Making Waves: Defending Ka’ena

Making Waves: Defending Ka’ena, Episode 55

Length: 0:27
Social issues & cultural programming dedicated to peace and social justice.
7/19/2011 Tue 9:30 am, Channel NATV Channel 53
Or streaming online:  http://olelo.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=30&clip_id=21987

I speak with Summer Mullins and Uncle Fred Mullins about their efforts to protect Ka’ena from the scourge of off-roaders destroying the sand dunes with their mud bogging, drunken crashes, bonfires and garbage. According to Uncle Fred Mullins, 90% of the offenders are military.  We show some video and photos from Ka’ena.

Also, you can watch past episodes online.

Making Waves, Episode 54 “No Can Eat Concrete!”

I speak with Wai’anae kupuna, Auntie Alice Greenwood (Concerned Elders of Wai’anae) and Candace Fujikane (UH Manoa English Professor) about the struggle for environmental justice to preserve Wai’anae’s cultural sites and agricultural lands from industrial encroachment.

Making Waves, Episode 51, “Violence and the Military Culture”

Darlene Rodrigues speaks with Col. Ann Wright about the epidemic of violence against women in the military and discuss how the military culture exacerbates the violence.

 

 

A Marriage of Convenience: “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” –a complex and costly policy

Ashley Lukens wrote a great article in the Honolulu Weekly about the recent repeal of the  military’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy and the complexities surrounding the issue of gays in the military:

One year into earning his bachelor’s degree at Hawaii Pacific University (HPU), John Foster longed for more structure and direction in his life. In 2003, he joined the US Navy and began a career as a linguist. Shortly after, Foster married Amy Carson. During their five-year marriage, the couple, who asked not to have their real names published, remained open about their gay and lesbian sexual identities.

Their story highlights the absurdities of living as a gay or lesbian service member under the military’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) policy. It also illustrates the complexities involved in the repeal of the policy, which will soon go into effect. What will the repeal of DADT mean for Foster, Carson and other soldiers–gay or straight, married or single?

She raises complex questions about justice and equality for LGBTQ service members and the impacts and role of the military in U.S. wars and occupations of other countries, including Hawai’i.  Some doubt that the repeal of the policy will amount to significant change in the military culture:

Kathy Ferguson, professor of political science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, doubts that the repeal of DADT will significantly alter the military’s homophobic culture.

“As long as the military proudly trains soldiers through the strategic use of sex and gender –“Don’t be a lady, a little girl, etc.,” and as long as contempt for women and homosexuals remains at the heart of soldiering –then gay service members will remain the object of contempt.”

The importance of sexuality in soldiering underpinned the conservative opposition to the repeal of DADT.

Eri Oura, former organizer of the Collective for Equity Justice and Empowerment and AFSC Hawai’i committee member and yours truly were interviewed for this article:

“A change in policy does not lead to a change in culture,” echoes local LGBT activist Eri Oura. “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, like gay marriage and civil union legislation, are policy changes. The repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell does not in any way imply that we can stop fighting for justice for all peoples.”

For Oura, this fight for justice requires that we not uncritically laud the repeal of DADT.

“I remember the day that Obama signed the repeal, there was an air of triumph across the LGTB community. People were really excited about it, my friends included, because it would open up new job and educational opportunities. What people were forgetting is that the military is a vehicle for war. Every day, people are being killed unnecessarily–soldiers and civilians alike. It does not help those of us who are struggling to liberate their communities from the forces of our economic draft.”

So, does celebrating the repeal of DADT bolster US militarism or make us complicit with the US’s wars in Afghanistan and Iraq? Does it implicate LGTB activists in the effects of militarism here in Hawaii?

The fight against militarism and the fight for equality are important political battles in Hawaii. As Native Hawaiian activists struggle for cultural access at Makua Valley, environmentalist fight against the Stryker Brigade and LGTB advocates begin to assess the passage of a civil unions bill, the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell raises some interesting questions for local residents and political leaders.

Kyle Kajihiro of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), is particularly wary of the effects of DADT’s repeal on demilitarization efforts in Hawaii. The AFSC focuses on the clean up, restoration and return of military-held lands in Hawaii as a way of moving toward a sustainable, peaceful society.

“We feel Hawaii should not be used as a place to expand US militarism and conduct wars against other peoples,” he explains. AFSC focuses on educating Hawaii’s youth on the realities of military service and promoting alternative ways of serving their community.

But even Kajihiro admits that the repeal of DADT creates a conundrum for progressive activists.

“Although we advocate for demilitarization and alternatives to the military, we are strong supporters of Hawaii’s LGTB youth. The AFSC feels that they should be treated fairly and equally when serving in the military.”

The author generously gave me the last word:

For the Army, no matter how you look at it, the repeal of DADT is a step in the right direction, according to Kajihiro.

“People feel that if they applaud the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, they are somehow endorsing the further militarization of Hawaii,” he says. “It’s not so. Anytime the government has less control over our bodies is a reason to celebrate. That is what the repeal of DADT means — for gay and straight people alike.”

READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Mental health program to aid Guard, Reserves

Mental health program to aid Guard, Reserves

By Helen Altonn

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Sep 13, 2009

Mental Health America of Hawaii is launching a program called “Healing the Trauma of the War” to address combat stress, depression and other needs of returning National Guard soldiers and Reservists.

“We’re going to do a review of what happens when they return home and who is falling through the cracks,” said Marya Grambs, MHA-Hawaii executive director.

The study will include spouses and look at marital problems and the impact on children of multiple deployments, as well as post-traumatic stress disorder, brain injury, suicide and employment issues, she said.

About 1,700 Hawaii Air and Army Guard and Army Reserve personnel have returned home after 10-month assignments in Kuwait.

MHA-Hawaii has retained theStrategist , an advisory firm to health care corporations and agencies, on a one-year consultant contract to work on the project.

Noe Foster, chief executive officer of the firm, said she is assembling a broad task force of National Guard and Reserve leaders, soldiers, families and other stakeholders. They will meet at least monthly over the next year to identify needs of Hawaii’s 5,500 National Guard soldiers and 5,300 Reservists, she said.

She said mental health studies of soldiers show PTSD and suicides increase dramatically with frequency of deployments and, compared to other U.S. Guard and Reserve troops, Hawaii’s soldiers have the highest frequency of deployments.

On a national level, statistics show 12 percent have some serious combat stress or depression on the first deployment, 19 percent on the second and 27 percent after the third, Foster said, adding that the task force is trying to get specific data on Hawaii soldiers.

