THE MILITARY BUILDUP IN THE
MARIANA ISLANDS
Guam, a possession of the United States, is one of 15 islands in
the Marianas, an archipelago in the western Pacific so pristine and rich in
biodiversity that it was recently designated a federally protected
Marine
National Monument
. However, military activities are exempt from this so-called “protection”
and the Department of Defense has plans to effectively destroy the natural
habitats of these islands with the “
Guam
Military Buildup,”slated to take place over the next five years.
Guam, an island only half the size of Cape Cod with a current population
of 178,000, will soon become home to 80,000 additional Marines, dependents and
laborers. The military already owns a third of the island, and the Marines
aren't the only unit expanding. The Army, as well, is building a missile defense
system; the Air Force is adding more drones; and the Navy is tearing out 2.3
million square feet of a healthy reef ecosystem to make way to house a
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
Though the people of these islands are being told that the Buildup
will improve their quality of life, the facts show otherwise. Below is a handout
being distributed among the people of Guam and the
Marianas
to shed light on the reality of how the Buildup will impact their islands.
The REAL STORY behind the
Guam
Military Buildup
The Military Buildup being
planned for Guam and the rest of the
Mariana Islands
chain is being sold to us as a once-in-a-lifetime economic opportunity. But if
you read the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) put out by the
Department of Defense, it quickly becomes clear that this is far from the truth.
And if you know your Pacific history, it is a simple connection of dots to see
that the Buildup will likely be as cataclysmic for our people and environment as
the atomic testing at Bikini was for the
Marshall Islands
.
Below are a collection of facts
taken from the Draft Environmental Statement released November 20, 2009:
I. ECONOMY
Myth: The
military buildup will be great for
Guam
’s economy.
Fact: The
military’s DEIS document states that very little money will go into
Guam
’s economy. According to the report, most contracts will go to large
off-island companies, not to local contractors. Most money spent by the 80,000
newcomers will be spent on base, at companies also based on-island, not at local
businesses. The 40,000 low-paid workers imported from the
Philippines
will not spend their money on
Guam
, but will send most of it back home.
And don’t
think that
Guam
residents will benefit from an increase in construction jobs. According to the
DEIS, at the projected 2014 peak in such jobs, only 2,566 will go to Guam
residents, while 15,157 will be taken by off-island workers.
In addition,
the military conducted a separate report which revealed that the cost of living
will rise, but wages will remain low too low to keep up with skyrocketing costs.
Guam Housing Urban Renewal Authority Executive Director, Benny Pinaula, does not
feel the buildup will help keep housing affordable.
How will GovGuam fare during the buildup? The costs to the Government of Guam associated with the buildup
will be $2.9 Billion dollars. But GovGuam officials are uncertain as to how
those projects will be paid for.
Guam Senator
and local industrialist Eddie Calvo explained that the buildup will cost
millions of dollars to maintain roads, to upgrade wastewater treatment and by
taking revenue from the port. Calvo recently wrote that the $50 million
appropriated for roads within the 2010 Defense Budget is “a drop in the
bucket to what is required to expand the roads and harden bridges to handle the
thousands of containers and workers that will be arriving on island.”
Calvo also pointed out that EPA has ordered the local
government to spend nearly $300 million dollars to develop secondary wastewater
treatment facilities. Though the military will ultimately be end-users of
the northern facilities, it appears that the local government will bear the
brunt of the upfront costs, resulting from EPA’s edict.
According to
Calvo, it has been discovered that commercial cargo has been shipping out of the
Navy side of the harbor. If this trend is a prediction of things to come, this
may cost the local government millions of dollars in lost revenue in the future.
To sum things
up, the military build up will NOT help local Guam businesses, will NOT provide
a boon in construction jobs, will NOT be an economic boost for local Guam
residents, and will cost Guam's government millions of dollars. The fact that
the DEIS was written by big defense contractors in
Hawaii
, not
Guam
, indicates where the money will go, and it is not to you and me.
II. NOT A “DONE DEAL”
Myth: The
Guam
Military Buildup is a “done deal.”
Fact: The Military
Buildup is NOT a “done deal," as the Pacific Daily News would have us
believe. There are many variables that need to take place in order for it to
happen.
