Category: Security

  • After 24 days, officials declare Tustin hangar fire ‘fully extinguished’

    Officials in Orange County declared Friday that the Tustin hangar fire is “fully extinguished” after 24 days, calling the blaze “one of the most challenging structure fires in the county’s history.”

    “I am pleased to inform the public that the final hotspot at the Navy Hangar Fire has been extinguished,” Steve Dohman, Orange County’s All-Hazards Incident Management Team incident commander, said in a statement. “With all hotspots now declared out, the work to safely lower the hangar doors can begin, and the Navy can start removing debris from its site.”

    The cause of the fire, which began in the early morning hours of Nov. 7 at the now-defunct Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin, remains under investigation.

    An 80-year-old relic of Orange County’s military history, the massive 17-story wooden hangar became an environmental nightmare as the fire reignited several times, forcing the closure of nearby schools and shuttering residents inside their homes as the blaze released asbestos, lead and other toxins into the air.

    Fire officials at one point determined the safest option was to allow the blaze to burn itself out, afraid that dropping thousands of gallons of water onto the structure would farther spread the debris and toxic particles.

    As of Friday, officials estimated that cleanup of nearby schools, parks, open space and public rights of way was 90% complete and that more than 50% of residential properties have been inspected with 35% cleared.

    Local officials advised residents who are concerned about debris to contact a certified asbestos contractor and their homeowners insurance company.

    “The residents and businesses in the area who have been impacted by this fire now need the full accountability of the Navy and the support of the Governor’s Office and FEMA to help our City and our community financially recover,” Tustin Mayor Austin Lumbard said in a statement.

    The north hangar was one of two massive wooden structures used by the military during World War II and later served as sets for the TV show “Star Trek” and the film “Pearl Harbor.” The hangars once housed military helicopters and blimps armed with machine guns and bombs.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

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  • India, US to team up for Pacific Islands

    India and the US are mulling over plans to team up and deliver development projects in the strategically vital Pacific Islands, according to persons aware of the matter.

    This comes as the islands attract increased attention from China given their location along key maritime trade routes and suitability for military power projection. These 14 island-nations include the Marshall Islands, Fiji, Tonga, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and Nauru.

    The Pacific Islands have typically been close to the US and Australia, but China has emerged a major player as a top lender, trading partner and an increasingly important military power in the region.

    Experts suggest the islands could be key locations in case of a military confrontation in the Indo-Pacific.

    While India and the US collaborate on development projects across Africa and Southeast Asia, expanded cooperation in the Pacific reflects their increasing strategic value.

    The two sides are promoting healthcare in Fiji by exploring collaborations in telemedicine and mental health care. Partnerships with other Pacific Island countries are now expected to expand, the persons cited above said.

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    (c) 2023 the Mint

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  • Terror threats are ‘blinking red lights everywhere,’ FBI director says

    Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Christopher Wray told the United States Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday that he sees “blinking red lights everywhere” regarding the unprecedented threat of terrorist attacks since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas terrorists in October.

    During Tuesday’s hearing, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) asked the FBI director to provide his analysis on the “threat matrix” currently facing the United States, according to Fox News.

    Wray testified, “What I would say that is unique about the environment that we’re in right now in my career is that while there may have been times over the years where individual threats could have been higher here or there than where they may be right now, I’ve never seen a time where all the threats or so many of the threats are all elevated, all at exactly the same time.”

    In response to Wray’s assessment, the South Carolina senator referenced the “red lights analogy” regarding the 9/11 terrorist attacks. “All the lights were blinking red before 9/11, apparently,” Graham said. “Obviously, all of us missed it.”

    Asked if the FBI saw “multiple blinking red lights” in the current situation, Wray answered, “I see blinking red lights everywhere.”

    Last month, Wray warned the Senate that the United States was facing an elevated risk of potential terrorist attacks following the October terrorist attacks against Israel that were conducted by Hamas terrorists.

    READ MORE: Video: Terrorist threat in US at new alarming level, FBI warns

    “The reality is that the terrorism threat has been elevated throughout 2023, but the ongoing war in the Middle East has raised the threat of an attack against Americans in the United States to a whole nother level,” the FBI director testified at the time.

    Wray explained the FBI’s assessment was that the terrorist attacks initiated by Hamas and its allies could act as “inspiration” for other terrorist attacks at a level that the United States has not experienced since ISIS.