U.S. Sen Daniel Akaka, chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, said at a hearing at the Oahu Veterans Center in Salt Lake last month that more should be done to help families of returning National Guard and Army Reserve soldiers, MHA-H said.

Grambs said the returning troops face a “triple whammy” because of high unemployment and economic problems.

“Those in my generation saw what happened to kids coming back from Vietnam,” she said. “We have to all join together and take responsibility and figure out how not to let anything that happened to our Vietnam veterans happen again.”

She said the task force will talk to soldiers, spouses, the school system, professionals, and National Guard and Reserve leaders and hold focus groups “to come to an understanding of what’s not working and what’s missing and create a plan of action to get needs filled.”

Town hall meetings will be held next year to bring the public together with Guards and Reservists and their families “about how the whole community can do a better job of supporting our own soldiers,” Grambs said.

Foster said Guard and Reserve unit members face challenges of housing and health care and “they don’t have the camaraderie of troops they would have on active duty. … They’re coming back to a world that changed in the past year.”

“To help these soldiers and their families, we need to see things from the 30,000-foot level to the foxhole level and every point in between,” Foster added.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/hawaiinews/20090913_Mental_health_program_to_aid_Guard_Reserves.html

Schofield soldier dies in barracks

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Nathan Spangenberg sent this lighthearted picture to his mother, Lois Spangenberg, when he was deployed in Iraq in 2007. Courtesy of lois spangenberg

Tucson GI made it through Iraq duty, died in barracks

By Carol Ann Alaimo
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 09.11.2009

The Army is investigating the death of a Tucson soldier who survived a war, only to be claimed by an apparent illness back at his home base.

Spc. Nathan Spangenberg, 21, was found dead in his room at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii on Tuesday, a few days after he told loved ones by phone that he wasn’t feeling well, family members said.

It isn’t clear when he died, they said. Because of the holiday weekend, the soldier wasn’t noticed missing until he failed to report for work on Tuesday.

Spangenberg, an infantryman, returned in February from a 15-month tour in Iraq with the 2nd Stryker Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, his family said.

Loved ones who rejoiced when he came home from the war safely were stunned to see Army officers at their doorstep Wednesday.

“You worry so much while they’re gone and then he comes home and you think you can stop worrying. And now this,” said the soldier’s girlfriend, Aleisa Krug, 19, of Tucson, a student at Arizona State University.

Nathan’s mother, Lois Spangenberg, a northwest-side resident, said her son called her from Hawaii late last week and said he had strep throat. He also said he was undergoing more medical tests because he had blood and protein in his urine, she said.

He told his mother he planned to stay in his barracks for the weekend to watch movies and rest.

That was their last conversation. When she came home Wednesday from her job at Sunquest Information Systems, men in uniform were waiting for her.

“It’s so hard to believe,” she said. “It’s hard not knowing what happened.”

She said officials told her the investigation could take some time, and they couldn’t immediately say when her son’s body would be returned to Tucson.

Army officials couldn’t be reached for comment late Thursday.

Nathan was the baby of the Spangenberg clan, and the family clown, his mother said.

After he deployed to Iraq in late 2007, he sent home a string of comical photos, she said. In one, the soldier is sitting on his bunk in Iraq, holding up a sign that says “I (heart) my Mommy.”

In another, taken as he marked his 20th birthday in Iraq, he’s in full battle gear wearing a cone-shaped birthday hat atop his helmet.

“He really cared about people. He was a very giving and loving person and a lot of fun,” his mother said.

“His friends would all describe him as a person who could make them laugh.”

The soldier attended Mountain View High School from 2004 to 2006, then transferred to Mountain Rose Academy, a charter school, before earning a general equivalency diploma. He joined the military in 2007.

He is the fifth service member with ties to Mountain View High School to die since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan began.

He also worked for a time as a custodian at Casas Adobes Baptist Church, his mother said.

Nathan Spangenberg also is survived by his brother Colin, 23, his sister Megan Bette, 26, and a niece and a nephew. His father, Glenn, died of cancer when the soldier was 4 years old.

Contact reporter Carol Ann Alaimo at calaimo@azstarnet.com or at 573-4138.

Source: http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/308523

Schofield Barracks hosting suicide awareness event

Updated at 6:25 p.m., Monday, August 31, 2009

Schofield Barracks hosting suicide awareness event

Advertiser Staff and News Services

The Army in Hawai’i will recognize National Suicide Prevention Month tomorrow on Sills Field at Schofield Barracks with events intended to promote awareness of the impact suicide has not only has on family members, but also on the “Army family,” officials said.

The day starts at 6:30 a.m. with a two-mile fun run, followed by opportunities for soldiers and family members to visit booths staffed by behavioral health experts, Army counselors and military chaplains.

Army programs are available not only for suicide prevention but also drug and alcohol prevention and domestic violence prevention, officials said.

In 2008, 143 soldiers Army-wide committed suicide, the highest number in the three decades that the Army has kept records. The service is on track to surpass that number this year.

“The most frustrating thing is trying to find a cause,” Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, the Army’s vice chief of staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee on July 30.

To reverse the increase in soldier suicides, the Army has implemented a number of programs and put Chiarelli in charge of the service’s suicide prevention efforts.

Among those efforts, which included a service-wide stand down and a series of chain-teaching sessions, is a $50 million, five-year study on suicide conducted in conjunction with the National Institute of Mental Health.

“It’s not that the Army lacks programs to confront the problem of suicide,” said Brig. Gen. Colleen McGuire, Director, Army Suicide Prevention Task Force. “The long-term challenge is determining which programs are most effective for our soldiers, and ensuring Army leaders, from junior noncommissioned officers to the most senior leaders, know how to help their soldiers take advantage of these programs.”

Officials are trying to reduce the stigma of seeking help, a key obstacle in a warrior culture that prizes physical and mental toughness.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090831/BREAKING01/90831073/0/RSS0103source=rss_breaking/Schofield-Barracks-hosting-suicide-awareness-event

Injured soldier feels 'betrayed'

Posted on: Sunday, August 30, 2009

Injured soldier feels ‘betrayed’

By William Cole
Advertiser Columnist

Sgt. Kaipo Giltner has been in the Hawai’i Army National Guard for 10 years.

The 28-year-old Hawai’i Kai man deployed to Iraq for a year in 2005, and was set to deploy to Kuwait last fall.

