WWII-era munitions removed from Bellows driving range

The golfers at the Bellows Air Force Station in Waimanalo encountered a real hazard on the course; several bombs were unearthed.  The Honolulu Star Advertiser reported:

Several World War II-era munitions found buried at Bellows Air Force Station’s golf driving range were removed Tuesday and today, the Air Force said.

The munitions were described as “bombs,” but no details were available from the service as to their size and type.

The Air Force said the area was a former World War II bomb range. Claudia de Leon, an Air Force representative, said the site is being environmentally remediated after it was subsequently used as a clay pigeon shooting range.

Man dies from heart attack playing ‘paintball’ at Bellows Air Force Station

The Honolulu Star Advertiser reports:

A 25-year-old man participating in a “paintball exercise” at Bellows Air Force Station in Waimanalo collapsed in cardiac arrest Saturday afternoon and later died at a hospital, police said.

There were no apparent signs of foul play, police said.

The case is being handled by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, according to the Honolulu Medical Examiner’s Office.

Pentagon Takes Aim at Asia-Pacific, and deploys mercenary social scientists

Recently, versions of the same op ed piece appeared in both Guam and Hawai’i newspapers by James A. Kent and and Eric Casino.  Kent describes himself as “an analyst of geographic-focused social and economic development in Pacific Rim countries; he is president of the JKA Group (www.jkagroup.com).”  Eric Casino is “a social anthropologist and freelance consultant on international business and development in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.”

The authors argue that Guam and Hawai’i should capitalize on the U.S. militarization of the Pacific and remake our island societies into “convergence zones” to counter China’s growing power and influence in the region.   They write:

Because of their critically important geographic positions at the heart of the Pacific, Hawaii and Guam are historically poised to become beneficial centers to the nations of the Western Pacific, the way Singapore serves countries around the South China Sea. In the 19th century, Hawaii was the “gas and go” center for whalers. In the 20th century it was the mobilization center for the war in the Pacific.

The writers even invoke the uprisings in the Arab world to encourage Guam and Hawai’i citizens to step up and take the reins of history:

Citizen action has shown itself as a critical component in the amazing political transformation sweeping the Middle East. It is time to change the old world of dominance and control by the few — to the participation and freedom for the many. The people of Hawaii and Guam will need to navigate these historic shifts with bold and creative rethinking.

“Change the old world dominance and control by the few – to the participation and freedom for the many”?   You would think that they were preaching revolution.  But its quite the opposite.   In the Guam version of the article, they attempt to repackage the subjugation of the peoples of Guam and Hawai’i as liberation, part of the neoliberal agenda of the upcoming APEC summit:

The opportunity to capitalize on these trends is aligned with the choice of Hawaii as the host of the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in November.

Furthermore they encourage the people of Guam and Hawai’i to partake in and feed off of the militarization of our island nations while denigrating grassroots resistance:

The planned move of a part of the Marine Corps base must take place in a manner that builds Guam into a full social and economic participant in the power realignments and not just a military outpost for repositioning of American forces. Citizen unrest in Guam would sap U.S. energy to remain strategic and undermine its forward defense security.

So, while they exhort the people of Hawai’i and Guam “to navigate these historic shifts with bold and creative rethinking,” in the end, they are just selling the same old imperial and neoliberal arrangements imposed by foreign powers that the people of Hawai’i and Guam have had to contend with for centuries.

So what is the point of the op ed?  It makes more sense when you understand the history and context of the authors.  Both Kent and Casino are part of James Kent Associates, a consulting firm that has worked extensively with the Bureau of Land Management to manage the community concerns regarding development of natural resources in a number of western states.  In 1997, the Marine Corps hired JKA Group to help counter resistance from the Wai’anae community to proposed amphibious assault training at Makua Beach, or as they put it to help “sustain its training options at Makua Beach in a cooperative manner with the community, and to be sure that community impacts and environmental justice issues were adequately addressed. JKA engaged in informal community contact and description by entering the routines of the local communities.”

