Archive for November, 2021

Veterans For Peace Statement on recent UN Climate Conference

Saturday, November 20th, 2021

VFP Statement on Results of COP26

VFP Statement on Results of COP26

If COP26 is the “last best hope for the world” as Climate Envoy John Kerry stated, the USA is largely responsible for the failure to achieve that “hope.” President Biden says the USA is “… leading by the power of our example”. The Veterans For Peace Climate Crisis & Militarism Project (CCMP) believes that the USA’s poor “example” led to the half-measures achieved at COP26.

  • Why should other nations, both USA’s friends and foes, prioritize action on climate when the USA spends more in one year on so-called “defense” than the total 10-year funding for climate action proposed in Biden’s Build Back Better plan?
  • Biden’s promised doubling of funds “…by 2024 to $11.4 billion per year to help developing nations deal with climate change,” is less than the funds added by Congress to an already bloated FY 2022 military budget.

In his address at COP26, President Biden stated the climate crisis poses “…the existential threat to human existence as we know it.” Unfortunately, the actions of the Biden administration are not just inadequate, they are counterproductive. How can other countries trust the intentions of the U.S. government to prioritize a meaningful response to climate change when the U.S. expends vast resources on maintaining its global military dominance? Without the trust of other nations, the USA cannot expect international cooperation in what should be a shared effort to meaningfully address the climate crisis.

Read the entire statement

The Climate Crisis & Militarism Project of Veterans For Peace invites you to urge your Member of Congress (MOC) to cosponsor H Res 767: Department of Defense to reduce the overall environmental impact of all military activities and missions, and for other purposes. 

Take action!

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Jim Albertini Malu 'Aina Center For Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola'a (Kurtistown) Hawai'i 96760
Phone 808-966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org Visit us on the web at www.malu-aina.org

Reining in the Pentagon — Can It Possibly Happen?

Thursday, November 18th, 2021
 
https://tomdispatch.com/reining-in-the-pentagon/?utm_source=TomDispatch&utm_campaign=f30f95a69e-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2021_07_13_02_04_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_1e41682ade-f30f95a69e-309102805
 

Hartung and Smithberger, The Pentagon’s Yearly Blank Check

Reining in the Pentagon

Good topic for a Sunday church homily

Wednesday, November 17th, 2021
Be prepared for abuse and exile, if not worse, but church people need to be challenged to get out in the streets.

America’s Abyss of Weapons and Warmaking
By William Astore

  Who is America’s god?

 
   

Hawaii U.S. Rep Kai Kahele Big Military supporter

Wednesday, November 17th, 2021

US Hawaii Congressional Rep Kai Kahele was named a “Champion of Pohakuloa” by the Army command.  While progressive in many areas, he has a very pro-military blind spot.  He has a military background himself and his dad, the late Hawaii State Senator, Gil Kahele, was head of Public Works at the military Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA).

Below is an  about Kai Kahele pushing for more Air Force funding.  It should be noted that Kai and the majority in the US House of Rep. voted bipartisan for $25 BILLION more for the US Military in this year’s budget than Biden requested.  The new total for this year’s military budget is $778 BILLION, yet there is more military spending hidden in other parts of the federal budget.  One example is Billions for Nuclear weapon spending comes under the Dept. of Energy, not the military budget.

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“Underfunding”= Air Force budget of $156.3 billion is a 2.3% increase over FY21 enacted levels, and the Space Force budget of $17.4 billion is a 13.1% increase over FY21 enacted levels. https://www.saffm.hq.af.mil/FM-Resources/Budget/

 
 

U.S. Rep. Kai Kahele says Air Force suffers from underfunding

By Kevin Knodell   kknodell@staradvertiser.com

Hawaii U.S. Rep. Kai Kahele wants the Pentagon to beef up its Air Force funding amid simmering tensions with China and Russia.

Last week, Kahele and a group of bipartisan lawmakers sent a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin expressing concern that “while the Air Force’s budget request appears commensurate with the other service branches’ budget requests, $39 billion of the $212.8 billion budget ‘passes through’” the department to fund other government agencies.

With the chaotic conclusion of the American military presence in Afghanistan this summer, the service branches are now increasingly committing to a future in the Pacific, the Pentagon’s largest theater of operations. Hawaii, home to the military’s Indo-Pacific Command at Camp Smith, has long been the nerve center for those operations in the region.

However, the military has also increasingly faced scrutiny for how it has spent its money over the past two decades on both its missions oversees and new technology. That’s put the branches into a fight for funding.

In a phone interview, Kahele, a Democrat who also serves as a Hawaii Air National Guard officer, said, “I don’t think we have very many Air Force people that are outspoken here (on Capitol Hill). … I’m working on it.” He added, “I’m just a new freshman, but I do bring 20 years of service in the Air Force in the Air National Guard to the House Armed Services Committee.”

Eleven other lawmakers signed the letter, including Republican Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska and Pat Fallon and August Pfluger of Texas. All three are former Air Force officers.

“Decades of underfunding the Air Force has led to the deterioration of its competitive advantage in key missions like air superiority, long range strike, and next generation unmanned aerial vehicles suitable for peer conflict,” the lawmakers wrote.

