Japan: Okinawans Protest New US Marine Base

Political Affairs Magazine
by: Akahata
November 14, 2009

About 21,000 Okinawans held a rally on November 8 in Ginowan City demanding the immediate closure of the dangerous U.S. Marine Corps Futenma Air Station and opposing the plan to move it to Henoko to provide a state-of-the-art air base in Okinawa.”

Ginowan is the city that hosts the U.S. Futenma base, but an overwhelming majority of the residents are demanding that the base site be returned to the city so that they can live free of sonic booms from U.S. military aircraft and the danger of plane crashes.

Participants in the rally demonstrated their firm opposition to a new U.S. base being constructed anywhere in Okinawa.

Speaking on behalf of the organizers of the rally, Ginowan Mayor Iha Yoichi urged Prime Minister Hatoyama Yukio to take a decisive step to free Okinawans from the unbearable burdens of U.S. bases, the source of their anguish and sufferings, which has continued to exist for more than sixty years.

Mayor Onaga Masatoshi of Naha City stated, “Although I am a conservative, I am sure the majority of Okinawans are united in calling for U.S. bases to be reduced.”

Mayor Noguni Masaharu of Chatan Town, north of Ginowan City, warned that residents nearby the Futenma base can no longer put up with the heavy burden of hosting the base. We also oppose the idea of moving the U.S. Marine Corps operations at Futenma to the U.S. Kadena Air Force Base.” …

www.politicalaffairs.net/japan-okinawans-protest-new-us-marine-base/

Air Force Command Brings Focus to Nuclear Enterprise

U.S. Department of Defense
By Cheryl Pellerin
November 9, 2010

Over the past 15 months, the Air Force has built from scratch a model new command that will sustain and modernize U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile wings and the nuclear-capable bomber fleet, the general who leads the new command said today.

“Some people have likened that to trying to build an airplane while actually having to fly it,” Air Force Lt. Gen. Frank G. Klotz told a group of defense reporters here. “And at times, it has seemed like that to us.”

Global Strike Command is the Air Force’s first new major command in 27 years. It’s also part of a larger strategy that Air Force Secretary Michael B. Donley and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton A. Schwartz drafted “to bring focus and attention back to the nuclear enterprise,” Klotz said.

The command, activated in August 2009 with headquarters at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., has gone from 47 permanent staff and an equal number of temporary-duty staff to a staff of 800, plus 100 contractors.

“We had to publish the guidance, the instructions and the checklists that govern activities inside the bomber and the ICBM worlds,” Klotz said. “As it turned out, we had to write nearly 200 of these documents that were several hundred pages long and ensure that they got trained and implemented in the field. It’s a pretty daunting task.”

The command is responsible for three ICBM wings, two B-52 Stratofortress wings and the only B-2 Spirit wing. About 23,000 people assigned to the command work in locations around the world.

For the first time since the end of the Cold War, Klotz said, the Air Force legs of the nuclear triad — which is composed of land-based ICBMs, strategic missiles and ballistic-missile submarines — are back under one command.

During the Cold War, Strategic Air Command was responsible for the Air Force segments of the triad.

“At the end of the Cold War, … those responsibilities were divested,” Klotz said. “The bombers went to Air Combat Command and the ICBMs went to … Air Force Space Command.”

That meant two different commands with two different commanders and two different organizations with different priorities and different resources were focusing on the Air Force nuclear enterprise, Klotz said.

“Our thought was that there was some fraying in the nuclear enterprise as a result,” he added, “and to bring focus back to the enterprise, a number of steps were taken, including creation of the Air Force Global Strike Command.”

In April 2009, President Barack Obama told a large audience in Hradčany Square in Prague in the Czech Republic that the United States would take concrete steps toward helping to create a world without nuclear weapons.

“We will reduce the role of nuclear weapons in our national security strategy and urge others to do the same,” Obama said, adding that as long as such weapons exist, the United States “will maintain a safe, secure and effective arsenal to deter any adversary, and guarantee that defense to our allies.”