They were essentially ‘hired gun’ social scientists helping the military manipulate the community through anthropological techniques:

Prior to JKA’s involvement, the NEPA process was being “captured” by organized militants from the urban zones of Hawaii. The strategy of the militants was to disrupt NEPA by advocating for the importance of Makua as a sacred beach. As community workers identified elders in the local communities, the elders did not support the notion of a sacred beach-“What, you think we didn’t walk on our beaches?” They pointed to specific sites on the beach that were culturally important and could not be disturbed by any civilian or military activity. As this level of detail was injected into the EA process, the militants were less able to dominate the process and to bring forward their ideological agenda. They had to be more responsible or lose standing in the informal community because the latter understood: “how the training activity, through enhancements to the culture, can directly benefit community members. Therefore, the training becomes a mutual benefit, with the community networks standing between the military and the activists.”

So community members active in the Native Hawaiian, environmental and peace movements are “organized militants from urban zones of Hawaii”?   The military uses similar language to describe the resistance fighters in Iraq and Afghanistan.   In a way, their methods anticipated the use of anthropologists in the battlefield in the “Human Terrain System” program.

What they don’t report on their website is that they failed to win over the community. Opposition to the Marine amphibious exercises was so strong that PACOM hosted an unprecedented meeting between Wai’anae community leaders on the one hand and CINCPAC, the Governor, and other public officials on the other.  As preparations were made for nonviolent civil resistance, CINCPAC canceled the exercise in Makua and moved the amphibious landing to Waimanalo, where the community also protested.

It seems as though JKA Group has been contracted by the Marines once again to help manage the community resistance to the military invasion planned for Guam and Hawai’i.  So the people of Hawai’i and Guam will have to resist this assault “with bold and creative rethinking.”  One such initiative is the Moana Nui conference planned to coincide with APEC in Hawai’i in which the peoples of the Asia Pacific region can chart our own course for development, environmental protection, peace and security in a ways that “change the old world dominance and control by the few – to the participation and freedom for the many.”

On the topic of the militarization of the Asia-Pacific region, I recently spoke with Korean solidarity and human rights activist Hyun Lee and community organizer Irene Tung on their radio program Asia Pacific Forum on WBAI in New York City.

http://www.asiapacificforum.org/show-detail.php?show_id=221#610

Pentagon Takes Aim at Asia-Pacific

Last month, the Pentagon unveiled the first revision of the National Military Strategy since 2004, declaring, “the Nation’s strategic priorities and interests will increasingly emanate from the Asia-Pacific region.” Join APF as we discuss the implications of the new document.

Guests

  • KYLE KAJIHIRO is Director of DMZ Hawaii and Program Director of the American Friends Service Committee in Hawaii.

Marines expansion threatens to “radically change” aircraft stationing and training in Hawai’i

The Marine Corps is threatening a major expansion in Hawai’i including basing of new aircraft, an increase in troops and dependents and expanded training.  The Navy/Marine Corps is preparing an Environmental Impact Statement for this expansion.  There will be public scoping meetings held in Aug 24-30. From the project website  http://www.mcbh.usmc.mil/mv22h1eis/:

Public Scoping Open Houses

Federal, state, and county agencies and interested parties are invited to attend any of these open houses and encouraged to provide comments. The Navy will consider these comments in determining the scope of the EIS. Five meetings, using an informal open-house format, will be held on the islands of Hawai‘i, O‘ahu, and Moloka‘i as follows:

Meeting Dates/Locations

August 24, 2010 | 5-8pm

Hilo High School Cafeteria

556 Waianuenue Avenue

Hilo, HI 96720

August 25, 2010 | 4-7pm

Waikoloa Elementary & Middle School Cafeteria

68-1730 Ho’oko Street

Waikoloa, HI 96738

August 26, 2010 | 5-8pm

King Intermediate School Cafeteria

46-155 Kamehameha Hwy.

Kāne‘ohe, HI 96744

August 28, 2010 | 1-4pm

Kaunakakai Elementary School Library

Ailoa Street

Kaunakakai, HI 96748

August 30, 2010 | 5-8pm

Waimānalo Elementary & Intermediate School Cafeteria

41-1330 Kalanianaole Hwy.

Waimānalo, HI 96795

Project Overview

The Department of the Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, is preparing an Environmental Impact Statement MV-22 Aircraft (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Kelsey J. Green (Released))(EIS) for the basing and operation of MV-22 tiltrotor Osprey aircraft and H-1 Cobra and Huey attack helicopters in support of III Marine Expeditionary Force elements stationed in Hawai’i. Because the squadrons would train on land owned or controlled by the Department of the Army, the Navy has requested that the Army be a cooperating agency for preparation of this EIS.

