arms build up in the wake of the 9/11 attacks in the U.S.,
this amount of pollution must be rapidly increasing as well. The U.S. military
budget is expected to nearly double from mid 1990 levels of spending to reach
$451 billion per year by 2007 (Chossudovsky, 2002). On November 24th, 2003,
President Bush signed a military spending bill of $401 billion ('Bush signs,'
2003).
The toxic legacy left over from the Cold War in 1990 included 'more than
17,484 military sites in violation of federal environmental laws' in the U.S
(Savage). The military is a huge consumer of energy, for example, 'a
conventionally powered aircraft carrier consumes 150,000 gallons of fuel per
day. In less than an hour's flight, a jet launched from it's flight deck
consumes as much fuel as a U.S. motorist uses in two years.' There is also the
widespread problem of the military's underground chemical and fuel tanks
leaking and contaminating aquifers. In one case drinking water that was tested
had toxins at 10,000 times the level that was considered safe by government.
Needless to say, the monstrous expenditures that go for military uses
could instead go toward environmental protections and restoration. A pittance
of a few million dollars a year could go a long way toward protecting Africa's
magnificent elephant populations (when the wide ranging elephants are
protected, numerous other species gain protection as well). Talk of
'sustainable use' of endangered wildlife species by hunters and wildlife
traders is disingenuous given the vast
resources that are wasted on war preparation and battle. One can
only imagine the solutions that could occur if funds were appropriately used
toward a sustainable energy policy; reducing global warming, deforestation and
desertification; assisting environmental refugees; and restoring the world's
dying oceans, to name but a few of our planet's urgent needs.
U.S. military pollution occurs in the context of the capitalist
industrial system, which, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), dumped '7.1 billion pounds of hazardous compounds into the air and water
in the United States in the year 2000' (Malkan, 2003). This amount is just the
tip of the toxic ice berg since this datum was volunteered by 'only a subset of
industries.' Whitaker (2003), also relying on EPA data offers a different
statistic (perhaps referring to global pollution levels) and states that
'almost 6 trillion pounds of chemicals are released into the environment each
year. Some of these inevitably make their way into our bodies via the air we
breathe, the food we eat, and the water we drink.' The carcinogenic and
immunity-impairing effects of pollution on human and non human organisms has
been well documented. Whitaker, a medical doctor notes that the human 'liver
undergoes subtle trauma every day' as the body's 'primary organ for
detoxification,' this organ processes every poison that people 'eat, drink and
inhale.' In addition to human suffering, pollution is a major contributor to
medical costs in the U.S.
The health of communities around the world is being damaged by the
environmental practices of the U.S. military. Day after day, the
Department
of
Defense (DoD) and defense-related agencies are undermining the basis
for life on the planet by their toxic dumping; production, testing, and
battlefield use of munitions; air and water pollution; hazardous waste
generation, transport, and disposal; military assault training
operations;
bombing and live fire training; and nuclear propulsion and warhead
production, to name only a few of their deadly habits...The country's
largest
polluter-- the U.S. military-- and the rest of the federal government
are
completely or partially exempt from basic environmental, public safety,
and
worker protection laws and regulations. These exemptions, plus lax or
nonexistent enforcement of laws that do apply, have helped produce a slew
of
environmental catastrophes at military bases, defense-related facilities,
and battlefields across the U.S. and around the world (Taylor &
Hunter,
2001).
The foremost NGO in the U.S. that addresses the issue of military
pollution is the Military Toxics Project Environmental Health Coalition
(MTP) (2001):
Every day the health and safety of our communities are under assault. It
is
constant. It is unrelenting. It is not the work of a foreign government
or
secret terrorist society. It is the result of hazardous and polluting
operations
of
our own U.S. Military...Military exemptions from laws and lax enforcement
by
regulatory agencies have produced over 27,000 toxic hot spots on 8,500
military properties.