The buildup
depends on what
Japan
decides to do. The
U.S.
is relying on
Japan
building an additional base on Okinawa in order for the troops to transfer from
there to
Guam
. They are also depending on
Japan
to kick in $6 billion to help fund the buildup. However,
Japan
doesn’t want to build another base and it has been
questioning the exorbitant expenses of the buildup, such as $775,000 per housing
unit.
Japan
could make a decision that significantly delays the buildup, or even prevents
it entirely.
Especially
since the economic downturn, the Pentagon, too, has been uncertain about the
expenses of the buildup (see this article from as recently as May 2009:
"Pentagon Reconsiders Pricey Guam Move" at http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0509/050709cdam1.htm
)
The powerful
Heritage Foundation, an ultra-conservative, rightwing think tank, has been
behind this buildup from the start, and has been steadily lobbying Congress to
spend the billions of dollars it will take to make it happen. The Heritage
Foundation takes the “Manifest Destiny” view of
America
, that it must rule the world, rather than share
the world. And yet, in December 2009, a
Pew
Research
Center
study showed that almost half of Americans think that their country should
“mind its own business internationally.” No doubt, these people would be
opposed to the idea that $15 billion in their tax dollars is going to the
Guam
buildup, devoted to the military domination of another hemisphere. If these
people were even aware of the buildup, let alone if they knew where
Guam
was, they would object to their Congressional representatives’
greenlighting the buildup. So far, less than $1 billion has been appropriated
for the colossal project. There is no guarantee that the remaining $14 billion
plus will come through.
So, it isn't a
"done deal" after all. It
is a future that can be shaped by the strategy and foresight of the people,
starting at the grassroots.
III. WATER
Myth: There will be no problem supplying water to 80,000 new people on
Guam
. All we need to do is drill 22 more wells.
Fact: False.
Twenty-two new wells will deplete our freshwater source. If there were enough
water for that many more people, the DEIS would not have listed a desalination
plant as a long-term solution. Desalination plants have adverse effects on the
environment; and building one would make the people of
Guam
dependent on the military for the most basic resource for life – water.
If there were
enough water to go around, the military would not consider the development of
Tolaeyuus
River
(“
Lost
River
”) in Santa Rita, either, to augment the water supply during the dry season.
This would entail dredging the reservoir area of the existing dam, and
installing a pump station and pipeline.
Another scheme
listed in the EIS is a comprehensive dredging of
Fena
Lake
to increase capacity. Dredging equals more environmental devastation.
The DEIS makes
no guarantee of water for the estimated 260,000-plus people to be on the island.
So when you run short of water, as too many of us already do in Agat, Santa
Rita, Piti and Asan, just remember the old Navy saying: "The needs of the
Navy come first".
IV. SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CONFLICTS
Myth: People living on the base and civilians will live together
harmoniously, as “one.”
Fact: The
buildup will create three distinct classes: 1) the military, who will be given
expensive homes and good salaries; 2) the local people, who will be marginalized
as second-class citizens and 3) 40,000 “temporary workers” who will be
housed in barracks.
Billions of
dollars are slated to be poured into construction inside the
fence, while THERE ARE NO PLANS TO SPEND ANY MONEY OUTSIDE THE FENCE, except for
road construction (not maintenance). There will be no money to help the current
systems deal with infrastructure inadequacies or the expected rise in crime.
The difference
between “inside the fence” and “outside the fence” will be more evident
within our education system than it already is. There is already a big
difference between the quality of education between the DODEA schools for the
military kids and that of local public schools. Now, the DEIS tells us to
expect a 20% increase in enrollment
in the civilian public schools. With no supplemental funding to enable the
public schools to absorb this huge influx of students brought by the military
buildup, the disparity in education between civilian and DODEA schools will
resemble the segregated schools of the Old South. The shameful
separate-but-equal ethic is already alive and well on
Guam
, and will thrive further if the military buildup is allowed to take place.
Medical care
and other social services will share similar problems. While military personnel
on-island will receive better funded care, the thousands of additional people
will overwhelm
Guam
’s already stressed medical and social services.