AH-1Z Aircraft (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Christopher O'Quin (Released))The EIS will evaluate a proposal to introduce up to two Marine Medium Tiltrotor (VMM) squadrons with a total of 24 MV-22 aircraft, and one Marine Light Attack Helicopter (HMLA) squadron composed of 18 AH-1Z and 9 UH-1Y helicopters, construction of improvements to accommodate the new aviation squadrons, improvements to training facilities in Hawai’i used by the Marine Corps, and use of Department of Defense training areas statewide.

UH-1Y Aircraft (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Christopher O'Quin (Released))This website provides information about the proposed action and alternatives, the EIS schedule, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process, and points of contact. Project documents will be posted here as they become available.

The Marine Corps requests your input to identify community concerns and issues to be addressed in the EIS. You can participate in a variety of ways:

  • Attend a public scoping open house.
  • Visit this website to learn more about the EIS throughout the process.
  • E-mail us at mv22h1eis@beltcollins.com to submit comments.
  • Mail written comments to Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Pacific, Attn: EV21, MV-22/H-1 EIS Project Manager, 258 Makalapa Drive, Suite 100, Pearl Harbor, HI 96860-3134.

Written comments must be submitted no later than September 7, 2010. Thank you for your interest.

USS Arizona artifacts are sacred – so are Native Hawaiian burials

The Navy and the veterans community have rightfully rallied to stop the auctioning of artifacts salvaged from the USS Arizona after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The silver plated service set is considered ‘sacred’, and is being claimed as property of the Navy.  It is good to have a sense of history and the sacred.  But it is hypocrisy when the military fails to extend the same degree of respect to Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) sacred sites and burials in areas touched by military activity.  For example in Waimanalo, the expansion of recreational cabins by the Air Force is evicting the bones of Kanaka Maoli ancestors from their resting place to make room for…toilets.    On Mokapu the Marines golf and build their homes and training facilities atop the vast Heleloa sand dunes, a well known burial site.   Years ago, sand was mined from the dunes to build the base, and now bone fragments are turning up in the driveways, pavements and foundations of many military homes on base.   Military homes are literally built with the bones of Native Hawaiians!  I wonder how well those families sleep.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091111/NEWS01/911110353/Artifacts+off+auction+block

Posted on: Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Artifacts off auction block

Navy raises ownership questions over recovered items from USS Arizona

By Christie Wilson

Advertiser Staff Writer

A partial silver-plated service set salvaged from the USS Arizona just months after the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor was withdrawn from auction yesterday after the Navy took action to claim the artifacts.

Cowan’s Auctions Inc. of Cincinnati was planning to sell the items at a Dec. 9 auction and estimated the 24-piece lot would fetch up to $20,000. When Navy officials learned of the auction through inquiries by The Advertiser, they contacted Cowan’s to discuss ownership of the artifacts, according to a spokesman from the Naval History & Heritage Command, which is part of the Department of Navy.

“We have withdrawn the items from our Dec. 9 auction and have encouraged the present owner to strongly consider donating the collection to the Navy or to the USS Arizona Memorial,” said auctioneer Wes Cowan, who has appeared on the PBS shows “Antiques Roadshow” and “History Detectives.”

U.S. military veterans and others were dismayed that artifacts from the USS Arizona might be sold to the highest bidder, because the battleship is considered hallowed ground. Many of the 1,177 crewmen who died on the ship are entombed in its hull.

Cowan said the artifacts, which include a teapot, saucers and a candlestick from the officers’ mess, were received on consignment from the daughter of Navy diver Carl Keenum, who collected the pieces while salvaging remains, ammunition, weaponry and personal items from the stricken U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor.

Keenum was serving as a construction battalion master of arms aboard the USS Oklahoma during the Pearl Harbor attack and helped saved the lives of 37 crewmates in the hours after the ship was sunk by Japanese torpedoes, according to the auctioneer.

A statement from Cowan’s Auctions said Keenum brought home the service pieces as souvenirs of his wartime experiences, just as countless other soldiers, sailors and other military personnel saved mementos of World War II.

The 30-year Navy veteran died in 1964.

“While Keenum is no longer alive to tell the story of how he acquired the silver plate, there is little doubt that he did so with the belief that it would have only been discarded,” the auction house statement said. “Indeed, the shipboard salvage operations at Pearl (Harbor) produced mountains of trash that was simply piled onto scows, towed to sea and dumped. Such would have likely been the fate of Keenum’s souvenirs.”