That’s when his service to the nation got complicated – in this case due to injury. Giltner’s battles have since been fought at home with the National Guard as he figures out what to do about a bad back.

Giltner said his Humvee hit a bump on a tank trail Sept. 2 during training at Fort Hood, Texas. He and other Hawai’i soldiers were preparing for the deployment to Kuwait.

Giltner, a 1999 Kaiser High School graduate, said he felt pain shooting down his leg, and numbness.

“He followed protocol” and went to sick call, said Giltner’s wife, Shelly. She was six months pregnant at the time. Kaipo Giltner was sent home and taken off active duty.

The National Guard initiated a special “line of duty” investigation, and Giltner recently got the results.

“They are going back and forth, (but) they are saying that it was a previous injury, and they are not responsible because I didn’t claim it at the time,” he said.

Giltner said he was in a Humvee that was hit by a roadside bomb in Iraq during the 2005 deployment. He had some back pain, “but it was really small and minor,” and Giltner said he didn’t report it. He then went through pre-deployment training in 2008.

“I was fine. I did all the necessary training,” he said. Giltner, who has a disc protrusion, said he should have been kept on active duty so he could receive pay as he pursued medical treatment.

“One doctor told me I might need surgery, so if I go through surgery, I’ll be out of work for a year,” said Giltner, who works part-time as a gate guard at Fort Shafter.

“I feel pretty much betrayed,” he added. “I fight for the country and put my life on the line and when it’s time to take care of me … they can’t do it.”

Lt. Col. Chuck Anthony, a Hawai’i National Guard spokesman, said he is prohibited from discussing specifics of Giltner’s case, which he called “very complicated.” Soldiers often are kept on active duty during injury treatment, he said.

“In most cases, it’s pretty clear cut,” Anthony said. Other cases “can be problematic because it’s not clear in terms off what caused a particular illness or injury (and) whether or not it was a pre-existing condition.”

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090830/COLUMNISTS32/908300357

Chalmers Johnson: Three good reasons to liquidate U.S. Empire, and ten steps to get there

photo

Soldiers line up at Manas Air Base in Kyrgyzstan. The US operates 865 bases in more than 40 countries and territories. (Photo: US Department of Defense)

Source: http://www.truthout.org/073009X

Three Good Reasons to Liquidate Our Empire: And Ten Steps to Take to Do So

by: Chalmers Johnson  |  Visit article original @ TomDispatch.com


However ambitious President Barack Obama’s domestic plans, one unacknowledged issue has the potential to destroy any reform efforts he might launch. Think of it as the 800-pound gorilla in the American living room: our longstanding reliance on imperialism and militarism in our relations with other countries and the vast, potentially ruinous global empire of bases that goes with it. The failure to begin to deal with our bloated military establishment and the profligate use of it in missions for which it is hopelessly inappropriate will, sooner rather than later, condemn the United States to a devastating trio of consequences: imperial overstretch, perpetual war, and insolvency, leading to a likely collapse similar to that of the former Soviet Union.

According to the 2008 official Pentagon inventory of our military bases around the world, our empire consists of 865 facilities in more than 40 countries and overseas U.S. territories. We deploy over 190,000 troops in 46 countries and territories. In just one such country, Japan, at the end of March 2008, we still had 99,295 people connected to U.S. military forces living and working there – 49,364 members of our armed services, 45,753 dependent family members, and 4,178 civilian employees. Some 13,975 of these were crowded into the small island of Okinawa, the largest concentration of foreign troops anywhere in Japan.

These massive concentrations of American military power outside the United States are not needed for our defense. They are, if anything, a prime contributor to our numerous conflicts with other countries. They are also unimaginably expensive. According to Anita Dancs, an analyst for the website Foreign Policy in Focus, the United States spends approximately $250 billion each year maintaining its global military presence. The sole purpose of this is to give us hegemony – that is, control or dominance – over as many nations on the planet as possible.

We are like the British at the end of World War II: desperately trying to shore up an empire that we never needed and can no longer afford, using methods that often resemble those of failed empires of the past – including the Axis powers of World War II and the former Soviet Union. There is an important lesson for us in the British decision, starting in 1945, to liquidate their empire relatively voluntarily, rather than being forced to do so by defeat in war, as were Japan and Germany, or by debilitating colonial conflicts, as were the French and Dutch. We should follow the British example. (Alas, they are currently backsliding and following our example by assisting us in the war in Afghanistan.)

Here are three basic reasons why we must liquidate our empire or else watch it liquidate us.

1. We Can No Longer Afford Our Postwar Expansionism

Shortly after his election as president, Barack Obama, in a speech announcing several members of his new cabinet, stated as fact that “[w]e have to maintain the strongest military on the planet.” A few weeks later, on March 12, 2009, in a speech at the National Defense University in Washington DC, the president again insisted, “Now make no mistake, this nation will maintain our military dominance. We will have the strongest armed forces in the history of the world.” And in a commencement address to the cadets of the U.S. Naval Academy on May 22nd, Obama stressed that “[w]e will maintain America’s military dominance and keep you the finest fighting force the world has ever seen.”

What he failed to note is that the United States no longer has the capability to remain a global hegemon, and to pretend otherwise is to invite disaster.

According to a growing consensus of economists and political scientists around the world, it is impossible for the United States to continue in that role while emerging into full view as a crippled economic power. No such configuration has ever persisted in the history of imperialism. The University of Chicago’s Robert Pape, author of the important study Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (Random House, 2005), typically writes:

“America is in unprecedented decline. The self-inflicted wounds of the Iraq war, growing government debt, increasingly negative current-account balances and other internal economic weaknesses have cost the United States real power in today’s world of rapidly spreading knowledge and technology. If present trends continue, we will look back on the Bush years as the death knell of American hegemony.”

There is something absurd, even Kafkaesque, about our military empire. Jay Barr, a bankruptcy attorney, makes this point using an insightful analogy:

“Whether liquidating or reorganizing, a debtor who desires bankruptcy protection must provide a list of expenses, which, if considered reasonable, are offset against income to show that only limited funds are available to repay the bankrupted creditors. Now imagine a person filing for bankruptcy claiming that he could not repay his debts because he had the astronomical expense of maintaining at least 737 facilities overseas that provide exactly zero return on the significant investment required to sustain them? He could not qualify for liquidation without turning over many of his assets for the benefit of creditors, including the valuable foreign real estate on which he placed his bases.”

In other words, the United States is not seriously contemplating its own bankruptcy. It is instead ignoring the meaning of its precipitate economic decline and flirting with insolvency.

