U.S.
Foreign Military Bases & Military Colonialism
U.S. Foreign Military Bases & Military Colonialism:
Personal and Analytical Perspectives
Joseph Gerson
NOT FOR WIDER DISTRIBUTION OR PUBLICATION WITHOUT PERMISSION
OF THE AUTHOR
In May, 2005, with more than 100,000 U.S. troops still
at war in Iraq as they sought to enforce the U.S. military occupation
of that oil-rich nation, and with confrontations growing over
North Korean and Iranian nuclear programs, the Washington Post
carried a disturbing report about U.S. preparations for its
next war. In response to Secretary of Defense (read War) Donald
Rumsfeld's top secret "Interim Global Strike Alert Order,"
the Pentagon's Strategic Command had, it was reported, developed
a "full-spectrum global strike
capability to deliver
rapid, extended range precision kinetic (nuclear and conventional)
and non-kinetic (elements of space and information operations)
effects in support of theater and national objectives."
In plain English, this meant that even as U.S. forces were bogged
down in Iraq, the Pentagon claimed to have established the ability
to launch offensive military attacks - "conventional"
or nuclear - "in any dark corner of the world" including
North Korea, Iran, or Venezuela "at any moment's notice."
"American 'imperial power" former National
Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski once wrote, derives "in
large measure from superior organization, from the ability to
mobilize vase economic and technological resources promptly for
military purposes." Like the wars the U.S. has fought to
create and then to maintain its global and regional hegemonies,
from World War II and the Bushes' Iraq wars, to Vietnam, Nicaragua,
and Kosovo, the Pentagon's 21st century "global
strike" doctrine depends on the organization of terrorizing
military violence in the form of an historically unprecedented
U.S. global infrastructure of foreign military bases. There are
more than 700 these fortresses - many of them secret - in more
than 40 countries, which are reinforced by so-called "access
agreements" that make airports, harbors, training facilities,
and other military resources available to U.S. military forces.
Without these bases, the U.S. could not have been an
"Asian power." The Monroe Doctrine that declares all
of Latin America and the Caribbean to be within the U.S. "sphere
of interest" could not have been enforced with repeated invasions
and other acts of subversion over almost two centuries. And,
without its world-wide network of military bases and installations
U.S. Cold War and Post-Cold War hegemony could not have been established
or maintained in Middle East -- "the jugular vein" of
global capitalism.
Similarly, if U.S. military forces had not guaranteed the survival
of the Saudi monarchy, and if the U.S. had not maintained strategically
vital bases near Mecca and Medina, cities revered by Moslems,
the world might never have heard of Osama Bin Laden. September
11 might still be remembered as the day Chilean President Salvador
Allende was overthrown and died in General Pinochet's CIA-backed
coup d'etat.
U.S. bases occupy vast tracks of land and enormous harbors
- some in remote rural areas and in or near major cities, including
national capitals - in countries as diverse as Japan, Britain,
Germany, Ecuador and Oman, where U.S. foreign legions, its naval
and air forces are based and trained. In Rumania, Kyrgyzstan,
and other nations, they include smaller "lily pad" or
"bare bones" bases that serve as jumping off points
for U.S. military interventions. And, smaller installations playing
essential roles in C3I (command, control and communications -
including for nuclear war) and in the U.S. campaign to monopolize
the militarization of space can be found in Korea, Australia,
Sweden, Djibouti and in many other countries.
Unknown to most U.S. Americans, the U.S. has been building
this imperial infrastructure for or more than a century. It began
with the United States' conquests of Cuba and Puerto Rico to consolidate
U.S. control of the Caribbean and of Central America, and the
Philippines and Guam to gain access to the fabled China market
during the Spanish American War of 1898. The network was expanded
in the course of World War II and the Cold War, and it is being
post-modernized ("reconfigured" and "diversified")
to enforce what Vice-President Dick Cheney calls "the arrangement
for the 21st century." The goal is to colonize
time as well as space in order to guarantee U.S. military, economic,
and political dominance for the century to come.
This new military colonialism claims its tolls of human
lives and hopes, the environment, sovereignty and national independence
even without shots being fired, missiles launched, or countries
invaded. More than two hundred years ago our Declaration of
Independence, decried the "abuses and usurpations"
caused by the "Standing Armies" that King George
III "kept among us, in times of peace". Today the "abuses
and usurpations" are far more intrusive and destructive than
those that fueled the U.S. war of independence. They include
more than rape, murder, sexual harassment, robbery, other common
crimes, seizure of people's lands, destruction of property, and
the cultural imperialism that have accompanied foreign armies
since time immemorial. They now include terrorizing jet blasts
of frequent low altitude and night-landing exercises, helicopter
and warplanes crashing into homes and schools, the poisoning of
environments and communities with military toxics, and they transform
"host" communities targets for genocidal nuclear as
well as for "conventional" attacks.
As Cynthia Enloe has helped us to understand, U.S. military bases
and their "host" communities are complex and dynamic
social systems that extend beyond their chain link fences, barbed
wire, and ornate main gates. Inside there is housing for the troops
and their dependents. There are schools, shops, bowling alleys,
and movie theaters as well as firing ranges, runways, and ammunition
depots. To greater and lesser degrees bases engage the people
of "host" communities, serving as sources of employment,
goods, culture and more.
But "abuses and usurpations" are essential to these
complex social relations. Take Kin Town in Okinawa as an example.
Kin Town abuts the Marine Base at Camp Hansen in Okinawa. Its
small commercial district is marked by seedy restaurants and businesses
that serve G.I.s . Before the dollar's decline, prostitution
was rife, and before the nonviolent Okinawan uprising in 1995
and '96 the forced the U.S. to commit itself to reducing the size
of its "footprint" on Okinawa, the explosions of live
fire artillery exercises regularly reverberated across this otherwise
quiet community. Sometimes shells landed in people's homes. Other
times they landed on people's farm land and along the community's
roads.
Sixty years after the U.S. first occupied Okinawa, and a decade
and a half after the end of the Cold War something remarkable,
but largely unnoticed, occurred in Kin. On the day that baseball
practice resumed in schools across Japan, I found myself in a
schoolyard, waiting to meet an authority on the impacts of the
nearby bases on the community. Seemingly as much in harmony with
nature's rhythms as the growth of sugar cane or animals caring
for their young, children and teenagers were taking their turns
fielding ground balls and flies hit to them by their coaches and
taking their first swings in batting practice. But, as these
youngsters worked a developing their athletic skills and strength,
the hillsides echoed with sounds. U.S. Marines were developing
their skills of killing people, and the children and coaches continued
baseball practice as if nothing unusual or dangerous is happening.
