Target Shaped Island of Guam
The Independence for Guahan Task Force held their second monthly general meeting last week and it was a significant success, with 70 members of the community coming to listen to educational presentations and provide feedback. Here are some media reports on the meeting, both before and after. As you'll read below the educational portion of the evening focused first on security threats to Guam due to it being a strategically important unincorporated territory of the United States. Second, it contained a presentation on Singapore, the first model of an independent nation that Guam can look to in terms of inspiration as it pursues independence itself. Each monthly meeting will feature a new independent nation to analyze and compare.
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Does the US military turn Guam into a regional target?
By Timothy Mchenry
Pacific News Center
September 20, 2016
The topic was chosen
after audience members at the first general assembly continually asked about
how Guam should handle recent threats from North Korea.
Guam
- Does the American military presence on Guam make the island
safer, or a target for countries like Russia, China and North Korea. These
questions will be explored by the independence for Guahan task force at their
second general assembly.
The topic was chosen after audience members at the first general assembly continually asked about how Guam should handle recent threats from North Korea. Independence for Guahan co-chair Dr. Michael Bevacqua says Thursday’s meeting will focus on Guam’s current security risks or issues. Bevacqua says this conversation will naturally center around Guam’s relationship with North Korea, Russia and China; specifically, if affiliation with the United States and housing U.S. military bases has made those countries Guam’s enemies by proxy. Additionally, Bevacqua says audience members asked about other small, successful independent nations Guam can mirror, if indeed the people choose independence. Task force members point to Singapore, one of the richest nations in the world and has a similar land mass to Guam.
“What
the task force is really trying to remind people is that Independence is not a
scary, weird abnormal thing. More than 80 former colonies chose to become
independent. And so it’s the natural course for people in Guam’s position to
seek more basic control over their lives. There is nothing strange or weird
about this and so at each meeting what we would like to do is present a
different model for what Guam can be like as an independent country,“ said
Bevacqua.
According
to an Independence for Guahan press release, each general assembly pays tribute
to a Chamoru hero who believed in Independence for Guahan. This meeting will
honor Dr. Bernadita Camacho- Dungca, who passed away earlier this year. Dr.
Duncga was a pioneer in Chamorro linguistics and education.
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Independence for Guahan Task Force honoring Chamorro pioneers
by Ken Quintanilla
KUAM News
September 20, 2016
Independence Task Force discusses militarization on Guam
By Shawn Raymundo
Pacific Daily News
9/24/16
While Guam’s location in the northern Pacific has played a
key role for the U.S. armed forces for decades, members of a decolonization
task force advocating for the island's independence question whether or not
the military presence makes the island a target for regional threats.
During their second general assembly meeting at the Chamorro
Village on Thursday night, the Independence for Guahan Task Force conducted a
presentation to answer the question: "What can Guam do to protect itself
from threats like North Korea and China?" The presentation was attended by
about two dozen residents.
The Decolonization Commission's independence task force
represents one of the three political status options Guam’s native inhabitants
could choose, should the island hold a plebiscite – a non-binding referendum
that would measure the preferred political status in regards to island’s future
relationship with the U.S.
The three options are statehood, independence or free
association.
Gov. Eddie Calvo has proposed holding the plebiscite
during the 2018 General Election, but nothing is official.
Citing the Chinese missile that’s been recently dubbed the
“Guam Killer,” independence co-chairwoman Victoria Leon Guerrero
noted news publications that have reported both North Korean and Chinese
militaries have been conducting missile testing with the purpose of possibly
striking Guam and the U.S. military bases here.
“We always hear that China and Korea want to attack Guam,
and that’s why we need America,” Leon Guerrero said. "(We’re told that
U.S. military exercises are) happening to protect us. But actually in the
world, (other countries) don’t see themselves as a threat to us, they look at
(the exercises) as a threat to them.”
Recent exercises, like bomber training at Andersen Air Force
Base and the launch of the joint-operations training known as Valiant Shield, have
likely perpetuated the idea that the U.S. is militarizing Guam for the purpose
of attacking its regional enemies, she said.
“So all of this is a tit-for -tat that we’re caught in the
middle of,” Leon Guerrero said. “‘I’m going to do this and you’re going to do
that’ … What we want to ask ourselves is: Are we a threat because Guam is what
they desire or because the U.S. is here?”
After the U.S. Air Force’s announcement that Andersen
would be hosting a rare training exercise with the military’s three bomber
aircraft, international news sites reported the North Korean government's
response.
“The introduction of the nuclear strategic bombers to Guam
by the U.S. … proves that the U.S. plan for a preemptive nuclear strike at the
(Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) has entered a reckless phase of
implementation,” North Korea’s foreign ministry said.
Guam’s identity around the world, Leon Guerrero said, isn’t
being seen for the island that it is, with a culture and people, but rather as
a U.S. military installation and base.
“That’s why Guam is how the world sees it today, as a place
that could be attacked, because there’s so much testing,” Leon Guerrero said.
“We’re offending everyone around ... do we really need it? Do we really need a
third of the island being used this way?”
Using the island nation of Singapore as an example, the
independence task force noted that there are once-colonized lands that gained
independence and became financially sufficient and successful.
Except for a brief period during World War II when Singapore
endured Japanese occupation similar to Guam, the small island was a British
colony since 1819 up until 1965.
Since it gained independence, Singapore’s Gross Domestic
Product had increased by 3,700 percent as of 2014. That same year, the
country’s GDP reached an all-time high of $306.34 billion, according to the
World Bank.
Ana Won Pat-Borja, a member of the task force and the
researcher for the Guam Legislature’s legal counsel, said Singapore didn’t
have any natural resources to profit from, but acknowledged that for the past
two centuries it has been a prime hub for trading, with its port.
The country, she noted, capitalized on its best asset by
investing heavily into the port and opening up foreign investments into
free trade, thus making it one of the largest and most visited ports in the
world.
Singapore, Borja continued, isn’t without its problems, as
human rights concerns have been an issue, specifically the country’s ban on
same-sex marriage.
Borja said choosing independence isn’t a path to doom.
In an effort to educate the island as much as possible
before the proposed plebiscite, the Independence for Guahan task force launched its
monthly general assembly meetings in August.
Melvin Won Pat Borja, a member of the task force,
acknowledged that the independence option is the “underdog,” adding that if the
plebiscite were to happen today the likely outcome would be statehood.
“If we’re going to be successful in winning the hearts and
minds that this is the right path for our people, we have to take
responsibility for it,” Melvin Borja said, advocating for more outreach.
The task force will hold its third general assembly meeting
on Oct. 27.
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