Nick Turse, author of The Complex: How the Military Invades our Everyday Lives (Metropolitan Books, 2008), calculates that we could clear $2.6 billion if we would sell our base assets at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean and earn another $2.2 billion if we did the same with Guantánamo Bay in Cuba. These are only two of our over 800 overblown military enclaves.

Our unwillingness to retrench, no less liquidate, represents a striking historical failure of the imagination. In his first official visit to China since becoming Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner assured an audience of students at Beijing University, “Chinese assets [invested in the United States] are very safe.” According to press reports, the students responded with loud laughter. Well they might.

In May 2009, the Office of Management and Budget predicted that in 2010 the United States will be burdened with a budget deficit of at least $1.75 trillion. This includes neither a projected $640 billion budget for the Pentagon, nor the costs of waging two remarkably expensive wars. The sum is so immense that it will take several generations for American citizens to repay the costs of George W. Bush’s imperial adventures – if they ever can or will. It represents about 13% of our current gross domestic product (that is, the value of everything we produce). It is worth noting that the target demanded of European nations wanting to join the Euro Zone is a deficit no greater than 3% of GDP.

Thus far, President Obama has announced measly cuts of only $8.8 billion in wasteful and worthless weapons spending, including his cancellation of the F-22 fighter aircraft. The actual Pentagon budget for next year will, in fact, be larger, not smaller, than the bloated final budget of the Bush era. Far bolder cuts in our military expenditures will obviously be required in the very near future if we intend to maintain any semblance of fiscal integrity.

2. We Are Going to Lose the War in Afghanistan and It Will Help Bankrupt Us

One of our major strategic blunders in Afghanistan was not to have recognized that both Great Britain and the Soviet Union attempted to pacify Afghanistan using the same military methods as ours and failed disastrously. We seem to have learned nothing from Afghanistan’s modern history – to the extent that we even know what it is. Between 1849 and 1947, Britain sent almost annual expeditions against the Pashtun tribes and sub-tribes living in what was then called the North-West Frontier Territories – the area along either side of the artificial border between Afghanistan and Pakistan called the Durand Line. This frontier was created in 1893 by Britain’s foreign secretary for India, Sir Mortimer Durand.

Neither Britain nor Pakistan has ever managed to establish effective control over the area. As the eminent historian Louis Dupree put it in his book Afghanistan (Oxford University Press, 2002, p. 425): “Pashtun tribes, almost genetically expert at guerrilla warfare after resisting centuries of all comers and fighting among themselves when no comers were available, plagued attempts to extend the Pax Britannica into their mountain homeland.” An estimated 41 million Pashtuns live in an undemarcated area along the Durand Line and profess no loyalties to the central governments of either Pakistan or Afghanistan.

The region known today as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan is administered directly by Islamabad, which – just as British imperial officials did – has divided the territory into seven agencies, each with its own “political agent” who wields much the same powers as his colonial-era predecessor. Then as now, the part of FATA known as Waziristan and the home of Pashtun tribesmen offered the fiercest resistance.

According to Paul Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gould, experienced Afghan hands and coauthors of Invisible History: Afghanistan’s Untold Story (City Lights, 2009, p. 317):

“If Washington’s bureaucrats don’t remember the history of the region, the Afghans do. The British used air power to bomb these same Pashtun villages after World War I and were condemned for it. When the Soviets used MiGs and the dreaded Mi-24 Hind helicopter gunships to do it during the 1980s, they were called criminals. For America to use its overwhelming firepower in the same reckless and indiscriminate manner defies the world’s sense of justice and morality while turning the Afghan people and the Islamic world even further against the United States.”

In 1932, in a series of Guernica-like atrocities, the British used poison gas in Waziristan. The disarmament convention of the same year sought a ban against the aerial bombardment of civilians, but Lloyd George, who had been British prime minister during World War I, gloated: “We insisted on reserving the right to bomb niggers” (Fitzgerald and Gould, p. 65). His view prevailed.

The U.S. continues to act similarly, but with the new excuse that our killing of noncombatants is a result of “collateral damage,” or human error. Using pilotless drones guided with only minimal accuracy from computers at military bases in the Arizona and Nevada deserts among other places, we have killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of unarmed bystanders in Pakistan and Afghanistan. The Pakistani and Afghan governments have repeatedly warned that we are alienating precisely the people we claim to be saving for democracy.

When in May 2009, General Stanley McChrystal was appointed as the commander in Afghanistan, he ordered new limits on air attacks, including those carried out by the CIA, except when needed to protect allied troops. Unfortunately, as if to illustrate the incompetence of our chain of command, only two days after this order, on June 23, 2009, the United States carried out a drone attack against a funeral procession that killed at least 80 people, the single deadliest U.S. attack on Pakistani soil so far. There was virtually no reporting of these developments by the mainstream American press or on the network television news. (At the time, the media were almost totally preoccupied by the sexual adventures of the governor of South Carolina and the death of pop star Michael Jackson.)

Our military operations in both Pakistan and Afghanistan have long been plagued by inadequate and inaccurate intelligence about both countries, ideological preconceptions about which parties we should support and which ones we should oppose, and myopic understandings of what we could possibly hope to achieve. Fitzgerald and Gould, for example, charge that, contrary to our own intelligence service’s focus on Afghanistan, “Pakistan has always been the problem.” They add:

“Pakistan’s army and its Inter-Services Intelligence branch… from 1973 on, has played the key role in funding and directing first the mujahideen [anti-Soviet fighters during the 1980s]? and then the Taliban. It is Pakistan’s army that controls its nuclear weapons, constrains the development of democratic institutions, trains Taliban fighters in suicide attacks and orders them to fight American and NATO soldiers protecting the Afghan government.” (p. 322-324)

The Pakistani army and its intelligence arm are staffed, in part, by devout Muslims who fostered the Taliban in Afghanistan to meet the needs of their own agenda, though not necessarily to advance an Islamic jihad. Their purposes have always included: keeping Afghanistan free of Russian or Indian influence, providing a training and recruiting ground for mujahideen guerrillas to be used in places like Kashmir (fought over by both Pakistan and India), containing Islamic radicalism in Afghanistan (and so keeping it out of Pakistan), and extorting huge amounts of money from Saudi Arabia, the Persian Gulf emirates, and the United States to pay and train “freedom fighters” throughout the Islamic world. Pakistan’s consistent policy has been to support the clandestine policies of the Inter-Services Intelligence and thwart the influence of its major enemy and competitor, India.

