One-third of the countries joining RIMPAC’s maneuvers in the Pacific this summer are not from Asia and the Pacific, says Ann Wright. They are from Europe and are all members of NATO.

USS Abraham Lincoln air craft carrier with multi-national war ships in formation during Rim of the Pacific, or RIMPAC, July 28, 2022. (Canadian Armed Forces, Djalma Vuong-De Ramos, US Navy on Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

By Ann Wright
in Honolulu, Hawaii

CODEPINK

As the United States increases its military confrontation with China through new military bases on Guam and the Philippines and more land, sea and air exercises with Asia-Pacific countries, the world’s largest naval war exercises will be held in the mid-Pacific from June 26 to Aug. 2 and NATO — from the other side of the world —  is in the middle of it.

Twenty nine countries are participating in the 2024 Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) naval war practice that will bring 40 ships, three submarines, over 150 aircraft, 14 national land forces and 25,000 personnel to the island of Oahu and the waters off Hawaii.

Incredibly, one-third of the countries bringing ships, submarines and aircraft to the middle of the Pacific are not from Asia and the Pacific, but are from Europe — all members of the North ATLANTIC Treaty Organization (NATO).

European NATO members Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom are joining the United States and Canada as the full NATO members in RIMPAC.

Along with the full members of NATO, five countries in the Pacific are NATO “partners” — Australia, Japan, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea and Colombia.  Each will be participating with ships, aircraft and personnel in RIMPAC.

Israel & US Rules Based Dis-Order

For the first time, on Jan. 26, 2023, an Israeli president addressed NATO allies in the North Atlantic Council (NATO,CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Having tested U.S. and NATO countries’ weapons on Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, Israel has special status by NATO and keeps an office in NATO headquarters. [In January 2023, NATO’s secretary general hailed the deepening partnership with Israel.]

The U.S. has not withdrawn its invitation to Israel to have a ship and personnel in Hawaii in RIMPAC despite the continuing Israeli genocide of Gaza with over 36,000 Palestinians killed, thousands dead in the rubble of destroyed buildings and over 100,000 injured.

[For more: WATCH: The Palestine Laboratory & Surveillance Capitalism]

Israeli impunity in its war on Palestinians is a harmful influence on militaries participating in RIMPAC. U.S. complicity in the genocide also sends a signal to other countries that violation of international laws and norms is perfectly acceptable in the U.S. “rules-based dis-order.”

Other countries sending ships, aircraft and military personnel to RIMPAC are Brazil, Brunei, Chile, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, the Republic of the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Tonga.

Freedom of the Seas Navigation Operations

Over the past two years, NATO countries have sent ships to the Western Pacific in tandem with the U.S. Freedom of the Seas navigation operations in the South China Sea.

In 2021, the British HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier strike group and an American surface action group had exercises in the South China Sea. Britain’s Ministry of Defense described the strike group as the largest concentration of maritime and air power to leave the U.K. in a generation.

In May 2024, Germany sent two warships to the Indo-Pacific on freedom of navigation and free passage missions as tensions were raised with China over the status of Taiwan and disputed South China Sea islands.

Why Not Diplomacy?

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg addressing a North Atlantic Council meeting with Sweden, Indo-Pacific Partners and the EU on July 12, 2023. (NATO, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Instead of using diplomacy to resolve security and economic issues, RIMPAC is one of hundreds of U.S.-sponsored military war exercises that fuel dangerous confrontations in Asia and the Pacific.

U.S. citizens can demand that elected officials/politicians use nonviolent methods to resolve conflicts in the face of great opposition to nonviolence from the manufacturers of violence, the weapons manufacturers who fuel the campaign coffers of politicians.

Conference in Washington in July 

The heads of state of the 32 NATO member states and “partner” and “wanna-be”  states will convene at the Washington Convention Center July 9-11 for the 75th Anniversary celebrations of the founding of NATO in Washington, D.C.

Preceding the arrival of the heads of state, No to NATO: Yes to Peace will hold a one-day conference on July 6 with speakers from around the world.  July 7 will be a rally at Lafayette Square in front of the White House.  July 9-11 concerned citizens will be at the Washington Convention Center.

Also Destroys Land & Sea

U.S. soldiers cover their ears during as they fire a mortar round during a live fire exercise on Sept. 20, 2012, at the Pohakuloa Training Area on Hawaii’s Big Island. (Department of Defense, Michael R. Holzworth)

In addition to prepare for war that threatens human life, RIMPAC war exercises harm marine life in the Hawaiian waters. Whales, dolphins and fish are harmed by the ships and their weapons. Ships are sunk by bombs, missiles and torpedoes. Onshore animals are killed during military beach assault landings.

Pohakuloa Training Area on Hawaii Island, the largest U.S. military training area in the Pacific, is bombed by aircraft some of which fly thousands of miles to drop their bombs, artillery shelling, and troop training.

Human rights advocates are very concerned about human trafficking with military troops in tourist areas in Hawaii when thousands of military arrive from around the world for RIMPAC.

Citizens Challenge Militarization & Contamination

Citizens in most of the countries in the Pacific challenge the need for the hugely expensive and destructive RIMPAC war practice.  Webinars, social media, conferences/town hall meetings and protests are held from San Diego, in the eastern Pacific, through Hawaii and Guam to the Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

In Hawaii, thousands of residents of Oahu are still dealing with the 2021 effects of fuel pollution from the giant underground Red Hill fuel tanks that leaked 19,000 gallons of toxic fuel into the drinking water and the 2014 leak of 27,000 gallons of fuel.

Several lawsuits against the U.S. military for the long-term damage to the health of those who ingested the contaminated water are in federal courts with the military arguing that the contamination did NOT cause widespread harm as military family members were hospitalized for severe reactions to the fuel-laced drinking water.

Additionally, residents of Hawaii are demanding the return of 29,000 acres of state land that was leased to the U.S. military 65 years ago for … $1.  The lease on these areas on Oahu and Big Island ends in 2029.

Communities around U.S. military bases all over the Pacific are finding that their water sources have been contaminated by the U.S. military use of fire-fighting foam that contains PFAS, the “forever chemical.”

Bases on Okinawa, Japan, and South Korea where the U.S. has had military bases since World War II and the Korean War have found high levels of contamination from PFAS.

Ann Wright served 29 years in the U.S. Army/Army Reserves and retired as a colonel.  She was a U.S. diplomat for 16 years and served in U.S. embassies in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia.  She resigned from the U.S. Diplomatic Corps 20 years ago in March 2003 in opposition to the U.S. war on Iraq. She is the co-author of Dissent: Voices of Conscience.