Marine gunfire has become a part of Kin Town's natural environment
and daily life.
Military colonialism, hard and soft, were present in other nearly
invisible ways. A century ago European powers consolidated their
colonial power over and continued privileged presence in East
Asian nations through "unequal treaties." In the 19th
and early 20th centuries Britain, France, Russia, Germany
and the United States dictated these treaties to Japan, Korea,
China and Indochina. With Japan's brutal invasions of these colonies
and with the destruction of the colonialism's remaining foundations
in the course of the Second World War and the Chinese revolution,
these unequal treaties were consigned to the history's compost
pile. But, in the immediate aftermath of the war, the unequal
treaties returned in a new guise: military alliances and Status
of Forces Agreements imposed by the U.S. on Japan and on many
of these same countries which have provided the "legal"
foundations for the continued presence of U.S. "standing
armies" across much of the Asia-Pacific region and much of
the rest of the world for the past six decades - three generations!
The "soft" side of military colonialism expresses itself
in food, cultural tastes and markets. Inexpensive and plentiful
food on and around U.S. bases in Okinawa - especially during the
25-year formal military occupation (1945-72) has permeated Okinawan
culture, changing tastes - especially for the young - and has
created markets for companies like McDonalds, Burger King, and
Mattel Toys, and these foreign forces and exact their costs.
Until recently Okinawans, who "host" three-quarters
of U.S. troops based in Japan on the 0.6% of the nation's territory,
enjoyed the longest life expectancies of any Japanese. Their
more leisurely culture was obviously a factor, but the primary
cause was Okinawans unique diet. In addition to jazz, G.I.s brought
their hamburgers, pizza, fried chicken, and French fries that
have conquered market share from fish, bitter Okinawan cucumbers,
and purple sweet potatoes. Today in Naha, Okinawa's capital,
people spend 46% percent more on hamburgers than people do in
other Japanese prefectural capitals. They spend 60% more on bacon,
and 300% more on processed meats, while spending 49% less on salad
and 71% less on sushi. Okinawan men are paying the greatest price.
While Okinawan women remain the longest lived in Japan, Okinawan
men's longevity has fallen to 26th among Japan's 47
prefectures. Military colonialism brings structural violence.
Military colonialism is hardly limited to Okinawa. Hawaii was
conquered and annexed under cover of the Spanish-American war
for the strategic role it could play in U.S. domination of Asian-Pacific
nations, resources, and markets. Despite its reputation as a tourist
Mecca, one quarter of Oahu, the main island, is occupied with
U.S. military bases (much of it Native Hawaiian sacred lands)
and at this writing the Army is working to obtain still more land
to train its new Stryker brigades. The sites they have in mind?
The slopes of the sacred mountains traditionally used by native
Hawaiian as their calendar and the holy site to which pregnant
women journeyed to give birth to the island's nobility. Elsewhere
Uzbeks complain that "security" near the newly created
U.S. bases in their country is more repressive than it was under
Soviet rule. In Scandinavia, young activists have been discovering
new illegal intelligence bases in Norway and a spy base in Sweden
that violates Stockholm's long honored neutrality. And Guantanamo
Bay in Cuba has become a U.S. military prison colony renowned
for torture.
Learning about the scale and impacts of U.S. foreign military
bases is no easy task. The Pentagon doesn't go out of its way
to inform the U.S. or "host" nation publics about the
number, missions, or impacts of its web foreign fortresses that
are unrivaled by those created by Genghis Khan, Julius Cesar,
Alexander the Great, or Queen Victoria. Over-stretched progressive
institutions and movements are consumed as they labor to anticipate,
prevent, or overcome the evils of empire, from assaults on the
New Deal and Great Society safety nets, to the onslaughts of globalizing
corporate capitalism, and the next U.S. invasion. (U.S. wars have
become so common in the late 20th and early 21st
centuries that we can study their patterns and exceptions to those
patterns.)
I had the good fortune of being introduced to the history and
roles of U.S. military bases while studying the history of U.S.
diplomacy as an undergraduate being prepared for the U.S. Foreign
Service. Professor Jules Davids, who we later learned had been
the primary ghost writer of President Kennedy's book Profiles
in Courage, explained that in the 1890s men like Theodore
Roosevelt, Captain Alfred Mahan, and Henry Cabot Lodge had perceived
the possibility of the U.S. replacing Britain as the world's dominant
power and then built the blue water navy needed to do it. (These
are the men who leading figures of the G.W. Bush Administration,
Rumsfeld, Cheney cited as their models and sources of inspiration
as they assumed power.) Professor Davids described how the navies
and merchant steam ships of that era were fueled by coal and required
coaling stations placed in strategic locations if they were to
traverse large bodies of water like the Pacific Ocean. He went
on to explain how the founders of the United States' overseas
empire laid the foundations for conquering markets in China and
Latin America and for challenging its colonial competitors with
their conquests in the Spanish-American war at the cost of hundreds
of thousands of lives - especially in the Philippines where nationalist
resistance was particularly strong. He reminded us that it was
under the cover of the Spanish American War that McKinley finally
moved to annex Hawaii, after it had been on the military's wish
list since Generals Schofield and Alexander, disguised as tourists,
first scouted the island monarchy and its gem - Pearl Harbor in
1873.
Although I had worked with exiled and other Filipinos working
to free their country of both the Marcos dictatorship and U.S.
bases, the scale and impacts of U.S. bases did not penetrate my
consciousness until the early 1980s, when I participated in a
major nuclear disarmament conference in Hiroshima. There, in addition
to being exposed and devastated by what U.S. nuclear weapons had
done to fellow human beings and to two cities, I was amazed to
learn that the U.S. still had (and has) more than 100 military
bases and installations across that island nation.