The current owner of the artifacts decided to sell the collection when a family member became ill with leukemia, Cowan’s Auctions said. “The consignor was genuinely surprised to learn that the souvenirs saved from almost certain destruction were not hers to sell,” the statement said.

Keenum’s daughter wishes to remain anonymous and would not comment, Cowan said in an interview.

“In her eyes, her dad did nothing wrong, he was a hero and he kept these not for their monetary but historical value,” he said.

Navy Region Hawaii issued a statement yesterday saying the issue of ownership of the artifacts is being reviewed by the Navy’s legal staff and the Naval History & Heritage Command.

The statement also reiterated the longstanding position that “U.S. Navy craft and their associated contents remain the property of the U.S. Navy unless expressly abandoned or title is transferred by appropriate U.S. government authority. Property rights are established in the U.S. Constitution and international maritime law.”

The statement said the USS Arizona “is considered one of our nation’s most sacred and hallowed historical sites.”

“We cherish the memory of the sailors who sacrificed in World War II. The significance of USS Arizona should never be diminished or cheapened.”

The lot of 24 pieces includes a candlestick with a raised Navy seal, a pedestal bowl, sauce boat and two lids, a tray, seven saucers marked Gorham, six bowls, a teapot marked Reed & Barton, a cruet stand, and several pieces of silver burners.

Salvage diver and former merchant marine Gary Gianotti, 38, of Milford, Conn., alerted The Advertiser to the impending auction. He said he has been involved in the recovery of Revolutionary War cannons, flags and other relics with a mind toward preservation.

“I was really shocked. I could not believe that (the auctioneer) would condone allowing sacred relics to that shipwreck being sold off,” Gianotti said.

Gianotti said he hopes the artifacts are returned to Hawaii.

Arthur Herriford, 87, national president of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, said he was relieved to hear the items will not be sold at auction.

“It’s sacred material and we feel very strongly that you don’t monkey around with anything like that,” said Herriford, of Sherman Oaks, Calif. “The Arizona Memorial museum is the place it should be.”

The auction catalog indicated the USS Arizona Memorial had written to Keenum’s heirs in 1997 expressing interest in acquiring the items as a gift from the family.

Paul DePrey, superintendent of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument, which includes the USS Arizona Memorial, has said the National Park Service would very much like to own the partial serving set, but was not planning to bid for it.

Reach Christie Wilson at cwilson@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Marines plan another urban training site in Hawai’i?

The article doesn’t specify where the Marines plan to put this new facility.  They already built a new MOUT at Waimanalo (Bellows) on Hawaiian national land that was supposed to be returned.  They failed to consult with the local community, which sparked protests.   Previously, the Marines had wanted to build a MOUT on Mokapu peninsula, in a Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) burial site, but this was opposed by the Hawaiian families from that area. So the MOUT was moved to Waimanalo.   Afghan nationals were shipped in from California to play the role of villagers for a recent training event in Waimanalo:

Nearly 50 Afghan nationals were recruited in Southern California and brought to Hawaii. They not only participated in checkpoint and village exercises but also prepared Afghani dishes for the Marines to sample.

Travel to Hawai’i, be extras in a military exercise…not bad work if you can get it.   Beats getting shot up or bombed by drones.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091108/NEWS08/911080390/Marines+to+build+urban+training+site+in+Islands

Posted on: Sunday, November 8, 2009

Marines to build urban training site in Islands

$7.9 million facility will help meet requirements for predeployment

By Dan Lamothe

Marine Corps Times

The Marine Corps will expand its use of special effects in infantry training next year, with an expansive urban training facility anticipated in Hawaii and high-tech immersion trainers planned in North Carolina and California, Marine officials said.

The next-generation Military Operation on Urban Terrain facility planned for Marine Corps Base Hawaii is expected to cost $7.9 million. Officials say it will help Marines meet predeployment requirements while reducing the need for travel to the Mainland.

Currently, most Hawaii-based units conduct such training at the Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif.

New Infantry Immersion Trainers are planned for Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Camp Lejeune, N.C.

