Guam: The Tip of a Nuclear Bomb
On February 16th the College of Liberal Arts and
Social Sciences at UOG will be holding a forum titled “Tip of the Spear? Or Tip
of a Nuclear Bomb?” The forum will feature a panel discussion on nuclear issues
related to Guam and take place from 6 – 7:30 pm in the CLASS Lecture Hall. The
event is free and the public is invited to come and learn more about a topic
that is largely under-analyzed in our daily lives on Guam, but is in desperate
need of more awareness.
Last year I conducted a study with my colleague at UOG Dr.
Isa Kelley Bowman on local perceptions of risk, safety and security. We passed
out surveys to 100 UOG undergraduate students in order to get a sense of what
they felt the major and likely threats were to life on Guam. The surveys
featured a list of 10 natural or manmade disasters that might affect the
island. They were asked to rate on a scale of 1 – 10 how likely or unlikely
they felt each was occur in our corner of the Western Pacific, sometimes
referred to as the Tip of America’s Spear.
The purpose of the survey was to analyze how closely aligned
these students’ fears or worries might be with the realities of living in such
a strategically important location that hosts so much US military presence. Students
overwhelmingly rated super-typhoons, earthquakes and an attack by North Korea
as the most likely to befall the island. Given our geographic location and our
history, worries over påkyo’ and linao is to be expected.
The fear of a North Korean attack was also expected, but is
nonetheless revealing about the skewed ways in which we perceive our status as
the tip of America’s spear. Fear of others attacking us, plays into the idea
that we need the US military presence in order to be safe and secure. While
this is in some ways true, it also belies the fact that increased military
presence also makes us a more significant and more seductive target for those
who might do the US harm. The recent development of “Guam Killers” by China is
grim evidence to this effect.
The two scenarios that students felt were least likely to
happen dealt with accidents around nuclear weapons or submarines. That fact
that students overwhelmingly rated these two possibilities as remote or nothing
to worry about, is instructive about the way we may not perceive basic facts
about our strategic situation. Nuclear weapons and nuclear powered vessels have
been a significant part of Guam reality since Truman first authorized their
storage on Guam in 1951. A horrific accident involving them is just as likely as
any assault on the island involving them.
Guam is a highly militarized space, and as I have argued in
my academic work, one of the most militarized communities in the world. Part of
our militarized experience is the way we see ourselves primarily as a weapon in
America’s arsenal, but do not consider the inherent dangers with such an
existence, and the way hosting such a significant military presence can lead to
terrible accidents and contamination.
We see threats that make us feel like the military presence
is essential to life. But we don’t see the poisons that the bases have brought
to the island, even though there are constant reminders. Recent interviews with
Leroy Foster who was stationed on Guam from 1968-1978 remind us about Agent
Orange being stored and used on Guam during the Vietnam War. This is
reminiscent of the testimony of Charles Schreiber, who claimed that in 1952
there was clear evidence that Guam was being negatively impacted by the nuclear
testing taking place in the Marshall Islands. According to him, his superiors
had covered it up.
How conscious on Guam are we of the dangers posed by the
storage of nuclear weapons or the stationing of nuclear powered vessels in our
waters? At least three nuclear powered submarines or ships have leaked
significant radiation into our waters since 1975. During the Cold War, hundreds
of nuclear weapons were stored in Guam. At present, officially no nuclear
weapons are being stored on Guam, but then again, during the Cold War,
officially there weren’t supposed to be any nukes here either.
Given the both haphazard and bellicose rhetoric of Donald
Trump, it is more critical than ever that we educate ourselves about the
dangers of nuclear weapons and nuclear powered vehicles. Trump showed as a
candidate to have little understanding of nuclear weapons and has shown little
regard in office for the relationship between his poorly thought out tweets and
policies and those it might affect. To learn more, please attend the forum at
UOG on the 16th.
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