Since the 1970s, of the 70 laws passed to protect 'environmental, worker
protection, and public safety,' the nation's largest polluting governmental
agencies, the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy, have remained
largely exempt from accountability by means of 'direct exemption, sovereign
immunity, the Unitary Executive doctrine, and the use of Executive Orders.' MTP
calls for immediate compliance by all U.S. government departments to the Clean
Water Act; the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act; the Clean Air Act; the Oil Pollution Act, the Noise Act; the Atomic Energy
Act; the Occupational Safety and Health Act; the Emergency Planning and
Community Response Act; the Coastal Zone Management Act; and the National
Environmental Policy Act.
Note that MTP's demands were made prior to the post 9/11 U.S. military
build up and the vigorous rollback of environmental protection laws pushed for
by the Bush administration. Kelly (2003) finds that the post 9/11 military
spending boom 'represents a bonanza for defense contractors like Northrop
Grumman' but a possible 'increase in toxic emissions...particularly in
communities surrounding the thousands of plants involved in defense
manufacturing nationwide.'
In
one example, a Boston University epidemiologist 'studied the incidence of
cancer in Concord' from 1980 to 1989 and 'found that the cancer
incidence' there was 'double that in other areas' in Massachusetts. One the
other side of the country in Los Angeles there is 'the largest defense
manufacturing complex in the nation.' It is likely that increased military
production in the post 9/11 era will occur 'without much regulatory scrutiny or
public notice.'
Aerospace companies also use exotic metals, such as beryllium, because
it
is
light, strong and flexible, qualities needed in a wide range of aircraft
components, such as bushings, thermo-couplers, gyroscopes, and x-ray
windows...Workers exposed to beryllium have developed immunological lung
disorders, as have family members exposed to the metal when carried
home on work clothing. Hexavalent chromium is a carcinogen and many
solvents used in the defense industries cause nerve system
disorders...and
cancer.
It
is also reported that 'asthmatics who number about 5 to 7 percent of the
general U.S. population...are more numerous among some segments of the
population, such as children and African Americans.' As Bullard (1990)
discovered in his classic study on environmental racism in the Southern U.S.,
that,
Black communities still suffer from institutionalized discrimination.
Discriminatory practices occur at various levels of government and
affect the
location of polling places, municipal landfills, and toxic-waste
dumps...Black
communities and their inhabitants must defend themselves against hostile
external forces that shape land-use decisions and environmental
policies.
In
addition to the environmental degradation that is endured by communities of
color, minorities, and other economically deprived groups in the U.S., Hoffman
(2003) has forcefully documented the potential (some say inevitable) nuclear
catastrophe that awaits all of America if the issue of an aging and
malfunctioning nuclear industry is not unflinchingly addressed. For example, a
terrorist attack on a vulnerable nuclear power plant could cause a radioactive
accident of unimaginable proportions. The U.S. military itself is heavily
involved in nuclear power production. Hoffman's fact sheet reports that:
1) Nuclear waste grows by about 100 tons every day around the
world.
2) Each 1000 Megawatt nuclear reactor produces about 250 lb per
day of High Level Radioactive Waste (HLRW).
3) There are about 430 nuclear reactors around the world, some of
which are smaller than others, but some of which are undoubtedly also less
efficient. In addition to HLRW, every day these reactors produce about 400 tons
of the so-called Low Level Radioactive Waste (LLRW), which is really just HLRW,
diluted.
4) There is no such thing as low level radioactive waste. It's all dangerous.
5) If one reactor produces 1/8 of a ton per day of HLRW, then 400+
reactors produce at least 50 tons a day.
6) Most of the rest of the waste comes from military reactors.
There are hundreds of them, and they may or may not be more efficient than
commercial reactors. Also, there is a lot of "scrap" created during
the life of a reactor, such as the reactor pressure vessel, which is highly
irradiated and certainly not considered low level radioactive waste.
7) There is no known scientific method for the safe storage and
disposal of nuclear waste. For the past half century, scientists have been
assuring us a solution to the nuclear waste problem would be coming soon. But the
fact is, it's an unsolvable problem because nuclear waste destroys any
container you put it in on an atomic level.
