You are herecontent / International Union for the Conservation of Nature Ignores Impact of Militarism
International Union for the Conservation of Nature Ignores Impact of Militarism
U.S. Military Forgets to Mention Its Fuel Consumption, Carbon Footprint, Destruction of Nature During Presentations at World Conservation Congress
By Ann Wright
The worldwide, prestigious World Conservation Congress of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) was held in Honolulu this week. The IUCN has come in for criticism for its lack of focus on the detrimental effects of wars and military operations on nature. Considering the degree of harm coming from these human activities one would think that the organization would have a specific theme and a series of workshops on that theme. Of the over 1300 workshops crammed into a 6-day marathon environmental meeting, followed by 4 days of discussion of internal resolutions, nothing specifically addressed the destruction of the environment by military operations and wars.
The heavy funding the IUCN gets from governments is undoubtedly the rationale for not addressing this "elephant in the room" in a conference for the protection of the endangered planet-a tragic commentary on a powerful organization that should acknowledge all pressures on the planet.
U.S. Military tries to “Green Wash” the Effects of its Operations
At a presentation at the USA Pavilion during the conference, senior representatives of the US Army, US Air Force and US Navy regaled the IUCN audience of conservationists with tales of caring for the environment including protecting endangered species on hundreds of US military bases in the United States.
The presenters did not mention what is done on the over 800 US military bases outside of the United States. In the one-hour military style briefing, the speakers failed to mention the incredible amounts of fossil fuels used by military aircraft, ships and land vehicles that leave mammoth carbon footprints around the world, wars that kill humans, animals and plants, military exercise bombing of entire islands and large swaths of land and the harmful effects of the burn pits which have incinerated the debris of war in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Each military service representative focused on the need for training areas to prepare the US military to “keep peace in the world.” Of course, no mention was made of “keeping the peace” through wars of choice that have killed hundreds of thousands of persons, animals and plants, the bombing of the cultural heritage in many areas around the world including Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan, Libya, Yemen and Somalia.
Miranda Ballentine, Air Force Assistant Secretary for Installations, the Environment and Energy said the US Air Force has over 5,000 aircraft, more than all the airlines in the United States—yet she never mentioned how many gallons of jet fuel are used by these aircraft, nor how many people, animals and cultural sites the aircraft have bombed. To give one some idea of the scale of the footprint of US military bases, Ballentine said Air Force has over 160 installations, including 70 major installation covering over 9 million square miles of land, larger than the country of Switzerland. Air Force bases have 200 miles of coastland; 115 endangered on 45 installations. Incredibly, Ballentine said that due to commercial development around military bases, military bases have become “islands of conservation,” that conservation takes place inside the protected base while there are larger conservation issues outside the fence lines of the bases.
Photo by Ann Wright
Adding to the mammoth size of the military base footprint, Dr. Christine Altendorf, the regional director of the US Army’s Installation Management Command of the Pacific said the US Army bases have 12.4 million acres of land, including 1.3 million acres of wetlands, 82,605 archeological sites, 58, 887 National Historical Landmarks and 223 endangered species on 118 installations.
The US Navy’s briefer, a Navy Commander, added to the inventory of military equipment. He said the US Navy has 3,700 aircraft, 276 ships, including 10 aircraft carriers, 72 submarines. 70 naval installations in the United States have 4 million acres of land and 500 miles of coastline. The Navy presenter said the Navy has never heard of a marine mammal that has been harmed by US Naval vessels or acoustic experiments in the past ten years.
Photo by Ann Wright
Only One Question from the Audience for the Presenters
At the end of the three presentations, there was time for only one question—and luckily, my intense hand waving paid off and I got to ask: “How can you conserve nature when you are bombing nature in wars of choice around the world, practicing military operations in areas that have endangered species like on the islands of Oahu, Big Island of Hawaii, Pagan, Tinian, Okinawa and bombing islands into wastelands like the Hawaiian island of Koho’olawe and the Puerto Rican island of Vieques and now you want to use the North Marianas “Pagan” Island as a bombing target. And how does the construction of the new South Korean naval base in pristine marine areas of Jeju Island that will be used by the US Navy and the proposed construction at Henoko of the runways into the pristine Oura Bay in Okinawa fit into conservation of nature?”