Meanwhile, who will monitor and enforce the labor laws governing
the island’s temporary workers, most of whom will be from the
Philippines
and the
Federated States of Micronesia
? There is already a problem regarding huge human-rights and labor abuse on
Guam
. Human-rights violations will most likely get worse, without adequate
monitoring or enforcement. In addition, the idea that these workers are really
“temporary” is a myth. Studies show that the vast majority of workers who
migrate to the states from the
Philippines
, even on temporary visas, stay, and create families. Do not expect a population
reduction after the buildup.
V. CRIME INCREASE
The huge surge
of young single males, both Marines and laborers, along with the disparity
between haves and have-nots, will lead to an increase in crime, fights,
alcoholism, rape and prostitution. According to the DEIS, the buildup will also
cause an increase in drug smuggling, due to the increased flow of goods and
legal and illegal immigrants into Guam. Currently, the drug methamphetamine is
already readily available on Guam, due to a steady supply from the
Philippines
,
Hong Kong
,
China
,
Taiwan
, and
South Korea
.
VI. STRESSED SOCIAL SERVICES
As pointed out
by UOG Professor of Social Work ,Dr. Gerhard Schwab, social services cannot keep
up with current demands. He says that currently, “children in private and
public child welfare organizations experience neglect and abuse… hard-working
families do not have the health care and family support they need to care for
their elderly and sick family members … our best local social service
professionals leave Guam because of poor working conditions and/or lack of
support and resources for their work.” And that is the way things are now.
If the buildup
is allowed to go forward, troubles will get worse.
The workload will double, while no money or resources are being
appropriated to deal with these gigantic, foreseeable problem social problems.
Peter Sgro,
president of the Guam Healthcare Development Foundation, says 500-600 additional
doctors, nurses, technical, management and administration professionals will be
needed on
Guam
, should the buildup take place. Where will they come from? Guam’s civilian
hospital already has the lowest patient-to-bed ratio of anywhere in the
U.S.
and no funding in sight. Meanwhile, $259 million was appropriated in December
2009 to build a brand new Navy hospital – open only to military personnel and
their dependents. The injustice of this neo-Apartheid system will be made all
the more evident by the small size of the island, which will force the haves and
have-nots to live uneasily side-by-side.
VII. CROWDING
Bottom line:
More people, less land.
Get ready for a
road system that will be a constant traffic jam of construction trucks.
The military is
eyeing an additional 3,900 acres to take. That’s about one and a half times
the size of Barrigada. This would include the FAA property, which was supposed
to have been given back.
Regarding
population increase: at first, the DOD told residents that the buildup would
increase the population by 40,000, though they
were always aware that the figure was really 80,000 -- double that! Unfortunately, no one told the people of
Guam
until the last possible moment – the day the EIS was released (November 20,
2009). Why did they wait so long? Maybe because they knew how upsetting this
information would be.
Currently, the
cap on H-2B temporary workers allowed to enter the country is only 66,000 for the
entire
United States
. But on tiny
Guam
, that cap for such workers has been lifted. Instead of protecting the island
from a surge of migrants, the government is encouraging a dangerous population
spike. Clearly, no consideration was given to living conditions, resources or
infrastructure on
Guam
. All that is considered important to project planners is to get the military
facilities up and running – no matter what are the human, social or
environmental costs.
VIII. RACIST ATTITUDES
According to
the Draft EIS, the transplanted Marines will not have an impact on
Guam
's overall crime and social order. Instead the report blames migrants from the
Federated States of Micronesia
as the likely cause. This blatantly racist mindset behind the planning of
Guam’s future is deplorable and goes against everything
America
stands for.
And racism will
continue to flourish as the buildup’s planned social stratification takes
hold, with predominantly Caucasian military personnel living in the most comfort
inside the fence, while Pacific Islanders live outside the fence in lesser
conditions, or outright squalor. It is tragically ironic that people native to
the region are the ones to be relegated to the worst housing, the worst
education system, the worst medical facilities, and the lowest wages. As 80,000
new people are dumped on
Guam
to fall into their preordained caste in this new “planned community” of
Apartheid, the Buildup will exponentially accelerate the denigration of Pacific
Islanders in their own land.