I was shaken by Okinawan and other Japanese descriptions of what
it means to live in communities routinely terrorized by low altitude
& night landing exercises, by crimes committed by GIs that
regularly went unpunished, and about how people's land had been
seized to make way for U.S. bases and how these bases blocked
economic and social development. I was upset by reports of the
pervasiveness of prostitution and of seemingly endless sexual
harassment and violence near U.S. bases. People shared their agonizing
memories of deadly military accidents: planes falling into schools,
drunken military drivers who caused deadly accidents (years later
it would be my painful responsibility to meet the surviving memories
of a family who mother and two daughters had been killed by a
drunken Marine on a Sunday morning as they walked along the sidewalk
outside the main gate of a U.S. base in Okinawa), and the destruction
of people's homes and property during military exercises.
People also spoke of their shame of being complicit in wars and
aggressions, especially the savaging of Vietnam. Their communities
having served as bases for U.S. bombers and warships, and much
of Okinawa having been used as jungle warfare training base.
As people scarred by war and massive aerial bombardments, they
could identify with the pain, suffering, and losses of other innocent
Asians terrorized by the tsunami of U.S. bombs and military might.
I also learned about the political context: the unequal U.S.-Japan
Military Alliance that was secretly imposed by the U.S. on the
Japanese people as the price for ending the formal military occupation
in 1952, and the resulting loss of national sovereignty. Left
unsaid was how the U.S. bases in Japan - some of which are still
located in the nation's capital - are designed to contain Japanese
militarism which the U.S. has re-legitimated and revitalized over
the decades as part of Washington's global Cold War and Post-Cold
War strategies.
That conference also included representatives of the Guam Landowners
Association. Their presentation featured two maps they had brought
with them. One showed the locations of the island's best fishing
grounds, its best agricultural land, and its best drinking water.
The other showed the locations of the U.S. military bases, installations,
and military exercises. The two maps were identical.
Filipinos had also come to the conference, not only to share what
they knew and learn about U.S. nuclear weapons based and transiting
through their country, but to urge leading peace activists from
around the world to find ways to act in solidarity with their
struggle to end U.S. military colonialism and the deadly Marcos
dictatorship.
European peace activists at the conference who had come from Britain,
Germany and Russia were terrified by the Reagan Administration's
plans to deploy nuclear armed tomahawk cruise and Pershing II
missiles in bases across Europe. The Pershing IIs were designed
to destroy the Kremlin and "decapitate" Soviet leadership
from its military within eight minutes of the missiles being launched.
This, in turn, was leading Moscow to adopt the policy of "launch
on warning" in which machines would automatically launch
Soviet (now Russian) missiles in a retaliatory attack within minutes
of detecting incoming missiles. Launch on warning still prevails,
making Europe and all of humanity vulnerable to human miscalculations
and technological glitches, including misreading of the origins
of Scandinavian missiles launching weather satellites and an inability
to distinguish between flocks of geese and missiles. Global efforts
from women's encampments outside U.S. bases in Britain, the Nuclear
Weapons Freeze movement in the United States, and enlightened
diplomacy by Soviet President Michael Gorbachev prevented the
deployment of the Pershing IIs, but the struggle against U.S.
nuclear weapons and bases in Europe still continues.
Since then, it has been my humbling, sometimes painful and often
inspiring privilege to meet and to learn from people who have
been victimized by and who are resisting U.S. military bases in
many countries from Iceland to Guam, and from Korea to Ecuador.
Each case is different. Each base brings: calamitous "abuses
and usurpations." And each brings resistance.
Touch a person's pain and it is yours. Etched in my memory is
the face of an Okinawan woman who described how, when she was
a child, her entire generation of girls - now middle aged women
- were terrorized by the brutal G.I. rape and killing of a young
girl. Other faces are there too: the agony of a young Korean
describing life within and surrounding the Maehyang-ri bombing
range and how people living there continued to suffer frequent
practice bombings in what was for them the never-ending Korean
war. There is the memory of another intense young Korean at another
conference in Japan who insisted that I look at a C.D. his organization
had made about the killings Shin Hyo-soon and Shim Mi-sun, two
young school girls who were killed by a U.S. tank as they walked
to a party - a military crime, like so many others, for which
no one in the U.S. military was ever held accountable.
There are also more hopeful life-affirming memories: , the image
of older Okinawan farmers - each wearing a headband declaring
that "Life is Sacred" - conducting a sit-in outside
the courthouse in Naha, demanding the return of their land, and
good Icelandic friend's smiling face as he described how demonstrators
there once placed horse's head on a pole as a way of invoking
the old Norse Gods to rid their island of the abominable airbase
at Keflavik . They had been joking, but they were also as serious
and committed as people can be.
Bases bring insecurity; the loss of self-determination, human
rights, and sovereignty. They degrade the culture, values, health
and environment of host nations - and of the United States.
Missions of Bases :
The raison d'etre for the United States integrated system
military bases and installations is to serve as a global infrastructure
for imperial domination. At any given moment approximately 400,000
U.S. troops are currently deployed at or supported by these bases:
100,000 in Europe, 100,000 in East Asia, 140,000 in Iraq and elsewhere
in the Middle East, and the remainder in Latin America, Africa,
Central Asia and at sea. Britain, France and Russia still retain
a handful of foreign bases, but their significance and impacts
pale in comparison to those of the United States. Pentagon spokesmen
defending Rumsfeld's plans to "reconfigure" the deployment
and the roles of U.S. bases, have been consistently clear that,
"the purpose of military units is to fight and win the nation's
wars, and they should be stationed in locations than enable the
United States to use them most efficiently and with minimal political
restrictions." Rumsfeld has pressed the point that "It's
time to adjust those locations from static defense to a more agile
and more capable and more 21st century posture."
Consistent with President Bush's public statements and the National
Security Strategy published in October 2002, the Administration
does not plan to limit its offensive and imperial war fighting
to Iraq. In the tradition of Mahan, Cabot Lodge and Teddy Roosevelt,
the Bush Administration is building on Clinton-era "Full
Spectrum Dominance" of other nations and peoples at any time
and at any level of power to impose "the arrangement for
the 21st century", not to ensure national defense.
The Bush Administration's "National Security Strategy"
tells us that reason the U.S. still maintains its network of more
than 725 foreign military bases and installations in more than
40 countries is "To contend with uncertainty and to meet
the many security challenges we face," The United States'
National Strategy Statement goes a bit further, explaining that
the U.S. "will require bases and stations within and beyond
Western Europe and Northeast Asia, as well as temporary access
arrangements for the long-distance deployment of U.S. forces."