4.2 Undermining environmental protection laws
There is now voluminous evidence that the Bush administration is not
only 'ignoring America's increasingly polluted environment' but has
successfully rolled back many of the environmental protections that began in
the late 19th century ('Bush budget,' 2001). From the establishment of national
parks during that era, all the way up to the 1970's with the creation of the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and a flood of laws that were passed to
protect public health and endangered species, Bush's reckless policy comes at a
critical time.
Evidence indicating the Earth is right now undergoing climate change,
the
ecological importance of large wilderness habitats such as ANWR
[Alaska],
and other environmental scientific findings - many by government
scientists
-
[is] being systematically ignored and/or edited from official government
documents ('Bush-Cheney,' 2001).
The Super fund toxic waste cleanup program that had been given priority
by the
federal government after the Cold War has now become bankrupt.
This will force 'regular taxpayers to shoulder the financial burden for toxic
waste cleanups' ('Super fund Trust,' 2003). 'The bankruptcy of the Super fund
trust fund marks a dramatic shift in toxic waste cleanup policy. The Bush
Administration is letting polluting industries off the hook again...' Well established
laws such as the Clean Air Act are also under attack from presidential campaign
contributors in the energy industry. Bush recently 'dropped enforcement actions
against dozens of coal-fired power plants that were under investigation for
violating the Clean Air Act and allegedly spewing thousands of tons of illegal
pollution into the air' (Shogren, 2003). Yet another astonishing outrage is the
U.S. threat to renege on one of the most successful and important international
environmental treaties on record, the Montreal Protocol, which was ratified to
revive the Earth's vital ozone layer (Lean, 2003).
In
a report from a top U.S. environmental organization, the Earth Island
Institute highlighted the litany of threats made by the Bush administration
to the world's endangered wildlife ('Congress is poised,' 2003). Among laws
that are in the cross hairs are the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and the
Endangered Species Act (ESA). The U.S. Navy has long been seeking an exemption
to their use of powerful sonar devices (LFAS) which have been known to severely
disrupt the behavior and health of marine mammals. The usual rationale of
national security and the war on terror are given as blanket reasons for
gutting what have been highly successful measures for protecting whales, seals,
dolphins, and a myriad of other endangered species.
Another symbol of the long history of Western ecological imperialism, is
the archaic practice of safari hunting ('Bush Endangered,' 2003). Bowing to
pressure from lobbyists in the safari hunting, zoo and exotic wildlife trade
industries, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has sought to eliminate trade
bans for more than 500 endangered species. Advocates of wildlife consumption
claim to support the practice of 'sustainable use' whereby proceeds from the
harvesting of animals nominally
help pay for conservation. However, a large coalition of wildlife
protection groups state that this measure would be 'fundamentally incompatible'
with the Endangered Species Act and 'could lead to the extinction of any of
more than 500 species around the world. Turning species into commodities will
only increase the slaughter and encourage illegal trade and
poaching."
To
bolster the de-regulatory onslaught, the Bush administration is using archaic
legal precedents to attack groups such as Greenpeace. The pretext of
fighting terrorism is used to justify such draconian moves, but in reality this
a means to further the agenda of logging companies (Horrock, 2003). In a case
where illegally harvested mahogany logs were entering the U.S., Greenpeace
protesters boarded the vessel to witness the crime. However, the tables were
turned when the Ashcroft justice department charged Greenpeace with the serious
offense of committing 'conspiracy.' Under the obscure ruling which blatantly
infringes on the spirit and intent of the U.S. Constitution, Greenpeace may
lose it's tax exempt status and be forced to report it's activities directly to
the government.
For useful analyses of all the Bush administration environmental attacks
and
rollbacks, see the Forests.org website and their
comprehensive database: http://forests.org/america/
4.3 Depleted uranium
'Nuke the evil scum, it worked in 1945!' -- pro-war activist
(Worthington, 2003)
'The United States is the
largest generator of DU in the world, with a stockpile of 700,000 tonnes and
growing' (Stapp, 2003). The U.S.'s use of so-called 'depleted' uranium weaponry
has been well documented since it was first used in the Gulf war in 1991. The
issue re-emerged into the mainstream with the U.S. led bombing of Yugoslavia
when many coalition force troops were exposed to DU particles and became sick,
and some died. To date, the U.S. has used DU on a large scale in wars in
Iraq in 1991 and 2003; Yugoslavia in 1999; Afghanistan in 2001 -
2002; and in training exercises in various parts of the world such as in
Vieques, Puerto Rico and in Okinawa, Japan.