IX. NO MORE GREEN SPACE
Most of the
four- and two- lane roads in the north will be widened to six- and seven-land
highways.
The greenery in
the north will be removed, not just for road work, but to house many of the
80,000 new people. One hundred acres of jungle will be replaced by a camp for
tens of thousands of low-wage laborers. More jungle will be razed to make way
for the luxury military homes. These homes will be soundproofed to protect those
inside from the noise of the new landing pad. Local homes just outside the gate
will not have such sound protection.
X. NOISE
Aside
from the harrowing noise of helicopters coming and going, the racket of weapons
firing from the firing range will plague much of the island. A 2000 study from
Asahikawa
Medical
College
shows that aircraft-noise exposure resulted in a range of physical and mental
consequences including sleep disorders, hearing loss, higher rates of low birth
weight infants, fatigue, neurosis, and negative effects on children.
XI. NO MORE ACCESS TO NATURE
According to
the impact study, “There are several recreational resources that the public
would lose the access to, and the use of the features if the proposed action
were implemented: Guam International Raceway, Marbo Cave, Pagat Trail and
associated trails near it, cultural gathering activities (suruhana),
and off-shore fishing near Marbo Cave.”
The DEIS spends
chapters detailing their plans for creating "recreation space" for
their dependents. They go on about how important it is to make sure that there
is lots of "wide, open, green space" within their neighborhoods. In
the mean time, they are taking away OUR recreation space. They are lessening the
wide, open, green space in OUR neighborhoods. And what does the DEIS say to try
to make things better? It actually says we should replace our outdoor culture
with indoor physical fitness centers, and indoor recreational resources such as bowling,
skating rink, youth center, theater and recreational pavilion. Do they really
think that bowling is an acceptable substitute for traditional fishing
practices? Can they really be that
culturally insensitive? And even if people wanted to go bowling instead of
fishing, what makes them think local people would be able to afford such
diversions, as the cost of living skyrockets against their low wages?
XII. STRESSED INFRASTRUCTURE
As 80,000
newcomers create waste and stress on our utilities and roads, the local people
must cope with the burdened electrical system, continual road maintenance,
limited water supply and thousands of tons of additional sewage. As mentioned
earlier, funding for the Guam Buildup does not include any financial support for
infrastructure outside the fence.
XIII. DESTRUCTION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE SITES
The DEIS states
that cultural heritage sites to be destroyed or compromised include locations at
Apra Harbor, Anderson AFB, Orote Field, Anderson South, and a sizable portion of
land south of Route 15. As described in the report, a parcel of land at Anderson
Air Force Base that is rich in
archaelogical artifacts will be subject to “100-percent disturbance.” In addition, it warns of increased
vandalism at the historical coastal site of Haputo, rich with latte stones.
XIV. THE DESTRUCTION OF PAGAT
The limestone
forest that stretches from
Marbo
Caves
to
Pagat
Caves
is being considered for use as a firing range, where the military can practice
shooting and bombing. The land belongs to several families who have been caring
for it for decades, choosing to not develop because they prize the land for its
inherent values. Their efforts to keep the land pristine have made it more
desirable for the military. The site in Pagat is registered at the Department of
Historic Preservation as an archaeological site.
XV. THE DESECRATION OF MOUNT JUMULLONG MANGLO
This holy
mountain, where thousands of island residents pilgrimage every year on Good
Friday, is also being considered for use as a firing range. This is
disrespectful of local Chamorro traditions.
XVI. DESTRUCTION OF REEF AND FISHING IN
APRA HARBOR
Amount of reef
to be dredged: 2.3 MILLION SQUARE FEET.
That’s the equivalent of 40 football fields!
That’s to make way for the berthing of a nuclear
aircraft carrier, the largest ship in the Navy’s fleet, carrying 85 aircraft.
It will bring 5600 additional people to
Guam
, ported 63 days a year. Having it will be terrific for local tattoo parlors;
disastrous for nature.
The sediment
churned up by the dredging will kill the coral that is not plowed up and the
fish population. According to Manny Duenas, president of the Fisherman’s
Co-op, the dredging will “affect
Guam
in itself because we know the fish don’t just live in one area.”