That position is manifest in the Defense Department’s April 2010 Nuclear Posture Review Report, Klotz said, “and in the attention to our enterprise provided by senior leadership from [Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates] on down, as well as the resourcing that goes with it.”

Still, the number of U.S. nuclear weapons is declining, from nine operational bases and 1,054 missiles to three bases today and 450 missiles, he said. During the Cold War, Strategic Air Command had more than 1,000 bombers. Today, 76 B-52s and 20 B-2s make up the bomber inventory.

“But I still think there is a compelling need for a balance across the bomber, the ICBM and the sea-launched ballistic legs,” Klotz said.

Klotz said he also supports ratification of a new strategic arms reduction treaty between the United States and Russia, which together are stewards of more than 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons. The old START treaty lapsed Dec. 5, and the Senate has not yet voted on the new treaty.

“The secretary of defense, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the commander of [U.S.] Strategic Command and virtually every former commander of Strategic Command have very cogent and compelling arguments in favor of ratifying the treaty,” he said.

Klotz, who has been working in arms control and arms control policy since the mid-1970s, said such a treaty facilitates important communication between the two largest nuclear powers.

“It’s critically important that the United States and Russia … have a continuous dialog on issues related to nuclear policy, including such areas as security, safety and command and control,” he said.

“This type of interaction in which the arms control treaties are the centerpiece, the nexus around which all that takes place, are critically important for understanding, for transparency and for openness between the two largest nuclear powers,” the general added.

www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=61633

U.S. Deficit Panel Proposes Steep Military Cuts

Defense News
By William Matthews
November 8, 2010

Promising to “cut spending we simply can’t afford, wherever we find it,” the co-chairmen of a U.S. presidential commission propose to:

  • Reduce military weapon buying by 15 percent.
  • Cut spending on weapon research by 10 percent.
  • Close a third of U.S. military bases overseas.
  • Freeze military pay.

A 15 percent cut in current $107 billion procurement spending would be about $16 billion. And a 10 percent cut in the current $79 billion research budget would be $7.9 billion. …

The proposed cuts to procurement might be the hardest for the U.S. military, said Todd Harrison, a defense budget expert at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington.

While procurement spending has increased dramatically over the past decade, the extra money has not resulted in dramatic increases in military hardware. Instead, prices have increased substantially, Harrison said. …

www.defensenews.com/story.php?i=5026887&c=AME&s=TOP

Air Force Command Brings Focus to Nuclear Enterprise

U.S Department of Defense
American Forces News Service
By Cheryl Pellerin
November 9, 2010

Over the past 15 months, the Air Force has built from scratch a model new command that will sustain and modernize U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile wings and the nuclear-capable bomber fleet, the general who leads the new command said today.

“Some people have likened that to trying to build an airplane while actually having to fly it,” Air Force Lt. Gen. Frank G. Klotz told a group of defense reporters here. “And at times, it has seemed like that to us.”

Global Strike Command is the Air Force’s first new major command in 27 years. It’s also part of a larger strategy that Air Force Secretary Michael B. Donley and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton A. Schwartz drafted “to bring focus and attention back to the nuclear enterprise,” Klotz said.

The command, activated in August 2009 with headquarters at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., has gone from 47 permanent staff and an equal number of temporary-duty staff to a staff of 800, plus 100 contractors. …

The command is responsible for three ICBM wings, two B-52 Stratofortress wings and the only B-2 Spirit wing. About 23,000 people assigned to the command work in locations around the world. …

In April 2009, President Barack Obama told a large audience in Hradčany Square in Prague in the Czech Republic that the United States would take concrete steps toward helping to create a world without nuclear weapons.

“We will reduce the role of nuclear weapons in our national security strategy and urge others to do the same,” Obama said, adding that as long as such weapons exist, the United States “will maintain a safe, secure and effective arsenal to deter any adversary, and guarantee that defense to our allies.”

That position is manifest in the Defense Department’s April 2010 Nuclear Posture Review Report, Klotz said, “and in the attention to our enterprise provided by senior leadership from [Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates] on down, as well as the resourcing that goes with it.”

