Back   OpEd News
Font
PageWidth
Original Content at
https://www.opednews.com/articles/Vermont-s-F-35-Dogfight-Ge-by-William-Boardman-120719-998.html
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).

July 20, 2012

Vermont's F-35 Dogfight Getting Rough

By William Boardman

Air Force admits errors -- oh there are people there -- and communities step up resistance to F-35 basing in Vermont.

::::::::

AIR FORCE ERRORS HELP ESCALATE VERMONT'S FIGHT OVER F-35 BASING

      By William Boardman   Email address removed"> Email address removed  

The Pentagon has admitted it was wrong about basic facts relating to basing the F-35 stealth fighter-bomber in Vermont, so of course the announcement was made late last week in a story spun to be about public participation.  While most Vermont media missed the story entirely, the Burlington Free Press got the scoop and missed its significance, focusing instead on the extension of the public comment period on the Air Force's environmental impact statement.   Mission accomplished? 

click here;

The environmental impact statement has been sharply criticized for weeks by retired Air Force Col. Rosanne Greco, whose critique pointed out false information on the scoring sheets on which the statement's conclusions were based.  In a locution worthy of Watergate, Pentagon spokesman Col. Frank Freeman explained that those erroneous score sheets and "no longer applicable." 

The Air Force refuses to make them public. 

The significance of this news began to appear yesterday, in a lengthy commentary by attorney James Leas on the blog  "F-35 in South Burlington."   Leas points out that the interview with Col. Freeman is entirely consistent with Greco's critique, and rebuts none of it, even though the Pentagon had flatly denied Greco's assertions up until now.   Greco is also chair of the South Burlington city council, which is concerned that the city will suffer significant environmental, economic, and human damage if the advanced F-35 fighter is based in Burlington. 

http://f35insouthburlington.blogspot.com/2012_07_01_archive.html 

In similarly inept reporting, WCAX-TV reported that the public comment period was extended, but omitted any hint Pentagon error, never mind admission of error, in its report.   Greco's principled and now confirmed criticism has earned her considerable public hostility in recent weeks, mostly along the lines of this one that accompanied the incomplete WCAX story:  " Why do they have to make so much noise and can't they just stay up there all the time flying high. I am talking about the loud mouth protesters and not our defense."   

http://www.wcax.com/story/19018705/comment-period-extended-for-f-35

The comment period that was previously closed as of June 20 is now re-opened till the end of August.  Comments may be sent to Nicholas Germanos at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia -- Email address removed">Nicholas. Email address removed  

One of Greco's key criticisms was that according to Air Force scoring sheets, there were no structures within either the F-35 crash zone or the F-35 unsuitable-for-residential-use noise zone.  At the same time, the Air Force environmental impact statement states that these areas include 2944 homes, 6675 people, 5 schools, 6 churches, and many businesses.   That closely approximates reality on the ground. 

Col. Freeman said the information about the areas being clear of buildings and people came from the National Guard office in Washington, D.C., who got their information from the Vermont National Guard in Burlington. So far there is no explanation for why the Vermont Guard, which desperately wants the F-35 in Burlington, managed not to account for the populated communities over which they fly almost every day.

Public support for the F-35 continues to be strong, but the Air Force's admissions of error haven't had time to sink in yet.  An anonymous poster campaign asks people to "Please show your support for keeping the F-35 in Burlington," by signing a petition, although it doesn't explain how to "keep" something that doesn't yet exist. 

The F-35 is not yet operational despite already being the world's most expensive weapons system ever.  The F-35 had had development difficulties that put it currently a decade behind schedule and 100% over budget, with no firm readiness date yet.  But testing of F-35 prototypes has been accelerating in recent months, apparently with some success and without serious setback, according to manufacturer Lockheed Martin.  https://f35.com/news-events/news-releases.aspx

Public opposition also remains strong, and a measure off just how strong will be the turnout Thursday night to protest at the Democratic Party fundraiser at the Ethan Allen Homestead in Burlington.  There they will confront U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy and Bernie Sanders, Congressman Peter Welch, and Governor Peter Shumlim, all of who have taken reflexively supportive positions on the F-35 without articulating any compelling rationale.  

The organizers say their message for the state's titular leaders will be, "Stop the F-35!  Support not destroying neighboring communities."  



Authors Bio:
Vermonter living in Woodstock:
elected to five terms (served 20 years) as side judge (sitting in Superior, Family, and Small Claims Courts);
public radio producer, "The Panther Program" -- nationally distributed, three albums (at CD Baby), some runner-up awards;
reporter and columnist (Rutland Herald, Valley News, Vermont Standard, others);
teacher at Woodstock Country School, for which I was commissioned to write the history, "Institutional Denial";
TV writer ("That Was The Week That Was," "Captain Kangaroo," others).
Guiding principle: "nobody really knows anything."

Back