Connecting the Aegis dots between Jeju, Okinawa, Guam, Hawai'i

Koohan Paik, co-author of the Superferry Chronicles and member of the Kaua’i Alliance for Peace and Social Justice wrote an excellent op ed in the Garden Island newspaper connecting the dots between the military expansion at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kaua’i, the struggle to stop a naval base in Jeju, South Korea, and protest movements in Okinawa and Guam.

True defenders

When I was a child in South Korea during the 1960s, we lived under the repressive dictatorship of Park Chung-hee. Anyone out after 10 p.m. curfew could be arrested. Anyone who tried to protest the government disappeared. A lot of people died fighting for democracy and human rights.

Today, the South Korean people carry in living memory the supreme struggles that forged the freedom they currently enjoy. And after all they’ve sacrificed, they are not going to give that freedom up.

So it is no surprise that the tenacious, democracy-loving Koreans have been protesting again — this time for over four years, non-stop, day and night. They are determined to prevent construction of a huge military base on S. Korea’s Jeju Island that will cement over a reef in an area so precious it contains three UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

This eco-rich reef has not only fed islanders for millennia, but it has also been the “habitat” for Jeju’s lady divers who are famous for staying beneath the surface for astonishing periods of time, before coming up with all manner of treasures. Even during South Korea’s times of unspeakable poverty, subtropical Jeju Island was always so abundant with natural resources and beauty that no one ever felt “impoverished” there.

There happens to be a very strong connection between Jeju’s current troubles and business-as-usual on the Garden Isle. You see, the primary purpose of Jeju’s unwanted base is to port Aegis destroyer warships. And it is right here, at Kaua‘i’s Pacific Missile Range Facility, that all product testing takes place for the Aegis missile manufacturers.

On Aug. 29, when Sen. Dan Inouye was here to dedicate a new Aegis testing site, he said, “We are not testing to kill, but to defend.” It would have been more accurate if Inouye had said, “We are not testing to kill, but to increase profits for Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, no matter how many people are oppressed or how many reefs are destroyed.”

Four days later, on Sept. 2, I got a panicked call from a Korean friend that there had been a massive crackdown on the peace vigil in Gangjung village to protect Jeju’s reef from the Aegis destroyer project.

More than 1,000 South Korean police in head-to-toe riot gear descended upon men and women of all ages blockading construction crews from access to the site. At least 50 protestors were arrested, including villagers, Catholic priests, college students, visiting artists and citizen journalists. Several were wounded and hospitalized. My friend told me, “We fought so hard for democracy. And now this. It’s just like dictatorship times.”

Another reason the Koreans are so angry is that their government has been telling them that the Aegis technology will protect them from North Korea. But Aegis missiles launching from Jeju are useless against North Korea, because North Korean missiles fly too low. In a 1999 report to the U.S. Congress, the Pentagon verified that the Aegis system “could not defend the northern two-thirds of South Korea against the low flying short range Taepodong ballistic missiles.”

So if Aegis is no good against North Korea, why build the base? Again, this is not about defense, this is about selling missiles (and increasing profits for Samsung and other major contractors on the base construction job).

There is a strong similarity between resistance on Jeju (where a recent poll showed 95 percent of islanders are opposed to the base) and concurrent uprisings on Guam and Okinawa, as well. All three islands are slated for irreversible destruction to make way for Aegis destroyer berthing.

And who wouldn’t protest? Like us, these are island peoples who care passionately for their reefs, ocean ecosystems and fisheries. I have heard certain Jeju Islanders say they will fight to the death to protect their resources.

Today, the mayor of Gangjung himself, along with many others, languish in prison because of their uncompromising stance against the Aegis base. Fortunately, people across the Korean peninsula and beyond, are heading to Jeju to support the resistance movement.

Without peaceful warriors like them, there would be no more reefs, no more coral, no more fish, no more nothing. They are our true defenders, not the missile manufacturers, as Inouye’s sham logic would have us believe.

As the Pentagon conspicuously ramps up militarization in the Asia-Pacific region, individuals of good conscious should pursue de-militarization. In the words of Aletha Kaohi, “Look to within and get rid of the ‘opala, or rubbish.”

Koohan Paik, Kilauea

"Stellar Avenger" missile test tomorrow off Kaua'i

Navy to target drone

The latest test of an interceptor missile system is set to launch tomorrow from an Aegis destroyer off Kauai

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 29, 2009

For the 23rd time, the Navy will attempt to intercept a short-range ballistic missile off the coast of Kauai.

The Aegis destroyer USS Hopper, based at Pearl Harbor, is slated tomorrow to fire an interceptor missile during the test, dubbed “Stellar Avenger.”

The 505-foot Hopper will attempt to hit the target, a drone launched from Pacific Missile Range Facility at Barking Sands, in flight with a Standard Missile-3 armed with a kinetic, or nonexplosive, warhead. The force of impact is expected to destroy the drone.

Also participating in the at-sea missile defense test will be the Pearl Harbor Aegis cruiser Lake Erie, which has been the launch ship in at least 12 missile intercept tests beginning in 2002, and the destroyer USS O’Kane.

The O’Kane has been designated as a shadow ship and will track and conduct a simulated SM-3 launch. The Lake Erie, which was recently upgraded with improved Aegis ballistic missile defenses, will perform surveillance and track operations with its new sophisticated SPY radar and also will conduct a simulated missile launch.

However, only the Hopper will fire an actual intercept missile.

The Hopper was part of a November test when two short-range ballistic missile targets were launched from Kauai. An SM-3 fired from the USS Paul Hamilton, a destroyer based at Pearl Harbor, directly hit the first target missile. The USS Hopper failed to intercept the second target missile.

Last year the Lake Erie launched a modified SM-3 missile in the Navy’s first-of-its-kind missile shot to destroy a malfunctioning spy satellite.

Meanwhile, the Missile Defense Agency completed a joint test last week with Israel to see how well the Arrow missile anti-missile system — a mobile missile launcher designed to protect Israel against ballistic missiles — would function with other elements of the U.S. missile defense system. Those elements include the terminal high-altitude area defense program, which deployed mobile missile interceptors to Barking Sands late last month when it was reported that North Korea threatened to test its ballistic missiles.
USS HOPPER (DDG 70)

» Class: 20th of 38 Arleigh Burke-class destroyers authorized by Congress

» Commissioned: 1997

» Namesake: Rear Adm. Grace Murray Hopper, known as the “Grand Lady of Software,” “Amazing Grace” and “Grandma Cobol” after co-inventing COBOL (common business-oriented language). COBOL made it possible for computers to respond to words instead of just numbers, thus enabling computers to “talk to each other.”

» Armament: Tomahawk cruise missiles and standard surface-to-air missiles. Two fully automated radar-controlled Phalanx close-in weapon systems, Harpoon anti-ship missiles, two triple torpedo tubes, one 5-inch gun and electronic warfare systems

» Home port: Pearl Harbor

» Crew: 23 officers, 24 chief petty officers and 302 sailors

» Length: 505 feet

» Beam: 67 feet

» Weight: 8,500 tons fully loaded

» Engines: Four gas turbine engines

» Speed: More than 30 knots

Source: U.S. Navy

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090729_Navy_to_target_drone.html

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