Mackay (2003) notes that the use of DU in the war against 17 million
Iraqis in 2003 was a deliberate
violation of 'a United Nations resolution which classifies the munitions as
illegal weapons of mass destruction [since] DU contaminates land, causes
ill-health and cancers among the soldiers using the weapons, the armies they
target and civilians, leading to birth defects in children.' The U.N. claims
that 'Cancer appears to have increased between seven and 10 times and
deformities between four and six times' due to their use in first Gulf war.
Estimates of the amount of DU that was used in the first Gulf war range from
320 to 1000 metric tons. The U.K. Atomic Energy Authority reported that, 'some
500,000 people would die before the end of this century, due to radioactive
debris left in the desert' of Iraq.
Nothing compares to the astronomical cancer rates and birth defects
suffered by
the Iraqi people who have endured vicious nuclear chastisement for
years. U.S.
air attacks against Iraq since 1993 have undoubtedly employed nuclear
[DU]
munitions. Pictures of grotesquely deformed Iraqi infants born since
1991 are
overwhelming. Like those born to Gulf War I vets, many babies born to
troops
now in Iraq will also be afflicted with hideous deformities,
neurological damage
and/or blood and respiratory disorders (Worthington, 2003).
Professor Doug Rokke, ex-director of the Pentagon's depleted uranium
project and one of the most knowledgeable and outspoken critics of DU, accuses
the U.S. of committing a 'war crime' every time it is employed in battle. His
case rests on a foundation of international law (Mackay). According to the
U.N., laws that were breached by using DU include: 'the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights; the Charter of the United Nations; the Genocide Convention;
the Convention Against Torture; the four Geneva Conventions of 1949; the
Conventional Weapons Convention of 1980; and the Hague Conventions of 1899 and
1907.' Rokke has noted of DU contamination, 'These consequences last for
eternity. The half life of
uranium 238 is 4.5 billion years' ('The war,' 2003).
In
the Iraq war of 2003, it is estimated that 200 tons of DU were released during
combat (Stapp, 2003). In contrast to Gulf war 1991 where most munitions were
exploded in desert regions, this time numerous missiles containing DU were
fired into the populated capital city of Bagdad.
The 'Christian Science Monitor' took a Geiger counter to parts of
Baghdad
that had been subjected to heavy shelling by U.S. troops. He found
radiation
levels 1,000 to 1,900 times higher than normal in residential areas
where
children were playing nearby.
In
addition to the harm inflicted upon civilians, Dr. Rokke has investigated and
exposed the connection to Gulf War Syndrome among thousands of U.S.
military veterans and in wars since then.
Dr. Rokke confirms that the Pentagon lies about DU dangers and is
criminally
negligent for neglecting medical attention needed by DU-contaminated
vets. He
predicts that the numbers of American troops to be sickened by DU from Gulf
War II will be staggering. As they gradually sicken and suffer a slow
burn to their
graves, the Pentagon will, as it did after Gulf War I, deny that their
misery and
death is a result of their tour in Iraq (Worthington, 2003).
4.4 Undermining global security
Sterngold (2003, April) notes that after the September 11, 2001
terrorist attack's in the U.S., the Bush administration began a severely
'unilateral approach to international disputes' which has helped to undue the
post WWII 'global arms control and
disarmament movement.' According to a U.N. official who worked to extend a
non-proliferation treaty, 'There is a general feeling that the disarmament
machinery is just not working.' In regard to such treaties, it
should be noted that the signing of a treaty shows that in principle a country
agrees with its content whereas the more important ratification process means
that the legislative body of a government has passed it into law. The following
points illustrate Bush
administration's moves to undermine global security.