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  • Foreign terrorists behind deadly Philippine bombing, Marcos says

    A bombing that killed four people and wounded dozens in the southern Philippines early Sunday was “perpetrated by foreign terrorists,” President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said in a statement.

    At least 50 were injured in the blast during a Catholic mass at a gymnasium at the Mindanao State University in Marawi City, according to the Philippine military. The southern city was under siege for months by Islamic militants in 2017.

    Marcos has ordered the police and military to step up security while urging the public to remain calm.

    “I have instructed the Philippine National Police and the Armed Forces of the Philippines to ensure the protection and safety of civilians and the security of affected and vulnerable communities,” Marcos said in the statement. “Additional security personnel are also being deployed.”

    “Extremists who wield violence against the innocent will always be regarded as enemies to our society,” the president also said.

    Over 1,000 people died, and hundreds of thousands were displaced in Marawi City during a five-month long siege by militants backed by foreign jihadists.

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

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  • SpaceX carries South Korea’s first spy satellite to orbit

    One of Elon Musk’s rockets carried a South Korean spy satellite into orbit as the rivalry between the two Koreas expands beyond Earth.

    A SpaceX Falcon 9 carrying Seoul’s first domestically made reconnaissance satellite launched from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 10:19 a.m. PST Friday, according to South Korea’s defense ministry. The satellite entered into orbit after successfully separating from the rocket 14 minutes after launch and also made its first communication with a ground station, the ministry said in a statement.

    The launch comes on the heels of North Korea placing its first spy satellite into orbit last month, allowing Kim Jong Un’s regime to keep an eye on U.S. troop movements in the region.

    South Korea has relied on the U.S. for space-based intelligence but is now seeking to supplement that by stepping up its own reconnaissance capabilities with a series of launches aimed at putting five spy satellites in orbit by 2025.

    “With this successful launch, South Korean military has secured an independent space surveillance and reconnaissance capability,” South Korea said.

    “The U.S. does not share all the satellite images Koreans want,” said Sejin Kwon, a professor of aerospace engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.

    The spy probes are part of a broader effort to develop South Korea’s space program, including the launch in May of a Nuri rocket that transported eight satellites into orbit.

    With the spy satellite launches, the two Koreas join a growing list of countries seeking to expand their data collection in space.

    Japan is looking to increase its network of information-gathering satellites from five to nine over the next few years to better keep an eye on its nuclear-armed neighbors, the Cabinet Secretariat has said. The country launched its latest reconnaissance satellite in January.

    An Indian rocket in July launched an Israeli-made Earth observation satellite for Singaporean users, including the country’s Defence Science and Technology Agency, Israel Aerospace Industries said in a statement. IAI on Oct. 2 announced an agreement to sell two satellites to Azerbaijan’s space agency.

    North Korea’s spy satellite may improve Pyongyang’s ability to target missiles designed to deliver nuclear strikes in South Korea and Japan.

    The newly launched South Korean satellite is expected to be far more capable than the North Korean probe, which likely has a rudimentary optical system that experts believe offers images with lower resolution than those from commercial satellites.

    Seoul’s satellite has a telescope with electro-optical/infrared sensors, according to a spokesperson for the South Korean Defense Acquisition Program. The spacecraft is capable of identifying objects as small as 30 centimeters (12 inches), with a resolution capacity about 100 times better than what North Korea has, the DongA Ilbo newspaper reported in late November.

    The project could bolster South Korea’s ability to gather intelligence independently, acting as a hedge against political changes in the U.S. that could impact information sharing.

    Former President Donald Trump, who is seeking a return to the White House, during his tenure threatened to withdraw U.S. troops stationed in the country.

    South Korea sees the deployment of its spy satellites as part of a security triad with the U.S. and Japan to launch preemptive strikes, shoot down missiles in flight and launch its own strikes to knock out North Korea’s military and command assets.

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

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  • GOP senator ends hold on military promotions

    Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) announced Tuesday that he is releasing his hold on senior military officer promotions and confirmations that he used to protest against the Biden administration’s abortion policies at the Pentagon.

    According to Fox News, Tuberville, who was previously a college football coach, explained that he would not be able to continue blocking military promotions since Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) “changed the rules” as part of the National Defense Authorization Act.