The new facilities will incorporate many of the same methods to familiarize Marines with what they’ll see in war zones, including the use of foreign role players, digital holograms that resemble insurgents and special effects that simulate improvised explosive blasts and the chaos afterward.

The Corps chose to expand its immersion facilities to increase the number of Marines who receive the training. Since the existing trainer opened at Pendleton in fall 2007, about 12,400 trainees have gone through it, Marine officials said. A smaller immersion trainer overseen by the Marine Expeditionary Rifle Squad program based near Quantico is used to assess combat gear, but does not train large Marine units.

taste of combat

The “hyper-realistic” immersion trainers are important, Marine officials say, because they give Marines a chance to experience a taste of combat before they actually deploy, to test themselves while hearing different languages in tense situations and discern who is — and is not — the enemy.

But the Corps hasn’t been able to provide this type of training to as many Marines as it would like.

“One of the things that we realized through the experience at Camp Pendleton is that the IIT that they put in the old tomato factory just had limited through-put,” said retired Lt. Col. Rich Engelen, a range requirements officer with Training & Education Command, based at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va. “They had an ability to host squads for training, but not in the volume that they wanted.”

Construction on the facilities has yet to begin, but planning is under way for all three facilities. The completion date for the Pendleton facility is May 2010, while the Hawaii facility could open in October and the Lejeune shoothouse could open in early 2011.

The facilities will offer Marine units training options that don’t exist now. At Pendleton, some units will be able to train for days, maneuvering through existing outdoor urban training facilities before sending squads of Marines through both the indoor and outdoor immersion trainers, Engelen said.

A conceptual drawing for the new Pendleton Infantry Immersion Trainer shows it could have dozens of buildings, a marketplace, cemeteries and mosques. Like existing outdoor urban training facilities, it also will have observation decks on the second floor of buildings, where the units can be observed during training.

“We’re going to make a concerted attempt to make this more realistic,” Engelen said. “One of the problems is that there is no solid definition of what immersion is. Everyone sort of understands that it’s the temporary suspension of belief to make you believe that you’re somewhere that you’re not, but we want to make it as good as we can.”

More role players

The facilities will likely incorporate even more role players who speak languages such as Pashtu, which is common in Afghanistan, Engelen said. They interact with Marines during training sessions, acting out scenarios that can range from friendly group meals to deadly ambushes.

The planned trainer in Hawaii also will break ground for the Corps. It will build on the service’s Military Operation on Urban Terrain concept, but offer four separate training areas with increasing levels of complexity, Engelen said.

“There will be some very basic structures that can teach some urban skills, then, as you ramp up, the most complex area will have irregular roads and paths, agricultural areas and other structures,” he said. “Conceivably, a company could come in, run distributed operations in the simple part then have an entire company take the final objective.”

MOUTs already exist on bases across the Corps, including Lejeune, Pendleton and Twentynine Palms. There are no holograms at MOUTs, however, and the facilities are typically large enough to send at least a company of Marines through, rather than a squad.

Waimanalo wants Air Force to return Bellows land

Board asked to seek Bellows land

A proposed resolution claims the Air Force no longer needs 400 acres and should give it up

By Kaylee Noborikawa

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 12, 2009

20090712_nws_bellows1

Some Waimanalo residents are calling for the U.S. Air Force to return about 400 acres from Bellows Air Force Station because the land is being used for recreation rather than critical military purposes.

“I’m asking the neighborhood board to adopt a resolution which asks for the return (of the land), and I expect the neighborhood board to transfer that resolution to Congress, our senators, and President Obama,” said Joseph Ryan, a former member of the Waimanalo Neighborhood Board and a Waimanalo resident since the 1960s.

Ryan drafted the resolution after receiving an environmental assessment in March by the U.S. Air Force which wants to construct at Bellows 48 vacation rentals, a nine-hole disc golf course, a community activity center, a car wash, a water park, a resort pool, and a nine-hole par-3 golf course.

Ryan said his action is not related to the military’s closing of Bellows to the public for a month recently. The popular beach and camping area was closed because of misuse and vandalism, military officials had said. It was reopened over the July 4th weekend.

According to Ryan, the state should get the land, which was appropriated by President Woodrow Wilson in 1917, since the military is no longer using it for its original military purpose.

A total of 1,510 acres of ceded land was appropriated in the presidential executive order, but in 1999, about 1,100 acres were transferred to the U.S. Marine Corps, according to the Corps.