Still, the number of U.S. nuclear weapons is declining, from nine operational bases and 1,054 missiles to three bases today and 450 missiles, he said. During the Cold War, Strategic Air Command had more than 1,000 bombers. Today, 76 B-52s and 20 B-2s make up the bomber inventory. …

www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=61633

US Predator UAVs arrive at secret Yemen base to hunt Al Awakli down

DEBKAfile
November 9, 2010

In the first week of November, directly after the discovery of two explosive parcels mailed from Yemen to the United States, Washington moved a squadron of Predator drones to a secret base at the Yemeni Red Sea port of Al Hodaydah …

Until now, the covert facility – finished in April on a site CIA director Leon Panetta has selected last January – was allotted to US Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) units for mounting clandestine raids against Al Qaeda cells deep inside Yemen.

The new deployment of drones elevates American military intervention in Yemen by another notch.

Monday night, Nov. 9, Awlaki himself aired a 25-minute videotape on extremist websites. It was devoted to an unbridled attack on America. Muslims around the world were called upon to kill Americans…

http://www.debka.com/article/9135/

Experts Urge Replacement of U.S. Missile Defense Plan

Global Security Newswire
November 1, 2010

The United States should replace its Ground-based Midcourse Defense and Standard Missile 3 systems with unmanned aerial vehicles capable of downing long-range nuclear-tipped missiles in their powered phase of flight, two analysts said in an article due for publication today in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

The defensive strategy outlined in the Obama administration’s April 2010 Nuclear Posture Review relies on the “technical myth” that the GMD and SM-3 systems are tested and accurate …

Each system, though, is marred by irreparable technological issues that place in question their ability to strike the necessary component of an enemy ballistic missile incorporating specific countermeasures …

The situation is urgent, as Iran is already demonstrating countermeasures in flight tests that would render both the GMD and SM-3 long-range missile defense systems ineffective …

www.globalsecuritynewswire.org/gsn/nw_20101101_7057.php

US military partnership in ‘national interest’

ABC Online
November 7, 2010

Defence Minister Stephen Smith discusses Australia’s role in Afghanistan and the strengthening of military ties with the US.

STEPHEN SMITH: … the NATO ISAF summit in Lisbon later this month will be dealing very directly with the transition in Afghanistan.

So we’re obviously part of the 47 country international security assistance force. Everyone has agreed we have got to transition to Afghanistan security competence and responsibility. And so Lisbon is a very important both NATO and ISAF summit to start mapping out the transition to Afghan responsibility.

We continue to be of the view that we can do our bit, our job in Oruzgan on the next two to four years training the Afghan National Army and police in Oruzgan province. …

we’ll be saying to the rest of the international community that we are committed to transitioning to Afghan-led security in Afghanistan, that whilst we can’t leave tomorrow, we can’t be there forever.

So we have to train the Afghan National Army, the Afghan national police and the local police forces to be in a position to manage security arrangements themselves.

And this is the strategy and the approach that we have outlined.

BARRIE CASSIDY: Not there forever but you will be there for at least 10 years?

STEPHEN SMITH: Well our current training mission we see being done in two to four years which is consistent with the timetable set by the Afghanistan conference in Kabul earlier this year.

But after that we do envisage the capacity for us to be there in some oversight or embed capacity. Time will tell what the detail and circumstances of that are. …

the United States is conducting what’s called a force posture review, looking at how it positions its forces throughout the world.

It has bases in other countries – Japan for example. It has a presence in the Republic of Korea. And in Australia, of course, we have joint facilities.

So in the course of the United States considering its force posture review, the possibility arises that the United States could utilise more Australia. And that’s very high on the agenda for AUSMIN today. …

… the United States is a significant power. It conducts strategic reviews from time to time as we do. And so you look to the future.

But it’s also making changes to the disposition of its forces throughout the Asia-Pacific, reducing, for example, the number of forces it has in Japan. So it’s looking at those matters.

But we welcome it very much because we want to see the United States engaged in the Asia-Pacific. That’s very important to Australia. It’s very important to stability in our region. We’ve had that stability since the end of World War II, largely as a result of United States presence.