    “I’d love to have had five downs in football instead of four, but you can’t do it. It’s got to be fair for everybody,” Tuberville stated. “So that being said, I’m not going to hold the promotions of these people any longer. We just released them.”

    Tuberville told reporters Tuesday that while he still had a hold on roughly 11 four-star generals, he was “completely” releasing all of the other military confirmations and promotions. Asked if he had any regrets about not achieving the intended goal of his months-long protest against the Pentagon’s abortion policies, the Alabama senator said, “It was pretty much a draw. They didn’t get what they wanted. We didn’t get what we wanted.”

    According to Fox News, Tuberville first started blocking the president’s military nominations in February due to what he described as the “illegal” policy of the Pentagon using taxpayer funding to cover the cost of military members who travel to have an abortion. The Pentagon’s policy was set in place by the Biden administration after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade as part of its ruling in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case last year.

    READ MORE: Merit-based military promotions opposed by Biden admin.

    Fox News reported that nearly 400 military nominations had been temporarily blocked by Tuberville’s hold on the promotion and confirmation of senior military officers.

    In an effort to bypass the senator’s hold on military promotions, a bipartisan group of senators developed a rules change in October as part of the Senate Rules Committee that would allow nominees to be approved through 2024, according to Fox News. Last week, Schumer announced that a resolution approving the rules change would ultimately be brought to the Senate floor for a vote.

    Addressing Tuberville’s decision to drop his hold on military confirmations and promotions during a Tuesday press conference, Schumer indicated that the Senate would quickly act on the delayed promotions.

    “I want to say, in regarding Senator Tuberville, in regards to Tuberville finally lifting his unnecessary and harmful holds on our nation’s military officials, I’m happy that we can finally move forward and give these men and women the promotions they deserve,” he said. “I plan to move these promotions as soon as possible, possibly later this afternoon.”



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  • 85 killed, 66 injured in ‘mistaken’ drone attack

    A “mistaken” drone attack in Nigeria on Sunday resulted in the death of at least 85 people, as well as at least 66 injuries.

    According to Fox News, emergency response officials confirmed the tragic consequences of the “mistaken” drone attack on a Muslim holiday gathering in northwest Nigeria. Both government and security officials noted that the drones were “targeting terrorists and bandits” in Kaduna state’s Tudun Biri village.

    “Eighty-five dead bodies have so far been buried while a search is still ongoing,” Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said in a statement obtained by Fox News. The statement added that children, elderly individuals, and women were killed in the drone attack.

    According to Fox News, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu ordered “a thorough and full-fledged investigation” be made into Sunday’s tragic drone incident.

    Kaduna Security Commissioner Samuel Aruwan noted that search-and-rescue efforts remained ongoing and that dozens of injured victims had been transported to the hospital.

    READ MORE: US Navy shoots down Iranian-made drone

    Fox News reported that Nigeria residents are often caught in the conflict between the country’s military and rebel organizations that have caused instability in the nation’s northern region for over a decade.

    Former Nigerian Vice President Atiku Abubakar, who is the leading opposition presidential candidate in the country’s current election cycle, expressed his condolences for those impacted in the drone incident and warned of a “worrisome” pattern of “miscalculated air strikes” in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

    “I am grieved by the news of the drone airstrike that killed dozens of people and left scores of others with various degrees of injury in the Tudun Biri community in Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State,” Abubakar stated. “The incidence of miscalculated air strikes is assuming a worrisome dimension in the country. We need to develop counterinsurgency strategies that will insulate the civilian population from tragic incidents of this nature. I call on the authorities to launch a thorough investigation into this tragedy to avert future occurrences.”

    According to Fox News, Nigerian officials explained that its military regularly carries out air raid operations against rebel groups that are often located in regions with large civilian populations.

    “Terrorists often deliberately embed themselves within civilian population centers,” Maj. Gen. Edward Buba, a Nigeria Defense headquarters spokesman, said.

    The leader of the Nigerian army division responsible for operations in Kaduna explained that Sunday’s drone operation was a “routine mission.”

    “The Nigerian army was on a routine mission against terrorists but inadvertently (its actions) affected members of the community,” Maj. Gen. Valentine Okoro said, according to the Kaduna State Ministry of Internal Security.