Condoleeza Rice put it more succinctly when, on returning from
Asia after traveling with President Bush she said "The centerpiece
of the President's strategy" she said, "is our strong
forward presence
"
U.S. military bases exist to:
· To reinforce the status
quo: for example U.S. bases in Middle East (including secret bases
in Israel) and Central Asia are designed to ensure continued U.S.
privileged access to, and control of, those regions' oil. U.S.
forces in Europe and Japan serve to maintain the hierarchy of
power and privilege created as a result of the Second World War.
· They encircle enemies.
This was the case with the Soviet Union and China during Cold
War and it continues with China, which is seen as the emerging
rival power that is most likely to become a "strategic competitor"
for regional and possibly global dominance over the long term.
U.S. bases in Korea, Japan, Guam, Australia and in Central Asia,
augmented by access agreements with the Philippines and Singapore,
and the emerging U.S. alliance with India are all designed to
contain China. Another dimension of encirclement is so-called
"missile defenses" - which the Chinese describe as the
shield being built to complement Washington's first-strike
nuclear swords. In addition to their deployments at sea and space,
missile defense weapons and support systems are being deployed
in Greenland, Eastern Europe, Israel, Korea, and Japan. Encirclement
is also role played by U.S. bases in Europe and the Mediterranean,
the Middle East.
· U.S. bases serve interventionist
aircraft carriers, destroyers, nuclear armed submarines and other
U.S. warships. This includes bases in Spain, Italy, Israel, Bahrain,
Qatar, Japan, and "access" agreements in Israel, the
Philippines, Singapore, and other countries.
· Bases in Germany and
Britain have long served as training centers for U.S. forces,
as was long the case in Vieques for bombardiers. Jungle war fighting,
live fire, low altitude, and other training continues across
Okinawa and elsewhere in Japan.
· Bases can function as
jumping off points for U.S. foreign military interventions. With
NATO's new "out of area operations" doctrine, the U.S.
has reinforced its ability to use bases across Europe for launching
attacks and wars against North African, Middle East and Central
Asian nations. Bases in Okinawa, elsewhere in Japan were essential
to the U.S. wars in Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf. This
is also a function of the U.S. bases in Kuwait, Bahrain, Ecuador,
and Honduras.
· Bases facilitate C3I,
command, control, communications and intelligence for both "conventional"
and nuclear war. This includes the use of space for spying and
actual warfare, as we saw in the wars Serbia, Afghanistan, and
Iraq . U.S. bases in Britain, Italy, Scandinavia, Australia, Japan,
Qatar, Australia, among others serve these functions.
· As can be seen with U.S.
bases in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the Middle East, Africa
and Latin America, U.S. bases are increasingly being used to secure
and protect oil and gas pipelines, ensuring fuel for the U.S.
economy and its war machines while attempting to control the energy
supplies of allied and competitor nations.
· U.S. bases serve to control
or influence the governments and political dynamics of host nations.
Japan, Korea (where U.S. military forces were deeply involved
in successive military coups,) Germany, Saudi Arabia , and today's
Iraq begin the list.
· As in the cases of Tajikistan
and Iceland small bases and installations can serve as a way to
"show the U.S. flag", demonstrating the U.S. commitment
to be taken seriously as a power in a particular country or region.
· While it is too early
to call them military bases, as U.S. military power has moved
to dominate land, seas and air, it is now moving into space.
The Pentagon's "Vision 2020" boasts that the U.S. Strategic
Command is now working to control the earth from space. Today
"Rover" is on the moon. Tomorrow we may well see a base
there for war fighting on earth, to control the moon-earth "space
well", and as a base for the colonization of the solar system.
The Current Context:
In what the White House has described as "the most comprehensive
restructuring of U.S. military bases overseas since the end of
the Korean War", Secretary Rumsfeld is working to reconfigure
and to revitalize U.S. forward military deployments and its global
military infrastructure. The party line is that the redesign
is being undertaken to address the challenges of the Post-Cold
War and post 9-11 world in which terrorists, nuclear and near-nuclear
powers threaten the U.S. "homeland." This is true in
part, but the restructuring is better understood as an pillar
of the Administration's megalomaniacal ambitions that require
threatening and fighting of offensive wars. The campaign is one
of the more ambitious tactics to expand and to consolidate the
U.S. global empire into and through the power vacuums left in
the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union and its empire.
While the unilateralism of the Bush-Cheney administrations is
widely regarded as a radical departure from more complex and nuanced
U.S. foreign and military policies, there is more continuity than
change. During World War II, U.S. strategic planners envisioned
"the Grand Area", a single global market economy that
would be dominated by the Untied States. That dream was frustrated
by the rise of Soviet power and the Cold war. With their collapse,
the way has been opened to establish that global empire in the
form of "the arrangement for the 21st century."
Following the initial uncertainty that accompanied the collapse
of the Berlin Wall - a time when most military alliances had lost
their raisons d'etre and of hopes that military budgets
could be transformed into "peace dividends" was widespread
- the first Bush Administration responded to Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait with the Desert Storm war. The President and his minions
mobilized popular and global support by stressing the illegality
of Saddam Hussein's invasion of the oil-rich sheikdom, but they
were also clear that Washington's goal was to create "a new
world order" in which "What we say goes." The
first rationale embraced and reinforced the United Nations' Charter,
but the second envisioned Washington's whims and the Pentagon's
power replacing international law as the foundation of international
relations.
Even this was not entirely new. "Desert Storm" was
in large measure a reaffirmation of what Noam Chomsky has called
"Political Axiom #1": that the U.S. will never permit
its enemies, nor its allies, to gain independent access to Middle
East oil. --the "jugular vein" of global capitalism
since World War I, when Winston Churchill called it "The
Prize."
In addition to being designed to drive Saddam Hussein's forces
from Kuwait, the war was also designed in part to serve as a demonstration
war. The conflagration in which one of the Arab world's most
advanced nations was, as the United Nations later reported, bombed
back into the "pre-industrial age" with hundreds of
thousands of people ultimately dying from its after effects, was
also designed to serve as a warning to other so-called rogue nations,
and even to China that this would be their fate if they challenged
U.S. hegemony.
Preparations for the war also served as the occasion to discipline
U.S. allies and to restructure the world (dis)order. With "Desert
Storm," NATO was turned toward "out of area" operations,
with bases in Britain and Germany used as staging areas and jumping
off points. Even placid Shannon Airport in Dublin was gratuitously
forced to accommodate U.S. warplanes to remind the Irish that
they live in what Zbigniew Brzezinski calls a "vassal state."
