Vieques 10 Years After the Bombing StoppedBy David Swanson 
OpEdNews Op Eds 4/16/2013 at 23:00:42



By Helen Jaccard and David Swanson, http://warisacrime.org/vieques

Ten years ago May 1, the people of Vieques, Puerto Rico and their 
supporters from around the world defeated the most powerful military 
machine ever, through mass civil disobedience and without firing a 
single shot.   On May 1, 2003 the bombing stopped and the bases were 
officially closed.  People from all over the world supported the 
struggle on Vieques, and the activists and residents have an incredible 
victory to celebrate.
There were decades of resistance, civil disobedience and arrests.  
But those hoping and laying the groundwork for greater resistance were 
given an opportunity on May 19, 1999, when a U.S. Marines pilot missed 
his target and killed civilian security guard David Sanes Rodriguez. 
 That spark lit a fire of nonviolent resistance that brought together 
Viequenses, Puerto Ricans, and supporters from the United States and 
around the world.  A campaign of non-violent civil resistance that began in 
1999 lasted four years, including a year-long occupation of the 
bombing range, and saw over 1,500 people arrested.  The Navy was forced 
to close the bombing range on May 1, 2003.  Peace loving people had won 
most of the first of their demands for the island: demilitarization.
A huge commemoration is planned in Vieques for the anniversary from May 1 -- 4, 
2013.
Beautiful Vieques island is only 21 miles across and 5 miles wide, 
and 7 miles from the main island of Puerto Rico.  It is home to about 
9,300 people, as well as endangered turtle species, rare Caribbean 
plants and animals, bio-luminescent bays, and miles of what look like 
unspoiled beaches.
But crabs with three claws, grossly deformed fish laden with heavy 
metals, once-beautiful coral reefs, and beaches and seas that have been 
decimated by military activity tell a story of environmental disaster 
with huge health impacts on people, plants, and animals.
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An incredible three-quarters of the island was appropriated in the 
1940s and used by the U.S. Navy for bombing practice, war games, and 
dumping or burning old munitions.  This was a terrible attack on an 
island municipality, one the United States was not at war with. 
Now, Vieques Island, a paradise in trouble, is one of the largest 
superfund sites in the United States, together with its little sister 
island of Culebra, which took the brunt of the bombing until 1973, when 
the Culebra bombing range closed (also due to protests) and the bombing 
practice was transferred to Vieques.
In 2003, the Navy did not return the land to the people, but 
transferred its Vieques land to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 
which operates beaches that were never used for military activities. 
Viequenses fear that keeping the U.S. Government in control of their 
lands could result in future re-militarization of the island.  Residents aren't 
happy that their land has not been returned to them and that 
they are fined for staying on their land past sunset or collecting crabs -- a 
mainstay of their historic diet.  There are also two military 
occupations of lands -- a ROTHR radar system and a communications area, 
and the people want these closed as well.  You can add your name to Viequenses' 
demand for peace here. 
For over 2,000 years people known as Taino inhabited Vieques, which 
they called Bieque.  The Taino found and left behind them a paradise of 
fertile soil, fresh water, and trees.  In 1493, the conquistadors 
arrived.  In 1524, the Spanish killed every remaining resident.  Vieques was 
then left uninhabited by humanity for 300 years, interrupted by a 
few British, French, and Spanish attempts to set up forts or destroy 
each other's efforts.
>From 1823 into the 1900s, Vieques was used by the Spanish and French 
to grow sugar.  English-speaking people of African origin, from nearby 
islands, were kept in slavery or the nearest thing to it, and forced to 
grow the sugar cane.  They revolted in 1864 and 1874, and in the 1915 
Sugar Strike.  The United States took Puerto Rico from the Spanish in 
1898 and made residents U.S. citizens in 1917.  The depression of the 
1930s, together with two hurricanes in 1932, brought on harder times 
than ever.