1) Abrogation of the 1972 Anti- Ballistic Missile Treaty.
2) Non ratification of the 1996 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
which had been signed by President Clinton.
3) The United States has rejected an inspection and verification
program for the biological weapons treaty, saying it is not stringent enough.
4) Resistance to the creation of a treaty that would 'prohibit
weapons in outer space and to ban the production of fissile material for
nuclear weapons' in space.
5) Resistance to the space treaty which would impede the U.S.'s
desire to use 'lasers on satellites as part of a missile defense.'
6) Opposition to 'efforts to ban the use of land mines.'
7) Signing of a nuclear missile reduction treaty which only
temporarily decommissions such weapons while failing to permanently remove them
from
operations.
Building upon this reactionary agenda, the Republican led congress has
paved the way for an agreement which 'will reverse a decade of self-imposed
restraint on the development of so- called battlefield nuclear weapons...make
nuclear exchanges more likely' and spur regional nuclear arms races (Sterngold
2003, November).
Finally, the U.S. recently 'has regained the capability to make nuclear
weapons for the first time in 14 years and has restarted production of
plutonium parts for bombs' (Vartabedian, 2003). This is a striking move toward
re-proliferation of nuclear weapons after a decade long lull in weapons
production. Even after 'the toll
of environmental damage from bomb production became known...the government is
now spending about $6 billion annually on the nuclear weapons complex, 50% more
than it did during' the Cold War period.
4.5 Toward omnicide
As
London's mayor, Ken Livingstone recently stated in reference to U.S. Dictator
George W. Bush's visit to the United Kingdom, 'I actually think that Bush is
the greatest threat to life on this planet that we've most probably ever seen.
The policies he is initiating will doom us to extinction' ('London Mayor,'
2003). While unapologetic disgust with Bush is justifiable, he is merely a
symptom of the larger cancer of American militarism and corporate/financial
greed that is taking the world in the direction of economic, social, political
and environmental instability, if not chaos. This is evident in the unending
refinement of technologies devoted to killing human beings.
A
wild variety of munitions are what it takes to make the U.S. military the
greatest spectacle on Earth. During the 1991 Gulf war, 'the U.S. deployed
117,634 landmines in Iraq and Kuwait,' (Landsberg, 2003). Despite the terrible
effects on non-combatant civilians and the worldwide outcry against their use,
the U.S. continues to deploy landmines in battle and refuses to join the 142 signatory
nations of the Ottawa Mine Ban Treaty. Naturally, the people who suffer most
from such indiscriminate weaponry are peasant farmers and children playing in
fields who often lose their limbs in random blasts.
When bigger fire power is needed to spook the spooks out of their caves,
the military calls for aerial bombing with 2,000 pound cluster bombs which have
been documented in recent wars in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq to
indiscriminately kill civilians. Brightly colored unexploded cluster bombs have
been mistaken as toys or food packages resulting in injury or death to
unsuspecting civilians, particularly children.
[The] CBU-75 Sadeye [is] a cluster bomb that contains 1800 one-pound
bomblets, each containing 0.7 pounds of TNT with 700 razor-sharp steel
shards imbedded in it, lethal up to 40 feet. These are scattered over an
area equivalent to 157 football fields; presumably nothing-military,
civilian,
old, young, male, female-survives within this space. Many of the
bomblets
fail to go off and become landmines, the perfect random killer. The
people
who drop these bombs know all this' (Bardacke, Lummis & Lustig,
2003).
Such weapons are not only used to inflict vast physical destruction, but
also psychological terror. Bardacke et al. (2003) carried out an informal
survey of the general public in North America to see if people thought there
was any difference between state sanctioned military operations and terrorism.
Most respondents seemed to have a woolly understanding of the issue, unable to
see that the government's mega-bombs which are employed to create a
'significant emotional event' are really meant to terrify enemy troops and
civilians, ie., it is terrorism. For example, the attack on Iraq in 2003
was marketed on American TV as a sort of sports event. The opening quarter
trumpeted as 'shock and awe' with an exciting array of missiles, bombs and high
tech gadgetry being employed to bring democracy to the Iraqi people.