“When the Air Force decided by its EA to use the base for recreational services, they made the decision that this is no longer critical defense purposes. Recreation is a collateral purpose. It doesn’t support the primary mission,” said Ryan.

The military responded by saying that although the primary mission is recreation, the Armed Forces continue to train on the land. Hickam’s 15th Security Forces Squadron, U.S. Marine Corps security forces, and the Honolulu Police Department use Bellows for training, including building clearing, hostage negotiation training, and robbery response.

“Bellows continues to fill key roles in troop recreation and training,” said Capt. Christy Stravolo of the Pacific Air Forces Public Affairs. “One of the key priorities of the Air Force Chief of Staff is airman morale and readiness. Bellows contributes to this priority every day.”

The Bellows Air Force Station offers cabins, camping sites, and other recreational activities for military retirees, soldiers in the reserve/guard, active military members, and U.S. Department of Defense civilians. According to Stravolo, 500,000 visitors use Bellows’ facilities every year.

“Troops can’t afford the expensive commercial establishments, so here’s a chance they have to relax with their families at a very reasonable price. The fees they charge are quite a bit less than Waikiki,” said Gen. Robert Lee.

Lee is in charge of the Army National Guard at Bellows and trains newly promoted sergeants on unit tactics.

“I think we can work it out with the community. We allow the Waimanalo Neighborhood Board to use our facility for their meetings; I believe we can work out a good solution,” Lee said.

MEETING

The Waimanalo Neighborhood Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Waimanalo Public Library to discuss the recreational use of land at Bellows Air Force Station. Public testimony is welcome.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090712_Board_asked_to_seek_Bellows_land.html

Waimanalo Wants Bellows Back

I liked this post by Kehau Watson on the community struggle to reclaim Waimanalo from military control and abuse.

Waimanalo Wants Bellows Back

July 9th, 2009 by Trisha Kehaulani Watson

I’ve never written about the same topic twice, until now.

My first blog on Bellows last week provoked a number of colorful responses on the blog site, but the most interesting response I received via email, from a member of the Waimanalo Neighborhood Board.

Seems members of the Waimanalo Neighborhood Board also have questions about the military’s continued presence at Bellows. As such, they are proposing a resolution requesting the return of the lands to the State. It reads in part:

AWARE the Waimanalo Military Reservation was renamed Bellows Field in 1933 and redesignated as Bellows AFB in 1948 and ten years later re-designated as Bellows AFS and the land was used for military purposes until March 2009, and the United States Air Force continues to hold 400 acres, more or less, of the original land appropriated under the 1917 Executive Order and has publicly declared the purpose and “mission” at Bellows AFS, effective March 2009, is “enhancing combat effectiveness by delivering secure, affordable, and customer-focused recreational services” and has published its intention and proposal to construct a water park, swimming and “resort” pools, golf courses, and recreational lodgings on the 400 acres which are Category C–Revenue Generating Programs which “provide recreational activities that benefit military morale [,] foster community spirit and provide alternatives to less wholesome off-duty pursuits , [and] have the greatest capability of generating nonappropriated fund revenues and fund most of their expenses.” (Air Force Instruction (AFI) 32-1022, § 3.2.3, June 29, 1994) and are not “programs required to support the basic military mission”, and

EMPHASIZING the lands held by the United States Air Force at Waimanalo, upon which a “resort” for recreational purposes is proposed, is a “Category C” use of land, approved by the Secretary of the Air Force under the authority of the Secretary of Defense, which cannot reasonably be construed as a “critical area” for defense or military purposes under the Admissions Act, and

IT IS DECLARED BY THE WAIMANALO NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD that since the United States Air Force, on the remaining Crown Land under its control at Waimanalo, no longer uses or intends to use the land for the specific military purposes for which it was appropriated and because the Congress of the United States has properly exercised its Constitutional authority and enacted laws which devolved the Waimanalo Crown Land to the State of Hawaii to be used “solely for the benefit of the inhabitants of the Hawaiian Islands for educational and other purposes” pursuant to the Joint Resolution of Annexation of July 7, 1898, the President and Chief Executive or his designate must return the Waimanalo Crown Land to the State of Hawaii and the Governor and Legislature of the State of Hawaii must revoke the conditional permission allowing for occupation of the Waimanalo Crown Lands as the current use and occupation exceeds the permission given to the United States, and

THEREFORE BE IT URGENTLY, STRONGLY, AND FINALLY RESOLVED THAT THE WAIMANALO NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD having given consideration to all the relevant issues, and provided opportunity for testimony by the public and United States Military Representatives, that the approximately 400 acres, more or less, of remaining land under the control of the United States Air Force must be returned to the State of Hawaii in furtherance of the legislative purposes declared by Congress in § 1, 30 Stat. 750.