The U.S. successfully traumatized Japanese political culture by
insisting that $13 billion and the use of U.S. bases from Okinawa
to Hokkaido for the war were not sufficient. In the future, as
we have seen with the Bush-Cheney Administration's invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq, Japan would be expected to" show its
flag" deploying its troops to war zones in violation of its
war-renouncing constitution.
Preparations for the war also visited physical and emotional hardships
on the people of Vieques in Puerto Rico. After having serving
as a target for U.S. and allied naval and aerial bombardment since
the Second World War and years of sometimes dangerous nonviolent
resistance, the Navy had previously announced that it would be
closing the base. But, within weeks of the September 11 attacks,
the it was announced that the navy would almost immediately resume
bombing exercise there "after the attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon." Once again Navy bombers traumatized
communities and savaged the environment with new rounds of practice
bombing runs. Across the planet, Diego Garcia - all of whose
Chagos people were forced to leave their island paradise between
1967 and1973 when Britain turned it over to the United States
- was shown to be fundamentally important to U.S. Middle East
hegemony, as well as to U.S. ambitions in Southern and Central
Asia. Its vast stores of pre-positioned weapons were moved to
the war zone, and its runways served as a base for daily B-52
bombing attacks.
Similarly, in North Africa and the Middle East, the war was used
to exercise formal and informal alliances, to re-legitimate the
presence and use of U.S. military bases in Egypt and the Persian
Gulf, and to build new military bases in strategically important
Saudi Arabia, Djibouti, Qatar and Kuwait. With the nuclear threats
made by President Bush, Vice President Quayle, Secretary of War
Cheney, and British Prime Minister Major during the "Desert
Shield" phase of the war, and, with the encirclement of Iraq
with as many as 700 nuclear weapons to back up those threats,
the First Bush Administration attempted to re-legitimate its nuclear
arsenal and the practice of nuclear blackmail -- at least in elite
U.S. circles --for the Post-Cold War period. Essential pillars
of those threats and the threats made in the run up to the 2003
U.S. invasion of Iraq were the military bases across in Britain,
Belgium, Holland, Spain, Japan, and other nations where U.S. nuclear
weapons are stored, where U.S. nuclear-capable ships are based
or make port calls, and which host nuclear war fighting C3I functions.
Compared to the Bush Administrations, the Clinton 90's are often
thought of as a relatively peaceful era for the United States,
if not Rwanda, the Congo, or Haiti. In truth, however, the Clinton
Administration's "Bridge to the 21st Century"
reinforced the transition from one Bush Administration to the
other. In Europe, Assistant Secretary of State, Strobe Talbot
and the U.S. military did their best to re-divide and to contain
the continent. They pressed for the inclusion of nearly all of
Eastern Europe into an enlarged NATO to augment U.S. interventionary
power targeted against the Middle East and successor states of
the Soviet Union and to counter growing French and Germany ambitions.
The U.S. led NATO in fighting "Kosovo" war against
Serbia in violation of the United Nations Charter, and it emerged
from the war with a new and massive military base, Camp Bondsteel,
the first of what the Pentagon hoped would become a new system
of U.S. Eastern European military bases.
Bush Administration came to power with the commitment to impose
what Vice President Cheney called, "the arrangement for the
21st century" to ensure that "the United
States will continue to be the dominant political, economic, and
military power in the world." The so-called "Revolution
in Military Affairs" - the near-complete integration of information
technologies into U.S. war fighting doctrines and its air, land,
sea and space based systems, was envisioned as an essential pillar
of "the arrangement."
Even before the September 11 attacks and the publication of the
unilateralist, first-strike, "National Strategy Statement"
a year later, the Administration was preparing popular opinion
for the new (dis)order. In an interview with The New Yorker,
Deputy National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley was clear that
the vision for "the arrangement for the 21st century"
was actually "a whole new world." By more fully engaging
the "Revolution in Military Affairs," the U.S. would
"have the military ability to act at any time, anywhere,
in defense of what it sees as its global interests." As
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Andrew Hoehm would later
observe that "Transformation is more than just new capabilities,
inherent in transformation is a physical change of the global
military posture." And, the "new world" would transcend
traditional, and what the administration saw as outmoded, concepts
of national sovereignty.
Rumsfeld's Restructuring
Pre-inaugural reports in 2000, prepared under the direction of
(later to be) Assistant Secretary of State Armitage and (currently)
Ambassador Khalilzad, recommended "diversification"
of U.S. military bases: reconfiguring the bases' Cold War global
architecture to meet the demands of 21st century war
fighting and intimidation. As the plans that are now being implemented
to withdraw two Army divisions are to be withdrawn from Germany,
and 12,000 troops from South Korea demonstrate, they were serious
about their aim of, "afford[ing] maximum flexibility in sending
forces to the Middle East, Central Asia and other potential battlegrounds."
Over the next decade, in what has been described as a "rolling
process" some bases will be closed. Some will be merged.
But, the consistent goal of the reconfiguration will to maximize
U.S. war fighting capabilities by increasing the agility, flexibility,
and speed of U.S. fighting forces. With "diversification"
of U.S. forces in East Asia and the Pacific - redeployed many
of them further south -China would be more completely encircled.
The likely number of U.S. casualties in a second Korean war could
be reduced. And U.S. military power in the Middle East and the
increasingly important oil-rich recesses of Central Asia could
be augmented.
Congressional Democrats, unfortunately, have been unable or unwilling
to provide an alternate vision. During the 2004 presidential
campaign, when initial plans for the restructuring were first
being leaked to the press, the Democratic Party's contender, John
Kerry could only echo concerns of some in the defense establishment.
The reconfiguration had not been sufficiently thought through.
It would upset allies, "give[e] up valuable real estate",
and "bring troops home where they would be further from potential
war zones."
In Europe, with Spain having precipitously withdrawn from President
Bush's diminishing coalition in Iraq, and having opted for "Europe"
over the United States, Madrid was to be punished. Italy, not
Spain, would likely become new home of the Navy's European headquarters
which to be moved from Britain, and closer to the Middle East's
oil reserves. With the Fuldt Gap no longer the geo-political center
of the struggle for world power, the lion's share of the U.S.
bases to be closed and troops withdrawn would be from Germany.