Colonel Douglas MacGregor, U.S. Army (retired), an adviser to the Center for Defense Information in Washington, summarizes our hopeless project in South Asia this way: “Nothing we do will compel 125 million Muslims in Pakistan to make common cause with a United States in league with the two states that are unambiguously anti-Muslim: Israel and India.”

Obama’s mid-2009 “surge” of troops into southern Afghanistan and particularly into Helmand Province, a Taliban stronghold, is fast becoming darkly reminiscent of General William Westmoreland’s continuous requests in Vietnam for more troops and his promises that if we would ratchet up the violence just a little more and tolerate a few more casualties, we would certainly break the will of the Vietnamese insurgents. This was a total misreading of the nature of the conflict in Vietnam, just as it is in Afghanistan today.

Twenty years after the forces of the Red Army withdrew from Afghanistan in disgrace, the last Russian general to command them, Gen. Boris Gromov, issued his own prediction: Disaster, he insisted, will come to the thousands of new forces Obama is sending there, just as it did to the Soviet Union’s, which lost some 15,000 soldiers in its own Afghan war. We should recognize that we are wasting time, lives, and resources in an area where we have never understood the political dynamics and continue to make the wrong choices.

3. We Need to End the Secret Shame of Our Empire of Bases

In March, New York Times op-ed columnist Bob Herbert noted, “Rape and other forms of sexual assault against women is the great shame of the U.S. armed forces, and there is no evidence that this ghastly problem, kept out of sight as much as possible, is diminishing.” He continued:

“New data released by the Pentagon showed an almost 9 percent increase in the number of sexual assaults – 2,923 – and a 25 percent increase in such assaults reported by women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan [over the past year]. Try to imagine how bizarre it is that women in American uniforms who are enduring all the stresses related to serving in a combat zone have to also worry about defending themselves against rapists wearing the same uniform and lining up in formation right beside them.”

The problem is exacerbated by having our troops garrisoned in overseas bases located cheek-by-jowl next to civilian populations and often preying on them like foreign conquerors. For example, sexual violence against women and girls by American GIs has been out of control in Okinawa, Japan’s poorest prefecture, ever since it was permanently occupied by our soldiers, Marines, and airmen some 64 years ago.

That island was the scene of the largest anti-American demonstrations since the end of World War II after the 1995 kidnapping, rape, and attempted murder of a 12-year-old schoolgirl by two Marines and a sailor. The problem of rape has been ubiquitous around all of our bases on every continent and has probably contributed as much to our being loathed abroad as the policies of the Bush administration or our economic exploitation of poverty-stricken countries whose raw materials we covet.

The military itself has done next to nothing to protect its own female soldiers or to defend the rights of innocent bystanders forced to live next to our often racially biased and predatory troops. “The military’s record of prosecuting rapists is not just lousy, it’s atrocious,” writes Herbert. In territories occupied by American military forces, the high command and the State Department make strenuous efforts to enact so-called “Status of Forces Agreements” (SOFAs) that will prevent host governments from gaining jurisdiction over our troops who commit crimes overseas. The SOFAs also make it easier for our military to spirit culprits out of a country before they can be apprehended by local authorities.

This issue was well illustrated by the case of an Australian teacher, a long-time resident of Japan, who in April 2002 was raped by a sailor from the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk, then based at the big naval base at Yokosuka. She identified her assailant and reported him to both Japanese and U.S. authorities. Instead of his being arrested and effectively prosecuted, the victim herself was harassed and humiliated by the local Japanese police. Meanwhile, the U.S. discharged the suspect from the Navy but allowed him to escape Japanese law by returning him to the U.S., where he lives today.

In the course of trying to obtain justice, the Australian teacher discovered that almost fifty years earlier, in October 1953, the Japanese and American governments signed a secret “understanding” as part of their SOFA in which Japan agreed to waive its jurisdiction if the crime was not of “national importance to Japan.” The U.S. argued strenuously for this codicil because it feared that otherwise it would face the likelihood of some 350 servicemen per year being sent to Japanese jails for sex crimes.

Since that time the U.S. has negotiated similar wording in SOFAs with Canada, Ireland, Italy, and Denmark. According to the Handbook of the Law of Visiting Forces (2001), the Japanese practice has become the norm for SOFAs throughout the world, with predictable results. In Japan, of 3,184 U.S. military personnel who committed crimes between 2001 and 2008, 83% were not prosecuted. In Iraq, we have just signed a SOFA that bears a strong resemblance to the first postwar one we had with Japan: namely, military personnel and military contractors accused of off-duty crimes will remain in U.S. custody while Iraqis investigate. This is, of course, a perfect opportunity to spirit the culprits out of the country before they can be charged.

Within the military itself, the journalist Dahr Jamail, author of Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq (Haymarket Books, 2007), speaks of the “culture of unpunished sexual assaults” and the “shockingly low numbers of courts martial” for rapes and other forms of sexual attacks. Helen Benedict, author of The Lonely Soldier: The Private War of Women Serving in Iraq (Beacon Press, 2009), quotes this figure in a 2009 Pentagon report on military sexual assaults: 90% of the rapes in the military are never reported at all and, when they are, the consequences for the perpetrator are negligible.

It is fair to say that the U.S. military has created a worldwide sexual playground for its personnel and protected them to a large extent from the consequences of their behavior. As a result a group of female veterans in 2006 created the Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN). Its agenda is to spread the word that “no woman should join the military.”

I believe a better solution would be to radically reduce the size of our standing army, and bring the troops home from countries where they do not understand their environments and have been taught to think of the inhabitants as inferior to themselves.

10 Steps Toward Liquidating the Empire

Dismantling the American empire would, of course, involve many steps. Here are ten key places to begin:

1. We need to put a halt to the serious environmental damage done by our bases planet-wide. We also need to stop writing SOFAs that exempt us from any responsibility for cleaning up after ourselves.

2. Liquidating the empire will end the burden of carrying our empire of bases and so of the “opportunity costs” that go with them – the things we might otherwise do with our talents and resources but can’t or won’t.

3. As we already know (but often forget), imperialism breeds the use of torture. In the 1960s and 1970s we helped overthrow the elected governments in Brazil and Chile and underwrote regimes of torture that prefigured our own treatment of prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan. (See, for instance, A.J. Langguth, Hidden Terrors [Pantheon, 1979], on how the U.S. spread torture methods to Brazil and Uruguay.) Dismantling the empire would potentially mean a real end to the modern American record of using torture abroad.