Interestingly, in the large audience of approximately 100 people, not one of them applauded the question indicating that either audience was composed primarily of Department of Defense employees, or that the conservationists are uneasy about confronting the US government and particularly the US military about its responsibility for its large role in the destruction of much of the planet’s environment.
The Navy representative was the only person to respond to my question. He reiterated the national security necessity for military exercises to practice to “defend peace around the world.” To his credit, he acknowledged the role the public has in commenting on the possible impact of military exercises. He said that over 32,000 comments from the public have been made on the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the possibility of artillery firing and aircraft bombing of the Northern Marianas island of Tinian-- that has only 2,300 inhabitants.
Unexploded Ordnance on Ko’holawee Island, Hawaii
Despite all odds, someone in Hawaii was able to get an exhibit of photographs of the cleanup of Koho’olawe placed on the third floor of the Hawaii Convention Center. There was no sign announcing the exhibition, just a series of photos with some explanation. in five days of attending the conference, I observed that 95 percent of the conference attendees walking past the exhibition did not stop to look at it ---until I stopped them and explained what it was about—then they were very interested.
From 1941 to 1990, the island of Koho’olawe was used as a bombing range for US military aircraft and naval vessels. One photograph in the exhibition showed the crater called “Sailor’s Hat” which was made by several massive explosions of TNT in 1965 to recreate and study the effects of large explosions on nearby ships and personnel to simulate in some manner the effects of a nuclear explosion. The crater affected the island’s fresh water aquifer and now no artesian water remains on the island.
Photo in Hawaii Archives
After Hawaiians stopped the bombing by their courageous protests and staying on the island during bombings from the 1970s, the US Navy returned Koho’olawe to the State of Hawaii in 2004 after a 10 year clean-up process. However, only 66% of the surface has been cleared of unexploded ordnance (UXO), and only 10% cleared to a depth of 4 feet. 23% of the surface remains uncleared and 100% of the waters surrounding the island have not been cleared of UXO putting divers and ships at risk!
Okinawan Environmental Activists at IUCN
Environmental activists from Okinawa had a booth at the IUCN at which they told about the attempt of the US military and the national Japanese government to construct an runway complex into Oura Bay, a pristine marine area that that is the home of the protected species of marine mammal, the dugong. The Deputy Governor of Okinawa and the Mayor of Nago city, Okinawa, both of whom have been key figures in the grassroots campaign to stop the construction of the runways and the lawsuits filed by the provincial government of Okinawa against the federal Japanese government, gave presentations about the citizens’ struggle against the construction of the runways.
Photo by Ann Wright
No Environmental Activists from Jeju Island, South Korea, site of previous IUCN meeting
However, there was no mention of the environmental effects on the marine environment from the construction of a huge new naval base on Jeju Island, South Korea, the site of the previous IUCN conference four years ago. At that conference, IUCN, no doubt at the request of the South Korean government, refused to allow citizen activists to have a booth inside the convention or make presentations like the Okinawans did this year. As a result, the Jeju Island campaigners were forced to stay outside the conference site.
Four years later in the 2016 WCC conference in Hawaii, the Government of Japan and the Province of Jeju Island sponsored a large multi-media pavilion about Jeju island which did not mention the construction of the new naval base and the destruction of the cultural heritage of the site nor the displacement of women divers who had dived at the location for generations.
Photo by Ann Wright
Local Groups from Honolulu have rally and sign holding against Militarization of Asia and the Pacific
On September 3, local groups in Honolulu came to the Hawaii Convention Center with signs to remind the IUCN of the US militarization of Asia and the Pacific. Issues of the environmental impact from the huge 108,863 acre Pohakuloa bombing range on the Big Island of Hawaii, the largest US military installation in the Pacific, the Aegis missile test center on the island of Kauai and the four large US Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine bases on the island of Oahu and the extensive number of US military bases in Japan, Okinawa, South Korea, Guam and new US military installations in the Philippines and Australia were featured on the signs and posters of the local environmentalists.
.
Photo by Ann Wright
Photo by Ann Wright
About the Author: Ann Wright served 29 years in the US Army/Army Reserves and retired as a Colonel. She also served 16 years as a US diplomat in US Embassies in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. She was on the small team that reopened the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan in December 2001. She resigned from the US Department of State in March 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq
- Login to post comments
- Email this page
- Printer-friendly version