Although the United States' major air base at Ramstein would
remain, other U.S. interventionist forces will be transferred
from Germany, Rumania, Bulgaria, and to Turkey if the new regime
in Istanbul permitted.
The movement of U.S. forces eastward from Germany reflects more
than simply moving U.S. forces closer to potential battlefields.
Rumsfeld and Cheney also want to ensure that "Old Europe"
will not be able to inhibit Washington's use of murderous force
then next time it opts for unilateral or "Anglo-Saxon"
invasion or attack. As one "senior military official"
explained, there is "a purposeful effort to possibly leave
places where they may not want us or they are snubbing us",
and "The Eastern Block countries have reached out to us
They
are looking for a partnership."
To the south, under cover of preparations for the Iraq war, the
Pentagon removed one of the precipitating causes of the 9-11 attacks:
the majority of U.S. troops and bases in Saudi Arabia, which many
Moslems experienced as sullying Islam's holiest land. These troops,
bases and functions were transferred to Qatar, Kuwait, Djibouti
and Bahrain. The Bush-Cheney plans for Iraq were not limited to
its vast oil reserves serving the U.S. "national interest"
by fueling the U.S. economy and serving a means to leverage accommodations
from Saudi Arabia and OPEC. With bases like Camp Victory in Baghdad,
which hosts two strategically important headquarters and more
than 14,000 troops and thirteen other "enduring" U.S.
military bases, Washington's military planners see Iraq as a bastion
of U.S. military power in the Middle East, with the added ability
to project U.S. force into Central Asia, for decades to come.
In the Asia-Pacific, the news is that now "all of the Pentagon
road maps lead to Guam," which is to "become one of
two or three major hubs of U.S. activity in the world."
Japan, which has been the keystone of U.S. Asia-Pacific power
since 1945, is being given an augmented role which is being negotiated
between the U.S. and Japan and within the Japanese elite. As
part of the decade old effort to pacify popular opinion in Okinawa,
the Pentagon's plan calls for either moving Futenma Air Base,
which has long tormented Ginowan City which surrounds it, to a
more remote site on the island or integrating it into the vast
Kadena Air Base. It also calls for rotating or moving some of
the 15,000 Marines based in Okinawa to Japan's main islands.
Meanwhile, a number of command functions, a second aircraft carrier,
and other forces are to be transferred from the United States'
west coast and from Guam and to Japan, bringing them closer to
China and North Korea. South Korea being pressed to assume greater
"burden sharing", not only on the Korean Peninsula,
but globally as we see with Seoul's grudging deployment of 3,000
South Korean soldiers to help enforce the U.S. occupation of Iraq.
As part of the "diversification" U.S. troops are being
redeployed from the Demilitarized Zone along the 38th
- perhaps the most militarized piece of real estate in the world
- to positions south of less vulnerable bases south of Seoul
and in the short term to Iraq.
Elsewhere in the region, U.S. bases in Australia are being augmented.
The "Visiting Forces" and access agreements with the
Philippines, and Singapore, are being expanded, and Indian Ocean
Tsunami relief operations 2005 helped to open the way for U.S.
forces to return to Thailand and for greater cooperation with
the Indonesian military. The Philippine press reports, U.S. military
officials are privately exploring the possibility of reestablishing
its bases in the former colony.
The Bush Administration's invasion of Afghanistan initially promised
to the way in for U.S. bases in Central Asia where, as General
Wald of the European Command put it, "In the Caspian Sea
you have a large mineral [i.e. petroleum] reserve...We want to
assure the long term viability of those resources." Following
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon,
the Bush Administration used its intimidating "for us or
against us" doctrine, to force dictatorships in Pakistan,
Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan to surrender sovereignty
and to open the way for what the Pentagon hoped would become permanent
U.S.military bases. Bases were established and enlarged in Afghanistan,
Uzebkistan, and Kyrgyzstan - with access and over-flight agreements
with Kazakhstan, and Tajikstan Turkmenistan - were designed not
only to keep the (repressive) peace within the region, but to
augment the encirclement of both China and Iran.
At this writing, the permanence of these bases is less than guaranteed.
In Uzbekistan, the bases came with the pledge to the country's
dictator, Islam Karimov, that Washington would "protect 's
security" through a "qualified new relationship...[that]
includes the need to consult on an urgent basis...in the event
of a direct threat to the security or territorial of the Republic
of Uzbekistan." Consultations
may have taken place immediately following the massacre of hundreds
of people who engaged in a popular demonstration in the city of
Andijon in the spring of 2005. But, as news of the massacre and
of the U.S. aid that had previously been provided to the four
Uzbek ministries responsible for the killings, questions were
raised in Congress, opening a breach between Washington and Tashkent.
With Beijing and Moscow offering Karimov uncritical support and
pressing both Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan to oust the U.S. bases,
their future was placed in doubt.
And, in Afghanistan, where the U.S. is working to establish nine
permanent bases, President Karzai remains the "Mayor of Kabul"
unable to travel the country freely, and provincial representatives
have balked at making long term military commitments to the United
States.
Africa, which the Pentagon expects to become the source of up
to 25% of the U.S. oil supply
by 2015, is also the focus of a major U.S. military build up.
With bases in Algeria and Djibouti and access agreements in Morocco
and Egypt, the new focus is south of the Sahara where a "family"
of military bases is to be created. This "family" is
to include major installations for brigades of up to 5,000 troops
"that could be robustly used." The family will also
include "lightly equipped bases available in crises to special
forces or Marines." "Host" nations for the new
family are to include Cameroon, Guinea (which has also been targeted
as a major source of oil), Mali, and Sao Tome and Principe, with
Senegal and Uganda providing refueling installations for the Air
Force.
And, Washington hasn't forgotten what used to be its own "backyard,"
Latin America. Although the Puerto Rican people's fifty year struggle
to close the base at Vieques has prevailed, new military bases
are now sprouting across Andean nations and the U.S. is increasingly
militarizing the Caribbean.
The "restructuring" of the United States' unprecedented
infrastructure of global military power is being built on several
conceptual pillars, foremost among them agility, flexibility and
speed. In addition to training U.S. forces and developing new
weapons that are "fast, small, dispersed" and which
can be easily "decentralized" the Pentagon is working
to "reconfigure" the locations and functions of its
bases, installations, and access agreements to serve its new priorities.
