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news
Feb 10, 2010US Missile Interceptors Planned for Romania by 2015
Feb 05, 2010Romania accepts US 'invitation' to host anti-missile shield
Feb 02, 201050 activists enter "Dal Molin" base and chain them selves to the cranes
Feb 02, 2010Blenheim Sun reports on "courageous" protests at Waihopai spy base
Jan 07, 2010Yemen to let US setup air base on its soil
Jan 07, 2010The question no US official dare ask
Jan 06, 2010 Waihopai Spybase Protest, January 22-24
Jan 06, 2010An alliance larger than one issue
Jan 05, 2010U.S. deploys fleet of interceptor missile ships to Mediterranean
Dec 09, 2009Initiative Concerning Pelindaba Treaty for African Nuclear Weapons Free Zone
Nov 14, 2009US health agency to take 'fresh look' at Vieques
Nov 14, 2009Obama lays out America’s Asia-Pacific agenda
Nov 13, 2009Pentagon urged to keep Guam better informed on Marine transfer
Nov 07, 2009US 8th Army headquarters may stay in Korea
Nov 07, 2009 USA to launch ICBM Minutman III on Nov 18 from Vandenberg Air Force Base to the Marshall Islands
Nov 05, 2009US may locate NATO missile command in Czech Republic
Nov 05, 2009US granted access to ALL Colombian airports!!
Nov 03, 2009Vicenzan citizens do inspections of new US base (Dal Molin)
Oct 30, 2009Civilian massacre 'appropriate', says German NATO general
Oct 30, 2009US missile systems stand guard in Bahrain, United Arab Emirates
Nov 14, 2009US health agency to take 'fresh look' at Vieques
A U.S. agency has overturned its 2003 research that said no health hazards were caused by decades of military exercises on Vieques, a bombing range-turned- tourist destination off Puerto Rico's east coast. The federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry said Friday it intends to "modify" some of its earlier research on Vieques, where the U.S. and its allies trained for conflicts from Vietnam to Iraq. By David McFadden, for The Associated Press The agency, a part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, used its own studies to conclude in 2003 that there was essentially no health risk from the bombing range - a conclusion widely criticized by academics and residents on the 18-mile-long island of less than 10,000 people. "We have identified gaps in environmental data that could be important in determining health effects," director Howard Frumkin said in a statement posted Friday on the agency's Web site. "The gaps we found indicate that we cannot state categorically that no health hazards exist in Vieques. We have found reason to pose further questions." Frumkin, who did not specifically identify the research gaps, said the agency will take a fresh look at the issue. He also said the agency will work with Puerto Rican health officials to conduct more in-depth health evaluations and will recommend monitoring to determine if Vieques residents were exposed to harmful chemicals. For decades, warships and planes hammered the Naval Training Range on Vieques with live rounds before it was closed in April 2003 after years of protests over environmental risks and the 1999 death of a Puerto Rican civilian guard killed by an errant bomb. Robert Rabin, who moved to Vieques from Boston in 1980 and helped lead the protests against the bombing range, said he and other islanders had an "attitude of cautious celebration" about the agency's announcement. "We hope this will lead to the best possible cleanup and allow people here to receive the best health care," Rabin said Saturday from his Vieques home. "They are using hopeful language, and this island really needs help." The U.S. agency reevaluated its earlier finding after being asked in April by U.S. Rep. Steve Rothman, a New Jersey Democrat who said independent studies and reports had documented a health crisis on Vieques. The military fired and dropped millions of pounds of bombs, rockets and artillery shells, including napalm, depleted uranium and Agent Orange, on Vieques. A cleanup began in 2005 to clear thousands of unexploded munitions from the former range, which is now a Fish and Wildlife Service refuge, and the island has placed new emphasis on tourism. Some 7,000 past and current Vieques residents have filed a federal lawsuit seeking billions of dollars in compensation for illnesses they have linked to the bombing range. comments add comment
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