So an enhanced engagement is something we very strongly support, whether that’s, for example, through the United States joining an expanded East Asia Summit or the United States taking part, as Australia did, in the ASEAN Plus defence ministers’ meeting.

All of these things are unambiguously good things for our region and also for Australia.

It’s certainly in our national interest to be very positively disposed to enhancing our engagement in that military and defence cooperation sense.

View a video of this interview or read the transcript here:
www.abc.net.au/news/video/2010/11/07/3059281.htm

US Space Weapon Now Circling the Globe

Toward Freedom
By John Lasker
May 27, 2010

The US space weapon X-37 is now circling the globe in relative secrecy. It is an unmanned space plane that looks like a smaller version of the Space Shuttle and was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on April 22, 2010. This new weapon poses threats to global peace and risks sparking an arms race in space.

“At one time, [the X-37] was going to replace the Space Shuttle,” said Bruce Gagnon, director of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space. The replacement plan was scrapped, however. In 2004 NASA handed over the X-37 to DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) and the Phantom Works at Boeing, the major aerospace player racing to develop space weapons and missile defense systems with millions of taxpayer dollars.

The X-37 officially is a US Military Space Place or MSP, and like most US space weapons, spreading anxiety across the globe. The Pentagon also has an unknown number of “dual purpose” space planes in the works; the Pentagon has publicly stated in their budgets these prototypes have been tested in wind tunnels. They might be space bombers, but no one is completely sure. They’re so secret, no one can say what they’ll be used for or how far developed they are.

A space vehicle that can repair, deploy and even attack satellites, or insert reconnaissance drones back into the atmosphere – all within hours of orders – is also desired. As one NASA official put it, the space plane will “be the key to opening and conquering the space frontier.”

To those trying to keep weapons out of space, such as Gagnon and his Global Network, the orbiting X-37 is a set-back. “I would say it is one of the first (space weapons) to be deployed, so yes the X-37 is now operating in space and should be defined as a space-based weapon,” says Gagnon. “The Pentagon though will claim it is not permanently stationed in space and thus falls outside the Outer Space Treaty – which is why we are strong advocates for a new comprehensive treaty to ban all weapons in space.”

The fear of an American space bomber, say experts, has one significant and severe backlash: other nations will develop their own space bombers or space weapons to counter any US MSP. …

Read on … http://towardfreedom.com/home/content/view/1980/1/

US Deploys Air and Missile Defence System Despite Russian Concerns

Defence Professionals
May 25, 2010
By Nicolas von Kospoth
defpro.com

First US Patriot Battery Arrives in Poland

In the midst of an increasingly improving political environment between the US and Russia comes a signal from the Polish-Russian border that may hamper the basis for dialogue between the two former antagonists. On Monday, the US Embassy in Warsaw confirmed that the first US surface-to-air Patriot missile battery arrived at a Polish military base in the town of Morag, some 57 kilometres south of the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast on the Baltic shore. The first of these air and missile defence systems will initially be operated by some 100 to 150 US soldiers deployed to Morag. According to the Embassy, this is the first such deployment on Polish soil.

“An American Patriot Air and Missile Defense Battery arrived on Sunday at Morag, home of the 16th Mechanized Battalion of the Polish Land Forces, located in north-east Poland,” the Embassy announced on Monday in a written statement which further said: “The US 5th Battalion, 7th Air Defense Artillery, also known as the Rough Riders, will unload 37 train cars of equipment on Monday.” Within the framework of the US-Polish Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), ratified by Poland in February 2010, the US soldiers will service the battery and will train Polish troops to operate it. As of 2012, the Patriot systems are scheduled to be an integrated element of the Polish air defence forces.

Russian Concerns Remain Despite Western Affirmation of Defensive Purposes

Considered by many as a symbolic move, rather than a tactically relevant effort, the deployment of US air and missile defence systems in Eastern Europe, and in particular so close to Russian territory, has been the reason for many protests from Russian officials. If not as a threat, Russia perceives the basing decision as blatant interference by the West into their sphere of interest and as a sign of a lack of trust towards Russia by the US and NATO.