Vice-President Cheney, Secretary Rumsfeld, and their associates
want total "freedom of action." If, Germany, or another
"vassal" state are reluctant to permit U.S. military
bases and installations in a given war, Rumsfeld's Pentagon wants
be sure that bases in other countries will be immediately available.
The plan for South Korea is illustrative of the multiple purposes
it wants a greater number of bases to be able to play. While
the primary roles of U.S. forces in the Republic of Korea will
continue to be 1) helping to ensure that North Korea is not tempted
to take reckless military actions, and 2) being prepared for possible
"regime change" war in the North, U.S. forces in will
have other agendas. Their presence and the ability to threaten
their complete withdrawal will be used to influence South Korean
foreign and domestic policies. Despite objections being raised
by President Roh Mu-hyun, U.S. troops deployed in South Korea
are there to be used during confrontations and possible conflicts
with China and elsewhere in East Asia. And, as in the case of
their being dispatched to invade and occupy Iraq, U.S. South Korean
based forces are to be available for interventions as far afield
as the Persian Gulf.
At considerable expense, bases in Japan, Ecuador, Guinea, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Rumania, and elsewhere are being similarly prepared
for multi-tasking.
Speed is as important to Rumsfeld's Pentagon as flexibility.
With more troops and major bases being positioned closer to anticipated
war zones, with new technologies, and with new "lily pad"
bases as jumping off points for military interventions and aggression,
the Pentagon is preparing to strike before the target of its attack
can prepare its defenses or a long term strategy of resistance.
The perhaps unwarranted hope is that "shock and awe"
will work in future wars.
Building on both the inherited infrastructure and new bases and
installations, U.S. forward deployed forces are to be organized
along a three-tiered integrated structure: 1) major hub bases
like those in Britain, Italy, Japan, Okinawa, Guam; Qatar and
Bahrain 2) smaller centers or "Forward Operating bases"
like those in Spain, South Korea, Diego Garcia, Kuwait, Afghanistan,
and Australia; and 3) "Lily pads", heavily stocked with
pre-positioned weapons and munitions, will serve as jumping off
points in countries ranging from Lithuania to Tajikistan, and
Djibouti to the Andean nations in South America. And, to increase
flexibility and augment its bare bones "lily pads,"
the Navy is exploring the development of essentially unmanned
and strategically located floating platforms where munitions can
be pre-positioned, and "sea basing" creating "a
fleet of large maritime ships capable of launching and sustaining
a combat force - either Army or Marine - thousands of miles from
shore.
Ending "Abuses and Usurpations"
How will we end the plagues of imperial wars made possible by
Washington's global infrastructure of foreign military bases and
the "abuses and usurpations" that inevitably accompany
our foreign legions? How do people in the United States who believe
that freedom and security are essential human rights make common
cause and act in solidarity with people in other nations who are
struggling to liberate their nations from U.S. military colonialism?
There are no easy answers, but we do well to remember the words
of the abolitionist leader Fredrick Douglas, who taught that power
yields nothing without a struggle. And struggle takes place at
many levels of human activity: politically, intellectually culturally,
economically, and spiritually in addition to what are usually
the pyrrhic victories of armed resistance.
The Roman, Spanish, and most British legions came home with the
decline and fall of their empires. While, like the inspiring
victory of the people of Vieques in Puerto Rico, we may succeed
in time by focusing on the withdrawal of particular bases, but
the 100 year to win the withdrawal of Subic and Clark bases and
the struggles of the Okinawan and Japanese movements may provide
a better model: integrating anti-bases campaigns into broader
struggles for democracy and national self-determination.
It should be borne in mind that the United States is increasingly
an isolated and pariah nation that depends on European, Asian,
and oil-rich Middle Eastern nations to maintain its empire. Both
the national debt which is subsidized by Japanese, Chinese and
other nations' massive purchase of U.S. Treasury bonds, and the
United States' seemingly irreversible balance of payments are
placing hundreds of billions of dollars in foreign hands. Wealth
is power, and in time states and political forces seeking to contain
or off-set U.S. power will decide that it is time to literally
cash in their chips. At some point, as the former head of the
Dutch Foreign Ministry told me shortly before the U.S. invaded
Iraq, some of these nations may conclude that they have had enough.
By selling off their bonds or selectively disinvesting in U.S.-based
multi-national corporations, , Asian or Middle Eastern nations
could at the very least send a powerful signal to the U.S. establishment.
They might have the power to bring down the U.S. house of cards,
much as states, private institutions and individuals did in the
1970s and 80s to help end South African apartheid. Of course,
there would be consequences all around, but change does happen,
and it can be painful as well as liberating.
In building the political forces within the United States and
internationally to win withdrawal of U.S. bases, we should not
under estimate the importance of intellectual and analytical work
that can be done by scholars, journalists, and by community based
activists. We should not underestimate the importance of this
exceptional conference. Few in U.S. academic circles outside
of the war colleges, and certainly not the wider public, have
an inkling of the scale, roles, and impacts of U.S. foreign military
bases or the need to repatriate them. The foundation of any political
movement is knowledge and information that touches people's moral
imaginations, that contributes to our understandings of the world
and how it operates, and which support or lead to action. Hopefully,
like the largely invisible and demanding intellectual work that
prepared the way for the Civil Rights struggles of the 1950s and
60s, the Vietnam-era peace and feminist movements, and the Nuclear
Freeze and Central America solidarity movements of the 1980s,
scholarly and analytical work being done today will open the for
U.S. Americans to assume our roles in bringing our troops, bases,
and war machines home and restoring our respect for other peoples
and nations.
Recent years, especially since the United States' militarized
responses to the September 11 attack, have witnessed a growing
wave of anti-bases education and organizing around the world.
Most impressive is the global anti-bases network that began in
East Asia under the tutelage of Focus on Global South, an international
NGO based in Bangkok which is devoted to "development, policy
research, analysis and action." Beginning with a small meeting
in Seoul in 1999, anti-bases activists from the Philippines, Thailand,
Japan, Korea and the United States began sharing information and
exploring possible collaborations. Subsequent meetings were held
in Jakarta and Seoul, and the "No Bases" network was
launched at an anti-bases conference that brought together people
from thirty-four countries held within the World Social Forum
in Mumbai, India in 2004. The network's e-mail network currently
serves hundreds of people and organizations across the world.