Brent Tibbatts,
fisheries biologist at the Guam Department of Agriculture,
explains that “there have been things found in Apra Harbor that have
been found growing nowhere else in
Guam
.”
One of those
things are 6-foot brilliant blue elephant ear sponges that stand out among the
common mounds of yellow, brown and green coral.
It is rare for
a busy port to be teeming with marine life like
Apra Harbor
, Tibbatts said. Most of the ports of the Pacific have barren sea bottoms, not
lively ecosystems.
Many of the
organisms in
Apra Harbor
will be buried during the dredging, according to the Draft EIS. Some will
survive and seek new homes elsewhere in weeks or months, the document states.
Other colonies of fish that are attached to their territory -- like damselfish,
clownfish and butterfly fish -- will die.
The draft EIS
also states that ship traffic and dredging will create "short-term"
disruption in the birthing area for scalloped hammerhead sharks. The sharks give
birth directly in the carriers' path into the wharf, the draft EIS states.
Although the
adult hammerheads spread to waters around the island,
Apra Harbor
is the only place they consistently return to give birth.
If the dredging
lasts more than a year, it could easily disturb two breeding cycles for the
sharks, Tibbatts said. Since they only give birth to a few babies a year, local
populations will be affected.
"It would
not be easy for them to replenish the population if something impacts their
ability to pup," he said.
XVII. LARGEST MANGROVE FOREST ON
U.S.
SOIL DESTROYED
The dredging at
Apra Harbor
will destroy the mangrove forest there.
XVIII. SEA TURTLE AND SPINNER DOLPHIN HABITAT DESTROYED
The green sea
turtle, the Hawksbill sea turtle and the Spinner dolphin, all protected by
federal law, will be wiped out in
Apra Harbor
.
We are trading
endangered species and their ecosystems for a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
XIX. REMOVAL OF DUKDUK TREES; DECIMATION OF IFIT
TREES
The ifit tree
is the official tree of
Guam
, traditionally used as timber, for fuel wood and craftsman art. The
termite-resistant hardwood has completely disappeared from some parts of
southeast Asia already and is increasingly harder to find on
Guam
. Construction eyed for Finegayan at Andersen South, and a firing
range would decimate the critically-endangered ifit trees, says the DEIS. The
construction would also require the removal of dukduk trees, a traditional
resource used by canoe builders.
XX. DESTRUCTION OF NATIVE MEDICINAL PLANTS
The hundreds of
acres of jungle to be destroyed or contaminated contains native plants used in
traditional medicine. To destroy these plants is to destroy
Guam
’s Chamorro heritage.
XXI. HAZARDOUS AND TOXIC WASTE
The total
amount of hazardous waste produced by the increased military presence will equal 8
tons per year! (according to the DEIS)
The DEIS
refuses to disclose all of the toxic and hazardous materials they will be
storing; this is most likely because they are radioactive and banned from the
shores of most countries. Our island is still in the process of
decontaminating land and removing toxic materials left behind by the military;
and many older generations of Guamanians suffer from an abnormally high cancer
rate resulting from previous exposure to radiation by the military.
XXII. DEPLETION OF REEF RESOURCES BY H-2 WORKERS
What little
reef resources are left may be quickly depleted by the underpaid foreign workers
who tend to comb the reefs for food.
XXIII. WILL AFFECT THE
ENTIRE MARIANA ARCHIPELAGO
The Guam Buildup does not affect only
Guam
. It will have grave, irreversible consequences for the entire island chain. The
military does not see the Mariana Islands as a biodiverse treasure of natural
wonders that the
U.S.
has even designated a protected
Marine
National Monument
(“protected” from everyone except the military). Rather, the military sees
our islands as a gigantic shooting gallery, which they’ve aptly re-named the
Mariana Islands Range Complex (MIRC). Don’t they know that regular people live
here—people who have been caretakers of the culture and environment for
millennia? But that is not their priority. As far as they’re concerned,
Guam
will be where the soldiers will live; the MIRC will be their enormous
playground where they will learn how to destroy life.
The DEIS even describes the
Mariana Islands
as “deficient,” for lacking enough live-fire ranges. In other words, the
military sees our archipelago home as useless unless it can be bombed.