In Late April, the Russian Foreign Ministry again expressed its unchanged concern with plans for the US to deploy Patriot systems in Poland. According to RIA Novosti, Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei Nesterenko, said: “We are concerned by the misguided anti-missile activities of the United States on the territory of Poland. We do not understand the aims for deployment of Patriot air defence missiles near the Russian border. Such unilateral steps on behalf of the United States cannot but raise our concerns.”

For its part, Warsaw has repeatedly insisted that Morag was not chosen for political or strategic reasons, but simply because it already has a superior infrastructure in place. Furthermore, Washington repeatedly emphasised that the sole purpose of the Patriot systems in Poland is to counter a potential ballistic missile threat from Iran.

The NATO-Russian Approach – The Better Solution?

While the US remains committed to their plans to establish its own missile defence shield in Europe, Russia is hoping for a different signal from Washington. As Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov said in mid-May, Russia is still waiting for a reaction from the US administration to Russia’s proposal of participating in the creation of a European missile defence system and is expecting an answer from Washington by the end of the year. Ivanov is seeking a comprehensive co-operation, saying: “We will assess the threats together, evaluate the risks together, and begin creating a defence system together.”

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in late April that Moscow is interested in co-operating with NATO on issues of missile defence. In contrast to the United States’ NATO-independent plans, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has repeatedly promoted the negotiation of a joint NATO-Russian missile defence shield for Europe. In April, NATO foreign ministers agreed, at an informal meeting in Estonia, to begin a dialogue with Russia on cooperation in this security-political field.

Indeed, Russia’s position is comprehensible when considering the possible threat of ballistic missiles launched by a potentially nuclear-armed Iran. The most effective way to counter such a threat is to place detection and anti-missile systems as close as possible to the launching area and to destroy missiles shortly after they have been launched, rather than after the re-entry phase. With regard to the Patriot systems based in Poland, which are officially meant to ward off short- to medium-range missiles, it does not seem to be the best solution to protect the entire eastern, central and south-eastern NATO territory from an Iranian threat. A combination of using Russian radar systems close to the Iranian border and missile defence systems based in south-eastern Europe, Turkey and Russia, as well as jointly operating naval assets from Russia and NATO members in the Black Sea and the Persian Gulf, would appear to be better suited to protect Europe and Russia from a mutually recognised threat.

The door towards such a joint solution has been opened wide by the Obama administration, which reached a hand towards Russia, the latter – under President Medvedev – readily seizing this opportunity. The recently negotiated treaty on the reduction of nuclear arms to replace the START treaty has proven the good will of both sides and the ability of constructive bilateral co-operation. The agreement could also be concluded due to Obama’s decision of September 2009 to scrap plans by the Bush administration on the deployment of missile defence systems to Eastern Europe after a reassessment of the threat from Iran.

www.defpro.com/daily/details/579/

Vandenberg Launch

edhat.com
June 6, 2010

The 30th Space Wing and Missile Defense Agency launched a ground-based interceptor at 3:25 p.m. June 6 from North Vandenberg. The launch was a flight test for a two-stage variant of the operationally-configured three-stage interceptor now deployed at Vandenberg AFB.

The test was solely for data collection purposes and system performance evaluation. There was no target launch or intercept attempt for this mission.

“Executing a successful launch like this requires a great deal of work from many people in various organizations and Team Vandenberg performed magnificently,” said Col. Richard Boltz, 30th Space Wing commander and Launch Decision Authority for today’s launch.

This launch was Col. Boltz’s first as wing commander; however, the 22-year career Air Force officer is no stranger to the spacelift mission, having previously served at Vandenberg as a mission flight control officer in the mid 1990’s.

“It’s great to be back in the launch business after being away from it for 15 years.”

This was the first missile defense program launch from Vandenberg AFB’s Launch Facility 24, which was recently upgraded to support missile defense testing.

Previous interceptor launches have been conducted at nearby Launch Facility 23.

www.edhat.com/site/tidbit.cfm?nid=32572

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