In 1939 the United States bought 26,000 of the 30,000 acres of land 
on Vieques from big sugar plantation owners.  Living on that land were 
10,000 to 12,000 workers who also raised crops to feed themselves.  The 
U.S. Navy gave families $30 and one day's notice before bulldozing 
houses.  Most people were left without means of subsistence, but many 
stubbornly refused to leave the island.
Carlos Prieta Ventura, a 51-year-old Viequense fisherman, says his father was 
8-years-old in 
1941 when the Navy told his family their house would be bulldozed 
whether or not they accepted the $30.  Ventura says he has always 
resisted the Navy's efforts to force people off the island.
>From 1941 to 2003, the U.S. military flew planes from aircraft 
carriers based on the main island of Puerto Rico dropping bombs over 
Vieques.  Bombs "rained down," and you could feel the ground shake 
within the base, as one U.S. veteran told CNN.  Bombs fell at all hours, all 
day, all week, all year, amounting to 
approximately a trillion tons of ordnance, much of which (some 100,000 
items) lies unexploded on land and in the sea.  Vieques was 
systematically poisoned by heavy metals, napalm, Agent Orange, depleted 
uranium, and who knows what all else that the Navy has not announced 
publicly -- having falsely denied using depleted uranium before finally 
admitting to it, and having dumped barrels of unknown toxic substances 
into the clear blue Caribbean.
The arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, and aluminum in the bombs are 
also found in hair samples of 80% of the people living on Vieques, who 
suffer at far higher rates than on the main island (and possibly 
anywhere else on earth) from cancer (30% higher than Puerto Rico), 
cirrhosis of the liver, kidney failure, hypertension (381%), diabetes 
(41%), birth defects, stillbirths, and miscarriages.
The impact of the U.S. occupation that began in 1941 was felt far 
more swiftly than cancer.  According to Ventura, some 15,000 troops were 
routinely set loose on Vieques looking for booze and women.  Women were dragged 
out of their homes and gang raped.  A boy was killed by gang 
rape.  Ventura says people had only a machete and a hole in the wall by 
the door where they could try to stab the Marines who would come to take women. 
 A dozen people were killed over the years directly by the U.S. 
weapons testing.  And the Navy banned fishermen from various areas, 
advising them to try food stamps instead.  Fishermen attempted civil 
resistance actions, and many were arrested during the 1970s, 80s, and 
90s.
Lydia Ortiz, a Viequense who grew up in the small town of Esperanza, recalls 
the 
bombing:  "A lot of houses had their roofs falling in and everything as a 
result of the vibrations from the bombs for many years.  It was pretty 
nerve wracking because you never knew what was going to crash down in 
your house.  We lived quite close to where the bombing was happening.  
When I was a child they were dropping bombs near me.  In the school, you could 
hear the bombing.  You couldn't even hear the teacher because of 
the noise.  People were afraid to go anywhere near the base or the beach so it 
was very difficult for many years.  It seems like just yesterday 
or only 5 or 6 years ago that the bombing stopped, even though it is 
really almost 10 years ago."
A celebration of the 10-year anniversary is indeed in order.  We must remember 
victories as they have remarkable power to motivate others 
around the world.
But the Navy's presence and the environmental disaster it created 
continue to afflict Vieques today.  The U.S. government has not cleaned 
up the poisons and bombs and continues to use practices that further 
endanger the people.  There is no bomb explosion chamber on the island.  The 
United States has disposed of what unexploded bombs it has disposed of by 
blowing them up, further spreading the contaminants that are 
killing the people of the island.
There is also no hospital on the island, few ferries to the island, 
few and overpriced airplanes, a handful of taxis and public vans, and 
very limited tourist facilities.  There is no college or university, and very 
few jobs of any kind.  Business licenses are issued in San Juan 
and require bribes.  Viequenses' families are ravaged by cancer, but 
also by illiteracy, unemployment, violent crime, and teen pregnancy. 
 All of the water -- like all electricity -- comes in a pipe from the 
main island.  Two of the residents said that the one resort on Vieques 
sometimes uses all the water.  Seven thousand Viequenses sued the U.S. 
government over their health problems, but the U.S. Supreme court 
refused to hear the case.