The MIRC area will encompass about 501,873 square nautical miles to
include open ocean, coastal areas, surface and underwater. The combined land
area on Guam, Rota, Tinian,
Saipan
, and Farallon de Medinilla to be used for training areas and facilities will be
about 64 nautical miles, and approximately 63,000 nautical miles of airspace
will be designated as Special Use Airspace. Surface
and underwater areas, according to the study, will “extend from the waters
south of Guam to north of Pagan and from the Pacific Ocean east of the
Marianas
Islands
to the middle of the
Philippine Sea
to the west.”
Already
bombing practice occurs routinely on Farallon de Medinilla, an island not long
ago prized by locals for its excellent fishing. Now it is off-limits and
contaminated, worsening by the day.
Stopping
the Guam Buildup will “cut off the head of the snake” that would otherwise
kill or severely diminish the celebrated reef and land ecologies of the rest of
the archipelago. According to the Population Reference Bureau, only 30% of
Guam
’s natural habitat remains. But that sad statistic is not shared by the rest
of the islands in the chain, still plentiful in biological diversity.
Tinian
The spectacularly beautiful and ecologically rich
island
of
Tinian
would be hardest hit, if we let this happen.
Tinian
is home to many endemic species, including the Tinian Monarch, an endemic bird.
The DEIS explains that the military intends to use two-thirds of the island to
routinely conduct many hazardous activities, including live-fire training (which
leaves behind depleted uranium and other highly toxic materials), various
pyrotechnics and detonations both on land and underwater, and amphibious
landings (heavy, lumbering tanks crushing the thriving reef as well as
destroying the sea-turtle nesting areas on the beach). As the DEIS explains,
Tinian is “capable
of supporting Marine Expeditionary Unit aviation events such as ground element
training and air element training, simulated evacuations of noncombatants,
airfield seizure training, expeditionary airfield training, and special warfare
activities.”
No
species will be left undamaged. These activities will decimate one of the
healthiest and most biologically diverse marine ecosystems on the planet, thus
also destroying an important food source for its
Pacific
Island
inhabitants.
Tinian
groundwater endangered
The
DEIS also warns that “groundwater aquifers on Tinian are also
vulnerable to contamination by substances introduced onto the soil surface
because the thin soils and underlying permeable limestone does not significantly
impede the passage of contaminants to the shallow aquifer.” We can only imagine what heavy metals and other carcinogenic and
hazardous materials will be seeping into the groundwater as military war games
are routinely conducted all over the island.
In addition to
the destruction caused by bombs, tanks, planes, ships and nuclear and hazardous
wastes, the islands will also suffer from opportunists “cashing in” on the
sudden inflow of a large demographic of single males looking for “rest and
relaxation.” As on
Guam
, we can safely predict a rise in prostitution, illegal drugs, and crime. On
Rota
– pristine and undeveloped; an authentic “tropical paradise” -- the
construction of two hotel-casinos are in the works, in anticipation of the Guam
Buildup becoming a reality.
As you can see
from these facts presented in the military’s Draft Environmental Impact
Statement, the Guam Buildup is a recipe for nothing short of social and
ecological disaster. Please do what you can to stop it.
Here is an
interesting observation from blogger Dave Owen (www.guamblog.com):
“The Draft Environment Impact Statement (DEIS)
wasn’t written to protect
Guam
. It was written to protect the
U.S.
government from criticism once things go wrong on
Guam
. The
U.S.
will say that the 11,000 page DEIS is evidence of its great concern and care
for
Guam
. It’s just the opposite. It’s a pile of data and observation dumped on the
island far too late, and
Guam
has been given precious little time – just 90 days – to respond to it. The
buildup, as the DEIS illustrates, impacts every aspect of the island; the
environment, land use and development, schools, health care, crime, roads -- the
sum of Guam’s quality of life. With the DEIS in hand,
Guam
’s government must now prioritize the buildup’s impact and then prepare
mitigation strategies. It’s a Manhattan Project-sized task and one that’s
impossible to complete in the amount of time available. Guam can rest assured
that the
U.S.
will use the DEIS as its defense when things go wrong: We
prepared you,
Guam
.”
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