“We believe that there is an urgent need to equitably fund the Air Force and equip this service branch with the resources it needs to counter ongoing aggression by the Chinese Communist Party and the Russian government.”

But Dan Grazier, a military researcher at the Project on Government Oversight, said complaints about pass-through spending are a “trope” that Air Force leaders have used for decades whenever they’re in a wish-list funding fight. He points out that of the Navy’s proposed $211.7 billion budget, $47.9 billion of it will go to the Marine Corps along with other pass-throughs.

Oahu serves as headquarters for the Navy’s vast Pacific Fleet, which includes ships, planes and submarines that conduct near-­constant operations across the region and is the largest presence among the branches. The Marine Corps also is reorganizing its entire force, starting with troops here, with an eye toward operations at sea.

The U.S. Pacific Air Forces, headquartered on Oahu, also conducts operations across the region. Lately, the Air Force has engaged in what it calls Agile Combat Employment, which includes spreading aircraft across islands and at airstrips throughout the region to make it harder for Chinese missiles to strike them in the event of a conflict.

 

“What pass-through funding is doing is it is obscuring real Air Force funding, which is a direct and causal factor in the Air Force’s inability to transform its force into the future design that our nation desperately needs and what we desperately need in the Indo-Pacific,” Kahele said.

A portion of the Air Force’s pass-through spending now goes to the newly formed Space Force, which technically falls under the Department of the Air Force. The Space Force is mostly made up of former Air Force personnel and takes on jobs the Air Force previously handled. Much of the Air Force’s other pass-through spending is classified.

“Most of it gets into space systems for the National Reconnaissance Office,” said Grazier, who argues they directly relate to the Air Force mission.

Kahele contends that the pass-through practice shortchanges the Air Force’s needs for new planes to replace old ones. Congress has scaled back some replacement orders in recent years, including Lockheed Martin’s F-22 and F-35 fighters.

“We need as many stealth platforms as possible, we need as many of those F-35s as we can get off the production line,” he said.

The F-35 in particular has been controversial. Originally pitched as a relatively low-cost jack-of-all-trades, the jet has been plagued with development problems, delays and has become one of the Pentagon’s most expensive weapons programs.

Grazier said, “We continue pumping money into these programs. The problem is that we keep pursuing programs that end up flopping.” Further, “The top-line figure, I think, is somewhat less important than how the money is actually spent.”

Among the criticisms of the government’s handling of these projects is a “revolving door” of officials who get jobs at the companies developing them, which critics say makes oversight more difficult. A 2018 report found 645 instances of top defense contractors hiring former military officers, lawmakers and senior legislative staff as lobbyists, board members or senior executives.

Kahele acknowledges that three companies — Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman — have come to largely dominate Air Force acquisitions, giving them significant sway in the halls of Congress and the Pentagon. He said it’s a problem that needs to be addressed.

“Twenty, 30, 40 years ago, you had a dozen or so prime contractors that built prototypes and had design teams and competed for those contracts. Today, you have only three,” Kahele said. “We have created that, Congress has created that, and we need to figure out a way to undo some of those things, if we want to infuse competition into our defense acquisition.”

Shut Down Pohakuloa & Ban Killer Drones

Monday, November 15th, 2021

Shut Down & Clean UP

Pohakuloa Toxic/Training Area (PTA)

The Pohakuloa Toxic Area (PTA), located in the center of Hawaii Island is a 133,000-acre toxic training area for a wide variety of munitions and weapon systems in the US military arsenal, including Depleted Uranium (DU) radiation, and now Assassination “Reaper” Drones too.

Millions of live-rounds are fired annually at PTA poisoning the land, air and water!

Assassination “Reaper” Drone firing a Hellfire Missile

The Military now has plans to expand the land area at PTA and other military sites in Hawaii. Don’t let it happen! See the  Hawaiʻi Military Land Use Master Plan (2021) produced by the US Indo-Pacific Command — INDOPACOM. MLUMP FINAL 30APR2021.pdfH

Definitive studies show that dust from the war theater has long term dangerous effects. What about the dust from toxic war training at PTA?

BEWARE! The answer is blowing in the wind. https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/11/politics/military-exposure-burn-pits-biden-administration/index.html

Don’t Look Away!  Act Now!  Ban Killer Drones!

1. Mourn all victims of violence. 2. Reject violence & war as solutions. 3. Defend civil liberties.
4. Oppose all discrimination, anti-Islamic, anti-Semitic,
anti-Hawaiian, anti-Black, anti-Asian, etc.
5. Seek peace through peaceful means and work for justice in Hawai`i and around the world.

Malu ‘Aina Center for Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola’a (Kurtistown), Hawaii 96760

Phone (808) 966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org to receive our posts. For more information www.malu-aina.org

November 19, 2021 Hilo Peace Vigil leaflet – week 1051– Fridays 3:30-5PM downtown Post Office

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Jim Albertini Malu 'Aina Center For Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola'a (Kurtistown) Hawai'i 96760
Phone 808-966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org Visit us on the web at www.malu-aina.org