A web page with detailed information about bases and resistance
campaigns is being developed. And the network is slowly exploring
ways in which member groups and others can act in solidarity with
one another and collaborate.
The Asia-Pacific region continues to be the center of the most
steadfast nonviolent resistance to the U.S. bases. The candlelight
vigils protesting the killings of Shin Hyo-soon and Shim Mi Sun
and the refusal of U.S. authorities to hold anyone accountable
transformed Korea's political landscape played a major role in
the election of Roh Mu-hyun. A new and more independent generation,
which looks critically at the continued U.S. military presence
in Korea, has assumed power.
In Okinawa, decades of popular opposition are forcing the Pentagon
to draw down the numbers of troops based there. The initial report
of the Pentagon's Overseas Basing Commission indicates, the courageous
resistance of the people small remote town of Nago in northern
Okinawa to the construction of a new air base on reef just beyond
Haneko Beach appears to have been largely successful. Rather
than pursue the construction of the new base, the Commission is
urging that the base be built elsewhere or that the functions
of the dangerous Futemna base be integrated to the massive Kadena
air base. While the struggle of the people of Nago was supported
by people from across Okinawa, including base opponents in Ginowan
City which surrounds the Futenma base, to get a sense of the movement
it helps to know that the resistance in Nago was led by grandmothers
and grandfathers in their eighties, and that the symbol of their
resistance was a friendly Dugong, which represented the
manatees whose feeding grounds are the waters surrounding the
threatened off shore reef.
Despite the Visiting Forces Agreement, the MLSA, and the political
axis created to bind Presidents Bush and Macapagal-Arroyo, the
Philippine movement has severely limited the return and operations
of U.S. forces. Further east, Native Hawaiians, for whom land
and respect for Creation are essential to their identity and ways
of life, are literally living their struggle to prevent base expansions
and to win back their sacred lands. Like the people of Vieques,
they have been occupying live fire sites, living in the open,
and challenging the Pentagon in the courts and in the court of
public opinion.
Equally courageous are the banished and long forgotten people
of Diego Garcia who are struggling to return home and to end their
years of suffering and marginalization as foreign outcasts, "some
few Tarzans." With activists allies in New Zealand and the
help of leading journalists, human rights organizations, and jurists
in Britain they have risen from oblivion and are pressing their
just demands on the consciences and political systems of the Anglo-American
Powers That Be. In the Americas, resistance to U.S. bases in
growing in Ecuador, and even before Lula assumed power in Brazil,
Latin America's rising power refused Washington's demands to transform
its space center into a U.S. base. And, across the Atlantic, activists
in Europe, activists committing civil disobedience at U.S. and
NATO nuclear weapons bases have forced their governments and political
parties to begin demanding that the U.S. withdraw the nuclear
weapons that are still based in Belgium, England, Germany, Holland,
Italy and Turkey. And, in the northern reaches of Scandinavia,
a lively network of young Scandinavians, is scouting out and protesting
the presence of secret bases in Norway and Sweden.
Reality is, of course, dynamic. Catastrophes as well as the routine
operations of militarized systems will continue to provide major
openings for us as they have in the past. Hegel's moment of history
will make itself felt when we least expect it. Recall the global
outrage that followed the killing of twenty-two Italians when
joy riding US pilots sliced the ski tow line at an alpine resort.
Remember the world-wide identity with the Okinawan people in
the wake of the kidnapping and rape of a twelve year old school
girl by three Marines and the solidarity that flowed toward the
popular nonviolent Okinawan uprising. The following year business
as usual presented another opportunity when the G-8 met in Okinawa.
They were greeted by a five mile long human chain of around Kadena
Air Base and by a full page advertisement in the prefecture's
newspaper, which called for the withdrawal of U.S. bases and was
signed by hundreds of U.S. Americans.
"Life" John Lennon told us "is what happens when
you are planning to do other things." It was the unexpected
synthesis of the mainland competition for the growing Latino vote
and of decades of courageous organizing and action that forced
the closing of that deadly and still badly polluted base. And,
it was Dictator Marcos' murder of Benigno Aquino that sparked
the EDSA revolution and fueled the resistance that resulted in
the withdrawal of the U.S. bases from the Philippines.
Basic human decency dictates that those of U.S. in the United
States be persistent and use our imaginations in exploring ways
that we can act in solidarity with movements working to liberate
their communities and countries from the "abuses and usurpations"
of U.S. bases. Even small acts of human solidarity, the sending
of a letter or statement, assisting with research, or traveling
to communicate concern and remorse, can help to buoy movements
and have wide reverberations. As Roland Simbulan, Walden Bello,
and Cookie Djokno and other leaders of the movement that won the
withdrawal of U.S. bases from the Philippines, the tiny network
of U.S. activists that called themselves "Friends of the
Filipino People" played a vital role in successful Philippine
struggle. Timely advertisements and statements of remorse and
solidarity have contributed to the Okinawan movement. Exposure
and speaking tours, videos and publications have helped to raise
issues and build movement within the U.S. And we should never
underestimate the importance of material assistance. Scientific
research in Massachusetts and California about the human and environmental
consequences of military toxics has been valuable to base opponents
around the world. And even small financial contributions can
help to pay for the leaflets, sound systems, and travel that are
essential to popular movements anywhere in the world. And a dollar
will pay for a lot more leaflets printed in Ecuador or Sao Tome
than in New York or New Mexico!
Finally, there is the importance of vision. Even the Bible tells
us that "A people without vision will perish." A Quaker
statement published early in the Cold War speaks as eloquently
today as it did then: "Military power in today's world is
incompatible with freedom. Incompatible with providing security,
and ineffective in dealing with evil."
*Dr. Joseph Gerson is the Director of Programs of
the American Friends Service Committee in New England. He is deeply
involved in the U.S. peace and anti-war movement and participated
in the founding conferences of United for Peace and Justice, The
Asia Peace Assembly, and the European Network for Peace and Human
Rights. His books include: The Sun Never Sets: Confronting
the Network of Foreign U.S. Military Bases , With Hiroshima
Eyes: Atomic War, Nuclear Extortion and Moral Imagination
, and The Deadly Connection: Nuclear War and U.S. Intervention
. For more information, write JGerson@afsc.org, see www.afsc.org/pes.htm,
or phone 617-661-6130.
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