The
following list offers an incomplete sampling of the modern killing technology
that is being developed or is part of the U.S. arsenal:
1) The AC-130 is a 'gigantic cargo plane that has been modified so
that it can shoot 20 mm and 7.62 mm Gatling guns and a 105 mm howitzer out the
side door. It circles around its target...and rains down fire from all sides.'
The Gatling guns which fire 'up to 6000 rounds per minute, can fill an area the
size of a football field with one round per square foot. In one incident, the
AC 130 that attacked the Afghan town of Chowkar-Karez on October 22-23, 2001,
killing, it is said, 93 civilians.'
2) The BLU-82B, also known as Big Blue or Daisy Cutter weighs
15000 lb 'Its lethal radius is reported to be between 300 and 600 feet ('five
football fields')... Military sources say that its 'psychological effect' (ie.
terrifying effect) is at least as useful as the material destruction it wreaks'
since people in the vicinity may mistake if for a nuclear weapon due to the
gigantic sound and cloud of dust it releases (Bardacke et al).
3) The MOAB, which some call the 'mother of all bombs,' but really
stands for 'massive ordnance air burst' bomb. MOAB is now the largest
non-nuclear bomb in the U.S. apparatus
weighing in at 21,000-pounds. It is 'pushed out the back of a C-130
transport and guided by satellite.' The 'massive explosive punch...is similar
to a small nuclear weapon' (McWerthy, 2003).
4) If there is an lingering doubt about the horrific nature of
modern warfare, the CBU-72/B will put it to rest. CBU-72/B is 'a cluster bomb
that contains three BLU-73/B fuel-air explosives (FAE). Each of these holds 75
lb of ethylene oxide. The first explosion turns this into an aerosol cloud 60
feet in diameter and 9 feet thick; the second explosion ignites this, 'turns
the air into fire' according to one description. The particular advantage of
this is that there is no such thing as 'taking shelter.' The cloud follows the
victims anywhere; they will even inhale the burning fuel. Even if they are in
deep bunkers, the explosion burns up all the oxygen from the air, and creates a
vacuum that ruptures the lungs and other internal organs. And if it fails to
ignite it is still a killer: the aerosol itself is as lethal as poison gas. The
U.S. dropped 254 of these during the Gulf War'...(Bardacke et al.).
5) The 'B-61-11 burrowing nuke bomb' is able to smash 'through the
earth and concrete' and 'explodes with the force of an estimated 340,000 tons of TNT.' It contains
plutonium and hydrogen elements which release an 'H-bomb fireball' upon
explosion. The U.S. also 'plans for a new generation of 'mini,' 'micro' and
'tiny' nuclear bombs and bunker busters,' (Worthington).
6) Just as we often hear in sports commentary, it is not only
physical size that contributes to a winning player, but speed as well. As
Shachtman (2003) reports,
'The Tomahawk cruise missile may seem fast and far-reaching. But
Pentagon planners want more.' With faster and farther ranging weaponry, the U.S. would be
able to extend it's military and political hegemony over the world by
comfortably 'delivering' payloads from bases in the continental U.S. The
Pentagon is designing a 'hypersonic CAV (Common Aero Vehicle) cruise missile'
that by 2010 is supposed to be able to deliver a 1,000 lb 'bunker-busting bomb
into near-space, and then send it crashing into a target more than 3,000 miles
away, at four times the speed of sound.' By 2025, the military hopes to develop
a drone plane called a Hypersonic Cruise Vehicle which could 'travel more than
10,000 miles in less than two hours, and deliver 12,000 pounds worth of CAVs or
sensors.' Also on board HCVs could be 'Small Diameter Bombs (SDB) or other
munitions' ('Bomb anywhere,' 2003).