4. We need to cut the ever-lengthening train of camp followers, dependents, civilian employees of the Department of Defense, and hucksters – along with their expensive medical facilities, housing requirements, swimming pools, clubs, golf courses, and so forth – that follow our military enclaves around the world.

5. We need to discredit the myth promoted by the military-industrial complex that our military establishment is valuable to us in terms of jobs, scientific research, and defense. These alleged advantages have long been discredited by serious economic research. Ending empire would make this happen.

6. As a self-respecting democratic nation, we need to stop being the world’s largest exporter of arms and munitions and quit educating Third World militaries in the techniques of torture, military coups, and service as proxies for our imperialism. A prime candidate for immediate closure is the so-called School of the Americas, the U.S. Army’s infamous military academy at Fort Benning, Georgia, for Latin American military officers. (See Chalmers Johnson, The Sorrows of Empire [Metropolitan Books, 2004], pp. 136-40.)

7. Given the growing constraints on the federal budget, we should abolish the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps and other long-standing programs that promote militarism in our schools.

8. We need to restore discipline and accountability in our armed forces by radically scaling back our reliance on civilian contractors, private military companies, and agents working for the military outside the chain of command and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. (See Jeremy Scahill, Blackwater:The Rise of the World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army [Nation Books, 2007]). Ending empire would make this possible.

9. We need to reduce, not increase, the size of our standing army and deal much more effectively with the wounds our soldiers receive and combat stress they undergo.

10. To repeat the main message of this essay, we must give up our inappropriate reliance on military force as the chief means of attempting to achieve foreign policy objectives.

Unfortunately, few empires of the past voluntarily gave up their dominions in order to remain independent, self-governing polities. The two most important recent examples are the British and Soviet empires. If we do not learn from their examples, our decline and fall is foreordained.

——–

Chalmers Johnson is the author of Blowback (2000), The Sorrows of Empire (2004), and Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic (2006), and editor of Okinawa: Cold War Island (1999).

[Note on further reading on the matter of sexual violence in and around our overseas bases and rapes in the military: On the response to the 1995 Okinawa rape, see Chalmers Johnson, Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, chapter 2. On related subjects, see David McNeil, “Justice for Some. Crime, Victims, and the US-Japan SOFA,” Asia-Pacific Journal, Vol. 8-1-09, March 15, 2009; “Bilateral Secret Agreement Is Preventing U.S. Servicemen Committing Crimes in Japan from Being Prosecuted,” Japan Press Weekly, May 23, 2009; Dieter Fleck, ed., The Handbook of the Law of Visiting Forces, Oxford University Press, 2001; Minoru Matsutani, “’53 Secret Japan-US Deal Waived GI Prosecutions,” Japan Times, October 24, 2008; “Crime Without Punishment in Japan,” the Economist, December 10, 2008; “Japan: Declassified Document Reveals Agreement to Relinquish Jurisdiction Over U.S. Forces,” Akahata, October 30, 2008; “Government’s Decision First Case in Japan,” Ryukyu Shimpo, May 20, 2008; Dahr Jamail, “Culture of Unpunished Sexual Assault in Military,” Antiwar.com, May 1, 2009; and Helen Benedict, “The Plight of Women Soldiers,” the Nation, May 5, 2009.]

Light punishment for assault at Fort Lewis

The man accused of assaulting a female soldier at Fort Lewis slipped through the administrative crack because he was technically discharged from the military at the time of the crime.  He contacted the victim from Hawai’i.

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Last updated August 23, 2009 1:50 p.m. PT

Light punishment for assault at Fort Lewis

By SEAN ROBINSON
THE NEWS TRIBUNE

FORT LEWIS, Wash. — Taylor Mack woke up choking.

She retched blood, spat out a tooth, and squinted through a fog of swollen pain. Her face was broken. She didn’t know it yet.

Slow recognition. Empty apartment, fast-food bag on the bedside table … Fort Lewis.

The barracks. Here with Andre, the night before … and he had wanted to, but she said no … and then something flying at her face a foot, a fist? She couldn’t remember, and Andre was gone.

It was 2:30 a.m. on June 19, 2007. Mack, then 20, was about to stumble into a Catch-22: a legal snafu, excused by the gods of procedure, footnoted with official sympathy.

Mack made one mistake. She got herself assaulted on military property by a soldier who wasn’t a soldier anymore, a man who slipped between the layers of military and federal authority.

Her attacker, Andre John Roberts, 26, had just been discharged. Hours after admitting his crime, Roberts left the base, escorted by military personnel. Officially, he was a civilian, beyond military control. Unofficially, he was free.

More than two years later, Mack is still waiting for justice. Roberts’ whereabouts are unknown. He did not respond to voice mail messages.

Military officials, responding to inquiries from The News Tribune, now say the case was mishandled.

“Clearly this is not the best we can do,” Joseph Piek, Fort Lewis spokesman, said in a written statement. “Mistakes were made, and those mistakes resulted from a genuine misunderstanding by the military police of Roberts’ status at the time of the incident.”

Mack, a Lacey resident, doesn’t think much of that. For two years, she and her mother, Kim Johnson, have sought action on the case. They blame Roberts, but they also blame what they see as a tepid response from Fort Lewis officials.

“It’s been two years, and he’s never gotten in trouble for it,” Mack says. “All they’re trying to do is save themselves.”

“…a Caucasian female with blonde hair entered the CQ (charge of quarters) area. She was crying and hysterical with blood running down her face. Her face was swollen and she was missing a tooth. She was confused and disoriented and appeared to have been assaulted. I called 911 and requested police and medical assistance.” – Statement from military police report, 6-19-07

Before the night of the assault, Mack knew Andre Roberts a little. He was dating a friend of hers. He’d deployed to Iraq, returned in late 2006, and kept in touch. Young and far from his New Jersey roots, Roberts began spending more time at Mack’s mother’s house sleeping on the couch, going on family camping trips.

“It’s like I adopted this other child,” Kim Johnson recalled.

By summer 2007, Roberts was approaching his discharge date. Johnson recalls that he started getting “kind of clingy,” hinting that he might re-enlist if Mack would be his girlfriend.

Mack wasn’t interested. She already had a boyfriend. Her mother, leery of the needy talk, warned her to avoid Roberts.

On Monday, June 18, Roberts called Mack, seeking help with paperwork related to his discharge. Could Taylor just come to the post and look over the forms? She was smart about that stuff.