You can read their entire proposal and press release below.

Bellows Presentation and Proposed Resolution

Press Release

The Waimanalo Neighborhood Board will be meeting to discuss this issue at its regularly scheduled meeting, Monday, July 13, 2009, at 7:30 at the Waimanalo Public Library.

If you do not know where the library is, I have included a map.

I hope those who commented on my last blog on this topic will make the time to go and share their comments with the neighborhood board in person.

Waimanalo has a beautiful and majestic history. It is best captured in the mele “Waimânalo `Âina Kaulana”:

Uluwehi Waimânalo `âina ho`opulapula
Ipu ia like ala ona pua like `ole

Ho`okahi pu`uwai ho`okahi mana`o
`Aina aloha o ka lehulehu

Hanohano no `oe e Kalanianaole
Ho`oko kauoha `oe na ka hana pololei

Ha`awi ka mae ma`i e ia Waimânalo
Kokua like mai na mana Kahikolu

Kû kilakila na home u`i
Me ka kokua a na mana lani

Ha`ina kêia mele no Waimânalo
`Âina ho`opulapula no Kalaniana`ole

Lush, Waimânalo, homestead land
Its fragrant flowers, incomparable

One heart, one thought
Land of love for the population

You are the glory of (Prince Jonah) Kalaniana`ole
You fulfilled the trust with righteous deeds

Waimanalo gives health
Help and power comes from Trinity

Standing strong, the stalwart homes
With help from the heavenly powers

Tell this song of Waimânalo
Homestead land of Prince Kalaniana`ole

(Traditional, from the G. Cooke Collection, translated by Kanani Mana.)

I have no doubt that if allowed to resume control of their land and space, the Waimanalo community is very capable of making the land now controlled by the military `aina aloha once again.

Source: http://hehawaiiau.honadvblogs.com/2009/07/09/waimanalo-wants-bellows-back/

Demonstration against Military Occupation of Waimanalo

Please support this action by the Waimanalo residents to resist the military build up in their c0mmunity.

On 6/18/09 8:05 AM, “iwalani keliihoomalu” <keliihoomalu@hotmail.com> wrote:

Aloha,

We are organizing a peaceful demonstration of protest. We the positive re-action along with other soverign groups will be coming together to take a stand. We will be excercising our right to say enough is enough. The health center is our place that provides us and continues to service and meet our needs. We have been in discussion with them to release a portion of land that they do not need but chooses to excercise the authority of power to keep us oppressed and seperate us from the land of our inherent birth right. The choice to continue to flaunt it and continually push their military authority is a misuse of their authority antagonizes the whole situation. Which instigates a reaction. Join us in an effort to take a stand and say not in waimanalo and not at the waimanalo health center. We will be in front on Kalanianaole Hwy across from Bellow Air Force Base to hold signs and let them know we do not agree and there is something wrong in their decision. We will be parking on mauka side in Bellows and using Tinker Road as a cross walk to hold signs. We will be there from 9:00 am- 1:00pm. Bring chair, water and your message. I can be reached at 954-7124.

Aloha kakou,
Mabel Ann & Solomon C. Spencer Jr. & Kawehi Kanui Gill

Who : Waimanalo community
What: “Peaceful Demonstration of Protest”
When: June 27, 2009 Saturday
Time: 9:00 am – 1 pm
Where: In front of Bellow’s Air Force Base on Kalanianaole
Why: To support the Waimanalo Community in protest of the closing of our bellow beach and the return of our Native lands.

Join us and take a stand and add your voice in support.


—–Original Message—–
From: May Akamine
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 6:04 PM
To: All Staff
Subject: Signs in Back of Waimanalo Health Center

All Staff –

Just want you to know that a contractor from the military posted 2 “No Trespassing” signs behind our clinic- see attached photos. Please leave the signs as is; please do not deface it; do not remove it, etc. But, please feel free to continue to walk/work in our Garden.