7) It is not only missiles and bombs that can cause destruction,
but also a new geophysical weapon being developed by the U.S. called HAARP
(High Active Auroral Research Program). HAARP is supposed to be able to turn
the Earth itself into a weapon by manipulating the atmosphere, the ionosphere
and the
magnetosphere. Solomatin (2003) found U.S. experimentation with
HAARP to be so controversial that the Russian government recommended to the
United Nations that HAARP experiments be banned:
Many specialists and scientists believe that unexpected natural
disasters, some
surprising technological catastrophes and the striking social cataclysms
that struck
Europe and Asia in the summer of the year 2002 might have certain global
reasons in common in their origin. Principally the possibility of secret
geophysical
weapon tests. Tests which were either secret or unauthorized...The
operators of
such a weapon are able to program floods, tornados storms and even
earthquakes in any region of the planet. It is also possible to paralyze
civil and
military electronic surveillance systems, and even to affect the psyche
of entire
nations (Solomatin).
8) Cramer (2003) found the U.S. Navy is involved in 'Aggressive
efforts to exploit ocean resources.' These efforts 'threaten to alter, perhaps
irrevocably, the finely-tuned chemical balances of the deep sea, with grave
peril to animal and plant populations that dwell within it.' In addition to the
noise that sea animals must endure from commercial 'ship engines and propellers
and seismic airguns from oil exploration,' the Navy's LFAS (low frequency
active sonar) emits greater noise and disruption to marine mammals who 'depend
on sound to survive -- to identify feeding grounds, to communicate and find
mates, and to follow migration routes.'
Each [LFAS] system, towed from a ship, deploys an array of 18
loudspeakers,
each beaming 215 decibels (dB) of sound at low-frequency throughout the
sea.
Noise emanating from each speaker is equivalent to standing on a runway
next
to
a jet fighter taking off. Where the sound converges, further away from the
source, the noise level rises to 235 dB, one hundred times louder. A
hundred miles
from the source, the sound may still be as loud as 160 dB, loud enough
to cause
permanent hearing damage in humans (Cramer).
There is evidence that LFAS experiments from have caused numerous whales
to become stranded or die at sea.
9) Wirbel (2002) directs our attention to a program which became
well known in the 1980's as Star Wars, or the missile defense shield.
Although the idea of missile defense has been ridiculed by scientists who found flaws in it's
ability to reliably block incoming missiles, the program has offered broad
cover for the merging of governmental agencies, private corporations and the
U.S. military toward the goal of developing space based weaponry and
surveillance systems. The U.S. Space Command's plans for space were made
explicit in the 1996 document, Vision for 2020. Of crucial importance:
domination of space in order 'to protect the current global division
between economic haves and have-nots'; 'satellites and satellite launches';
'The Global Positioning System (GPS)' in order to 'provide precision targeting
for military missions'; and the Defense Support Program (DSP) which warns of
impending missile attacks from abroad.
5. Conclusion
Our...military...must be ready to strike at a moment's notice in any
dark
corner of the world. -- U.S. President George W. Bush, post 9/11,
(Castro, 2003)
That is what we are: dark corners of the world. Never before had anyone
offered a better definition; no one had shown such contempt.
--
Fidel Castro (2003)
There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious,
makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part; you can't even
passively take part, and you've got to put your bodies upon the gears
and
upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got
to
make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to
the
people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be
prevented
from working at all! -- Mario Savio
An
eye for an eye will only end up leaving the whole world blind.
--
Mahatma Gandhi
The
legacy of the past five hundred years of imperialist cultures in conjunction
with the innovation of technology and the pace of global environmental
degradation is terrifying to ponder. For example, Waugh (2003) reports that
'according to a European scientific committee' which researched radiation
biology and human epidemiology, studies show that radioactive 'pollution from
nuclear energy and weapons programmes up to 1989...have caused, or will
eventually cause, the death of 65 million people worldwide.'
As
shown in this paper, one can never relax the vigilant faculties of the mind
regarding the development of ever more powerful and deadly weapons systems and
other potentially destructive innovative technology. Proctor found that as of
1991, between 20 percent up to a third of the world's scientists were involved
in military research. The human potential for solving environmental problems is
thus squandered by the militaristic mindset that has largely created the
environmental chaos we are now engulfed in.
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