Mack said she would come after work.

She did not know that Roberts had been discharged almost three weeks earlier. By military standards, he was already a civilian, though he was still staying on the base with friends.

Records obtained by The News Tribune show Roberts was discharged May 31, 2007 but it wasn’t that simple. He had blown off his outprocessing, the paperwork aspect of leaving the Army.

“Because Roberts was not at his place of duty and did not perform his required outprocessing, he was discharged in absentia,” said Piek, the Fort Lewis spokesman.

Roberts was out, but not gone. He was flopping with friends in the barracks, bunking without authorization.

“It is believed that he was being permitted to stay at the unit barracks by friends, without the knowledge of the unit chain of command,” Piek said. “This is a violation of unit and Army policy regarding visitors to the barracks.”

The standard procedure for checking such violations is loose, officials said. Unit leaders conduct occasional barracks inspections, but they typically rely on soldiers to report violations.

When Mack arrived at Fort Lewis the evening of June 19, Roberts was already toasted.

“He’d been drinking before I got there,” she said. “They drink all the time. That’s all the guys seem to do in the barracks.”

As the evening wore on, he bought burgers and took her to an empty barracks apartment – a friend’s old room. Roberts had the key code. He and Mack could stay here, he said.

He wasn’t interested in discharge paperwork. He wanted to talk about something else – about their relationship, their future. He said he was in love.

“I’m like, I have a boyfriend – I’ll never leave my boyfriend for you,'” Mack remembered saying. “I think in the back of his mind he was hoping he could win me away, and that would never happen.”

Roberts wanted to lie on the bed with Mack. She wasn’t into it.

“That’s when the (expletive) hit the fan and he started kicking me in the back, and I’m like, Dude, don’t – seriously, stop,'” she remembered.

Mack stood. She told him she was leaving.

“That’s the last thing I remember,” she said. “Before standing up and spitting my teeth out of my mouth.”

“…Mack walked into the building bleeding from her face and mouth, stating she wasn’t sure what happened or where she was, but that she was (had been) with Roberts.” – Excerpt from military police report, 6-19-07

Roberts wasn’t around. Military police started searching for him. Mack had called her mother, who was driving up to the post. Police took statements, and sent Mack to Madigan Army Medical Center.

While they gathered statements and surveyed the bloody scene at the barracks apartment, Roberts walked into the charge of quarters area and turned himself in. It was 5 a.m., and he was still drunk. He blew a blood-alcohol level of 0.086 on a breath tester.

“Roberts was apprehended, transported to this station, where he was advised of his legal rights, which he waived, rendering a sworn written statement admitting to the offense.” – Statement from military police report, 6-19-07

After citing him, military police handed Roberts off to his old unit: the 542nd Maintenance Company. Standard procedure in such cases: Give the guy back to his commander until the legal stuff’s done.

“Thinking Mr. Roberts was still in the Army, the military police were planning to turn the case over to his chain of command for action as appropriate under the Uniform Code of Military Justice,” said Piek.

The unit took him, Fort Lewis records say, but confusion lingered.

“The noncommissioned officer who picked him up was not in Mr. Roberts’ former chain of supervision, was not familiar with his status, and also believed him to be in the Army,” Piek said.

Piek did not identify the soldier who picked up Roberts. He added that personnel with firsthand knowledge of the incident are no longer stationed at Fort Lewis or have left the Army.

How is unclear, but unit leaders soon realized Roberts was a civilian, already discharged, someone else’s problem.

Military officials did not alert the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department; there was no formal requirement to do so. They didn’t request a hold for the U.S. Marshals service, which they could have considered.

Instead, a few hours after he confessed to beating Taylor Mack bloody, they escorted him off the base and released him into Pierce County.

“He had already been a civilian since 31 May and was no longer under military control,” said Piek.

At the hospital, military police asked Mack and her mother to go over the incident again and supply a more detailed statement.

Both women were worn out. They wanted to go home and get some sleep. Johnson said she and her daughter would come back to Fort Lewis that evening.

When they arrived, military police said Roberts had been released.

Johnson couldn’t believe it.

“That was it,” she said. “We went to give our side and it was never ever brought up again.”

Johnson asked about the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department. Could that agency help? She remembers military police saying she could seek a restraining order against Roberts.

When she and Mack tried that a few days later, they got nowhere. The incident took place on federal property, they were told. This was a Fort Lewis issue.

Johnson wrote to her congressman, Adam Smith, and the state attorney general, Rob McKenna. Letters came back, advising her to talk to Army prosecutors. She tried that too, and hit dead ends.

“I contacted as many people as I possibly could,” she said. “Basically, it was kind of like we’ll get back with you, we’ll call you, and they never called back, and I would follow up.”

When she did get through, she ran into a new obstacle. Johnson wasn’t the victim – her daughter should do the talking, officials said.

Taylor Mack, still recovering from multiple surgeries to her face and jaw, didn’t feel like talking to anybody. Dismayed by Roberts’ release and the apparent lack of action, she believed the authorities weren’t interested.

On Sept. 14, 2007, Capt. Kenneth Tyndal, a federal prosecutor assigned to Fort Lewis, charged Roberts with assault.

Three months had passed since Roberts signed a statement admitting to the assault. The gap in time was standard for routine cases. “It’s not considered a delay,” said Emily Langlie, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Seattle.

The charging statement was one sentence long, filling a single page: misdemeanor assault, the lowest level in the federal code, worth six months in jail at most.

Tyndal is deployed overseas, and could not be reached to discuss his decision.

There was a higher level of assault in the code a felony offense with a stiffer potential penalty, linked to attacks that caused “serious bodily injury.”

The original military police report provided nothing to support the tougher charge. It looked like a straight domestic case.

“All we see is what’s in the file,” said Emily Langlie, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office. “The police report indicated one punch and a knocked-out tooth.”

The police report includes an area labeled “injury type,” with a series of checkmark boxes. “Minor injury” was checked, as was “tooth loss.”

Boxes labeled “broken bones,” “severe laceration,” and “unconsciousness” were left blank.

Taylor Mack had been beaten into unconsciousness and left in a barracks apartment. For weeks, she ate through a straw.

“He broke my jaw,” she says. “He broke my nose, broke my eye socket. I had a concussion. I had to get my teeth re-implanted. I couldn’t eat anything besides liquids for a month.”

Those injuries weren’t listed in the police report. There is no sign in records of the incident to show that police followed up on their initial assessment.