With very little land available for farming, Vieques, like all of 
Puerto Rico, imports almost all of its food.  Some people have become so 
desperate that they gather old munitions to sell for a little money to 
someone who will melt the metal for aluminum cans.  But heavy metals and 
depleted uranium endanger the metal gatherers and whoever later drinks 
from the cans.
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Presidential candidate Obama wrote to the Governor of Puerto Rico in 
2008: "We will closely monitor the health of the people of Vieques and 
promote appropriate remedies to health conditions caused by military 
activities conducted by the U.S. Navy on Vieques."  But that promise 
remains unfulfilled.
Robert Rabin Siegal of the Committee for the Rescue and Development of Vieques 
writes in a letter to President Barack Obama, 
"Although I cannot claim the Navy and military toxics 
caused my cancer, you don't have to be a quantum physicist to understand how 
decades of exposure to heavy metals in the food chain, air, water 
and land, combined with the socio-economic pressures from the loss of 
two thirds of the island's lands, would clearly contribute to high 
cancer rates.  The Navy dropped radioactive uranium projectiles here, we 
believe, in large quantities, in preparation for military actions in 
the Balkans and the Middle East.  The list of dangerous chemical 
components from munitions dropped on Vieques is extensive, as is the 
number of illnesses they cause.
>"Mr. President: you received the Nobel Peace Prize; we demand peace 
for Vieques.  An island and people used to protect U.S. interests since 
WWII, forced to sacrifice its land, economic prosperity, tranquility and 
health, deserves at least the hope of peace for this and future 
generations."
>". . . A handful of powerful US based corporations have pocketed most of the 
>more than 200 million dollars spent on clean-up over the past 
decade.  We urge you to order technology transference to promote the 
creation of Puerto Rican and Viequense companies to carry out the 
clean-up of Vieques, thereby transforming that process into part of the 
economic reconstruction of the island as well as assuring community 
confidence in this crucial element in the healing of Vieques."
People anywhere in the world can take one minute to sign a petition to the 
Pentagon, Congress, and the White House in support of justice, at long last, 
for Vieques:
By RootsAction by By RootsAction

"I join the people of Vieques in demanding:
>"Health Care -- Provide a modern hospital with 
cancer treatment facilities, early screening
>"Demilitarization and Return of the Land -- Close 
the remaining military installations still occupying 200 acres of 
Vieques.  Return to the people of Vieques all land still under the 
control of the U.S. Navy and the federal government."
>For extensive documentation, see the attachments below and others at this link.
>Helen Jaccard is Chair of the Veterans For Peace -- Environmental 
Cost of War and Militarism Working Group.  She spent October, 2012 in 
Vieques doing research about the environmental and health effects of the 
military activities.  Her previous article about Sardinia, Italy can be found 
at http://www.warisacrime.org/sardinia .
>David Swanson's books include "War Is A Lie." He blogs at 
>http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works for 
>http://rootsaction.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio.
>and timely treatment for 
all diseases.  Create a research facility to determine the relationship 
between military toxins and health.  Provide just compensation to people 
suffering poor health as a result of the Navy's activities.
>"Cleanup -- Fund a complete, rapid cleanup of the 
land and surrounding waters, still littered by thousands of bombs, 
grenades, napalm, Agent Orange, depleted uranium and other explosives 
left by the Navy.  Cease the ongoing open detonation of unexploded 
ordnance.  Guarantee community participation in the cleanup; train 
Viequenses as managers, administrators, and scientists, and foster 
Viequense companies to do the work.
>"Sustainable Development -- Support the Master Plan 
for Sustainable Development of Vieques which promotes agriculture, 
fishing, eco-tourism, small guest houses, housing, collective 
transportation, archaeology, and historic and environmental research, 
among other things.
>
>
>
>
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Vieques-10-Years-After-the-by-David-Swanson-130416-106.html

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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