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----- Original Message -----
From: Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <mailto:Undisclosed-Recipient:;@mindspring.com>
Sent: Sunday, July 01, 2001 5:21 PM
Subject: STAR WARS TESTS IN HAWAII


Saturday, June 30, 2001


        A Strategic Target System missile sits on its "launch stool"
                  at the Pacific Missile Range on Kauai.
                                    ----
                                Kauai missile
                                tests return

                          A new target could be the
                            waters off the island
                                   -----

                              By Anthony Sommer
                              Honolulu Star-Bulletin

BARKING SANDS, Kauai -- STARS, a long dormant missile program that
     pitted the military against environmentalists and native Hawaiians
     on Kauai in the early 1990s, is back.

     And the military has done a good job of hushing it up, says one of
     the program's harshest critics, University of Hawaii physics
     professor Michael Jones. There has been no public announcement
     regarding a revived STARS program.

     After years of controversy, only four Strategic Targets -- STARS
     -- missiles ever were fired, the last in 1996. But, with renewed
     interest in developing missiles that can shoot down other
    missiles, a rebirth and major expansion of STARS has been proposed
     as a component of the testing programs.

     An environmental assessment was published April 11 for public
     comment, which closes Friday.

                          ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT

                 The environmental assessment is
                  available online at
                  www.huntsville.edaw.com/northpacific.
                  It must be downloaded in order to be
                  read and is a lengthy document.

     Only five copies were sent to Hawaii. Three went to public
     libraries and never have been read by anyone, according to
     librarians. One went to the National Marine Fisheries Service, and
     one went to the Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai
    where the public affairs officer said she has not seen it. Jones
     requested and received a sixth copy only last week.

     Most important, notes Jones, no copies went to the Hawaii Office
     of Environmental Quality Control, which publishes a monthly
     newsletter listing all environmental assessments and environmental
     impact statements statewide that are open for public comment.

     By way of contrast, the new incarnation of STARS will include
     missile launches from Kodiak Island, Alaska, as well as from
     Kauai. Last November, the military conducted a public
     informational meeting on Kodiak Island. When the environmental
     assessment was published in April, copies went to 81 addressees,
     including the governor of Alaska, both U.S. senators from the
     state and the mayor of Kodiak.

     STARS is one of several programs that provide targets for the
     anti-missile missiles.

     Among those being tested are the National Missile Defense system,
     which has had a spotty record in test flights so far in attempts
     to knock down Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missiles fired
     from California to Kwajalein Atoll.

     The Navy has two anti-missile missiles under development. The
     first of these is being tested at the Pacific Missile Range on
     Kauai. The Army has two others in the works, a beefed-up version
    of the Patriot and a new rocket called the Theater High Altitude
     Air Defense missile.

     All of the new defense missiles are designed for "kinetic kills":
     hitting a bullet with another bullet.

    To test them the military needs target missiles to shoot at, and
     that is where STARS comes in. The STARS missile consists of a
     surplus Polaris missile -- the first generation of long-range
     missiles to be fired from submarines -- mated to a new Orbus third
     stage that can make the rocket mimic a wide variety of hostile
     rockets. It has a maximum range of 3,400 miles.

     Even though Polaris is a Navy missile and the Pacific Missile
    Range on Kauai is a Navy base, the STARS program belongs to the
     U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command in Huntsville, Ala. It
     is fired by technicians working for Sandia National Laboratory.
    And they all come under the Ballistic Missile Defense Office, a
   joint service program.

     Currently, STARS has authority only to fire target missiles from
     Kauai to the Army's missile test site on Kwajalein. The authority
     expires in 2003.

     The proposal would add the Kodiak Launch Center, a privately owned
     rocket test site in Alaska. Four launches a year would be allowed
     at each site "for the foreseeable future."

     The new STARS also adds four new "launch corridors" comprising the
     "North Pacific Targets" program. STARS missiles would be fired
     from the Pacific Missile Range on Kauai to an impact area in the
     ocean west of Seattle. They also would be launched from Kodiak to
     Kwajalein, to the ocean off of Kauai and to an impact area off the
     west coast of Mexico.

     Thomas Craven, the program manager for the new STARS environmental
     assessment, was not available for comment. A message on his voice
     mail said he would not be back in his office until after Friday,
     when the public comment period ends.

     A public affairs officer at Huntsville said he was not aware of
     the STARS program.

     But everyone who was on Kauai a decade ago and involved in the
     conflict over STARS remembers. It has left scars that have not
     entirely healed.

     "It was an ugly thing. I don't think anyone involved wants to go
    through it again," said Sue Dixon, former managing editor of the
     Kauai Times and outspoken critic of STARS.

     "There were a lot of angry public hearings. I got shoved to the
     ground at one of them," Dixon said. "It was dramatic, emotional
     and changed everything in the relationship between the Navy and
     the public on Kauai."

     Dixon added that if STARS is being reborn and changed so that
     missiles will be fired toward Kauai instead of only away from it,
     it ought to be the subject of public debate.

     Retired Navy Capt. Bob Mullins looks at it somewhat differently.

     Mullins was base commander at the Pacific Missile Range during
     much of the dispute. He currently is Kauai manager of Textron, a
     major defense contractor that is providing the optical tracking
     equipment for the missile base.

     "The only impact on Kauai is that missiles will be coming down
     hundreds of miles west of Kauai. So what? It's way the hell out at
     sea," Mullins said.

                          © 2001 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
                           http://starbulletin.com




Bruce K. Gagnon
Coordinator
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL. 32607
(352) 337-9274
http://www.space4peace.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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