Langlie said the U.S. Attorney’s Office could consider revising the original charges if new information comes to light.

Fort Lewis officials say they’re not satisfied by their response to the incident, or the still unanswered questions surrounding Roberts’ departure from Fort Lewis.

Military police acted according to what they knew at the time, said Piek, the Fort Lewis spokesman.

“It’s important to note that, in the final analysis, what was supposed to happen did happen: Because he was a civilian at the time of the incident, Mr. Roberts’ case was referred to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and he was charged by the U.S. Attorney for his actions,” Piek added.

The charge was a paper move; the citation was sent to a forwarding address. No one actually looked for Roberts. He was never taken into custody. He didn’t show up for his arraignment in U.S. District Court in Tacoma.

That prompted another paper move. The court issued a warrant for Roberts’ arrest. It remains active one among hundreds of federal warrants in Western Washington.

Since 2007, Roberts has spoken to Mack a few times. He’s called via cellphone and sent messages from his MySpace Page, asking her to be his friend.

The page says he’s in Hawaii. His wireless phone number has a Maryland area code. Mack said Roberts has talked of re-enlisting in the military, but it’s unclear whether he has.

He’s told Mack he thought she was dead when he left her in the barracks apartment. She’s asked him why he attacked her. He never answers.

“Andre also has told me that Fort Lewis made him come back at some point, like before he left to go home, they made him come back and clean the room, clean all the blood and all that. He told me the room looked like a murder scene.”

The official response to her case still rankles.

“He almost killed me. He left me for dead in an abandoned room,” Mack said. “All he had to do is clean the room and then they sent him on his merry little way.

Source:  http://www.seattlepi.com/local/6420ap_wa_fort_lewis_assault.html

New Informational Website on U.S. Military Violence Against Women

Announcing A New Informational Website on U.S. Military Violence Against Women

http://www.usmvaw.com

Providing information, analysis, and news about the history of U.S. military violence against girls and women in Okinawa and Japan, and in numerous other locations around the world. Other related concerns include:

* Sexual assault and violence against women within the U.S. armed forces; and

* Militarization and violence against women as an expression of colonialism, imperialism, and war.

The website is a collaborative project designed to deepen and broaden understandings of the relationships between U.S. militarism and foreign policy, imperialism, racism, and violence against girls and women. Organized by a team of faculty and students at California State University San Marcos, in collaboration with Colonel Ann Wright (retired), the project brings together information about United States military culture, historical narratives, stories of victimization, and analysis of the strategies used by Japanese activists to raise public awareness and prevent further crimes against girls and women.

These activists and organizers, particularly Okinawan Women Act Against Military Violence (OWAAMV), who view the U.S. military presence as a threat to local and regional security and happiness, are now making common cause with organizers in the Philippines and Korea who harbor similar concerns, and with activists in the United States and other parts of the world who have long worked for justice and accountability.

We invite you to visit the website and share it with others: http://www.usmvaw.com.

Please help get the word out about this continuing injustice.

We look forward to collaborating with activists, organizers, and scholars with an interest in these issues. Please contact us if we can share information or find ways to work together.

For information about the project, contact Project Director: Professor Linda Pershing, lpershing@usmvaw.com

For questions about the website or to share information, contact: Lezlie Lee-French, LLF@usmvaw.com

"They survived the combat, came back and – within two months – died on a motorcycle"

The Army is training soldiers in motorcycle safety to curb the high number of cycle fatalities that have occurred since 2005.  An Army spokesperson said that “motorcycles are a great tool to release adrenaline” and that one possible reason for the fatalities is the “aggressive soldier mind-set”.    First of all, motor vehicles shouldn’t be tools to “release adrenaline”.  Second, it seems that the “aggressive soldier mind-set” point to a deeper pathology within military culture and are symptomatic of the human costs of war.   The Army should look into the death that occurs inside soldiers who experience combat. This may be the real cause of many of the motorcycle fatalities.

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Soldiers learn cycling safety

By Darin Moriki

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Aug 20, 2009

About 250 soldiers are participating in a supplemental motorcycle training program instituted because there have been 16 Army cycle fatalities since 2005.

“Many of them were killed soon after returning from combat,” said Bill Maxwell, U.S. Army Garrison-Hawaii transportation safety manager. “They survived the combat, came back, and – within two months – died on a motorcycle. We want to reverse that trend by providing them every bit of education that we possibly can.”

Maxwell said the Army pilot program was adopted from the Marines after it was found that “they have been having some positive results.” He explained that the free program is essential for motorcycle riders in light of the high number of Army motorcycle deaths.

One possible reason for the fatalities is the “aggressive soldier mind-set” that some may have, Maxwell said.

“We prepare them for combat, they go into a very high-stress situation, and they come back here,” Maxwell explained. “Motorcycles are a great tool to release adrenaline. Unfortunately, we have quite a bad history with motorcycles.”

The Honolulu Police Department reported that 12 of the 38 traffic fatalities this year involved motorcycles. Riders were wearing helmets in only six cases.

For a soldier to operate a bike on military installations, he or she must go through a basic and experienced rider course offered through the Motorcycle Safety Foundation. However, Maxwell said that these courses “provide the basic skills” and are “limited in size.”

“What we wanted to do here is expand the area and bring the speed up to get them a little bit closer to the operational speeds that they encounter out there on the road,” Maxwell said.

The training program, which began Monday at Wheeler Army Airfield, covers eight half-day courses that allow smaller groups of about 25 people.

The Los Angeles-based California Superbike School said the course is meant to boost a rider’s confidence with conditions that they may experience on the road.

“If the rider is unsure of himself, he’s going to panic,” said California Superbike School instructor and project manager Dylan Code. “What we want to make is a confident rider at this point.”

Each course included 30 minutes of classroom instruction before riders were taken out on an obstacle course. It was on the obstacle course that the real instruction began, where instructors – stationed at three checkpoints on various corners of the course – corrected mistakes that a rider made.

Many of the soldiers who attended the motorcycle training course left believing that they were more informed.

“The fundamentals that I learn here can be something that I can use out there on the streets,” said Cpl. Tyler Bridgeman, who has been riding about seven years. “This is one of the best courses that I have been to.”

“I left with a little bit more knowledge, but the knowledge that I left with was extremely important,” said Lt. Col. Rob Howe, who has been riding for 28 years. “I don’t know what I don’t know, but they told me what I needed to know.”

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090820_Soldiers_learn_cycling_safety.html

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