I will be contacting the military PR liaison Major Crouch, w/ cc to our Board of Directors, our Waimanalo Neighborhood Board Chair Kekoa Ho, Representative Chris Lee, etc. to find out what is going on. I’ll get back to you all when I get more info. Mahalo for your cooperation.

signs-by-waimanalo-health-ctr-adult-clinic-6-17-091 signs-by-waimanalo-health-ctr-garden-6-17-091

Aloha –
May Akamine, RN, MS
Executive Director
Waimanalo Health Center
41-1347 Kalanianaole Hwy
Waimanalo, HI 96795
Personal Line: (808) 954-7107
Cell: (808) 225-9614
Clinic Phone: (808) 259-7948
Fax: (808) 259-6449
www.waimanalohc.org <http://www.waimanalohc.org/>

Marines train for Afghanistan war in Waimanalo

Marines prepare for Afghanistan in Waimanalo “village”

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 15, 2009

Sgt. Michael Osburn cautiously led his squad of Kaneohe Marines into the remote village.

With him was Lance Cpl. Robert Bacigalupo. Like many in his squad of 14 Marines, this was Bacigalupo’s first time in a combat zone. The town was littered with plastic bottles, discarded car tires, rags, trash and items Marines call “battlefield clutter.” Loud music from a nearby mosque echoed through the town square.

Osburn, relying on his experiences from earlier Afghan and Iraq combat tours, reached for a pack of Marlboros in his combat vest as he began his “meet and greets” with the locals in the town square. He’s learned that cigarettes were the quickest way to prove that his squad’s intentions were friendly.

As he met with the town’s leaders, an insurgent sniper cut down three of his Marines. Osburn quickly apologized to the mayor for his abrupt departure and turned to handle the crisis.

The crisis and the Afghani village, however, were not real, but rather a combat drill at the Marine’s two-year-old urban warfare training site in Waimanalo last week.

Here Kaneohe’s “Lava Dogs” were preparing for a seven-month deployment to Afghanistan.

Before they leave for Afghanistan, Osburn and the more than 900 Kaneohe Marines belonging to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, will be participating in numerous battle drills and combat scenarios at Kaneohe Bay, Waimanalo, Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island and the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center at Twentynine Palms, Calif., about halfway between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

This will be the battalion’s fifth combat tour. It went to Afghanistan in 2006 and was sent to Iraq in 2004, 2007 and again last year.

Osburn, who deployed to Afghanistan in 2006, said parts of the country resemble the training areas in the mountains near Kahuku.

Last week Bravo Company, with about 180 Marines, completed part of its first phase of training at Bellows Air Force Station, where shipping containers have been used to replicate an Afghan town. The containers are painted tan with windows and doors cut into them. Some are stacked on top of one another to transform them into two-story buildings, which are supposed to be Afghan schools, government offices and shops. There was even a turquoise wooden dome added to one of the shipping container complexes to make it look like a mosque.

The Marines get a quick critique after each exercise. After one session, Staff Sgt. Lee LeGrande, an exercise controller, praised Osburn for using cigarettes to get closer to the “villagers” and for apologizing to the mayor before breaking off his courtesy visit.

However, LeGrande also criticized the squad for failing to get approval before firing on the “mosque” where the Marines believed the sniper had been hiding. He also cautioned the squad to be more careful before aiding the wounded Marines or they could end up becoming a victim of the sniper.

Chief Warrant Officer Craig Marshall, a battalion gunner who has done four Iraqi combat tours, said during the first phase Marines are taught basics of the culture where they will be deployed; procedures and techniques necessary to man a vehicle checkpoint and conduct patrols through villages and towns; and ways to identify the various homemade bombs used by insurgents.

Nearly 50 Afghan nationals were recruited in Southern California and brought to Hawaii. They not only participated in checkpoint and village exercises but also prepared Afghani dishes for the Marines to sample.

The Kaneohe Marines will spend a couple of weeks at Pohakuloa later this summer where intense live-fire exercises will be held. They will then return to Waimanalo and live and work for several days in the same training area, which will be turned into an Afghan forward operating base. In September the 1st Battalion will spend nearly a month at Twentynine Palms before going on leave and deploying to Afghanistan at the end of the year.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090615_Marines_prepare_for_Afghanistan_at_a_village_in_Waimanalo.html