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  • Oceanside to consider policy restricting which flags can fly on city properties

    A request to display a “sanctity of human life” flag at the Oceanside Civic Center has prompted a proposal to create a policy for the display of all flags on city properties.

    Oceanside City Council members Rick Robinson and Peter Weiss placed the issue on the agenda for discussion at Wednesday’s meeting after receiving an email request to fly the “Sanctity of Human Life” flag outside City Hall during the week of Jan. 15-19.

    The phrase “sanctity of life” is often used by abortion opponents in what is widely seen as a wedge issue between Democrats and Republicans or liberals and conservatives.

    “We are at a point where we need to have some sort of discussion,” Weiss said last week.

    Several city councils, school boards and other agencies have created or discussed flag policies in recent years. Many of those discussions hinged on whether to fly the rainbow Pride flag representing LGBTQ rights, another issue on which many people have strong opinions.

    Weiss said that for simplicity, only three flags — city, state and nation — should be displayed at the Oceanside Civic Center.

    “It’s easier just to fly the key flags,” he said. “That’s what unifies us … we should celebrate what unites us, not what divides us.”

    Oceanside, a military town since Camp Pendleton was created as the Marine Corps’ West Coast training base in 1942, also displays the POW/MIA flag below the U.S. flag on the three poles with the banners at its civic center. No other flags, such as Pride flag, have been hoisted there in recent memory, a city official said.

    Max Disposti, executive director of the LGBTQ Resource Center in Oceanside, said the request by Weiss and Robinson is disheartening and called it “an attack on LGBTQI+ people and our representation in Oceanside that will drag our community into a public debate that will make us even more vulnerable and less safe.”

    Vista, Carlsbad, Encinitas, San Diego and Chula Vista fly the rainbow flag in June to recognize Pride Month, Disposti said in an email he sent to the Oceanside City Council.

    “In other cities, hate and polarization prevailed and the introduction of a flag policy, along with the banning of books and drag shows, has become a bastion for conservative views and anti-LGBTQI+ sentiments,” he said.

    “In each of these occasions the proposal of a flag policy was presented not as an anti-LGBTQI+ policy, but as one that will prevent groups or individuals from requesting to fly the Nazi flag, the Vatican City flag, the pro-life flag, and so on,” Disposti said.

    The Pride flag represents a community that “has strived for equality and visibility while trying to overcome a century of hateful, discriminatory practices and violence that continue today,” Dispoto said.

    “The rainbow flag does not represent a political choice, an idea, or a side to be with or against,” he said.

    The request to fly the Sanctity of Human Life flag came from Mary Davis, whose only identification was an email address. No one at the email address responded to questions about where she lives and why she made the request.

    La Mesa City Councilmember Laura Lothian asked her colleagues to consider a flag policy in May this year, raising points similar to those of Weiss in Oceanside.

    More than 40 speakers defended flying the rainbow Pride flag in La Mesa, where it has been displayed for Pride Month since 2020, and Lothian dropped her proposal without a vote.

    The Carlsbad City Council voted 3-2 in June, with Mayor Keith Blackburn and Councilmember Melanie Burkholder opposed, to display the rainbow flag during Pride Month.

    The decision came a week after a meeting where the Carlsbad council failed to approve a policy that would have set guidelines for displaying any commemorative flag, including the rainbow LGBTQ banner.

    Carlsbad’s council members voted the same the second time as the week before. The difference was that the proposed policy change needed four votes to pass, a requirement the City Council approved in 1970, and only three votes were necessary for a decision to fly the flag.

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    © 2023 The San Diego Union-Tribune

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  • Democrat senator’s bribery case linked to fmr. robbery: Report

    In a startling revelation, federal agents unearthed several gold bars at the residence of Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) as part of an extensive bribery investigation. Multiple gold bars discovered by the agents reportedly have connections to a violent robbery that occurred 10 years ago.

    The indictment against Menendez, which was unsealed by federal prosecutors in September, alleges that Senator Menendez and his wife were entangled in a years-long bribery scheme involving the Egyptian government and local businessmen.

    Notably, Fred Daibes, a renowned New Jersey real estate developer, was also implicated in the scandal, according to NBC New York. The prosecutors revealed that multiple gold bars, supposedly used as payment in the scheme, were retrieved from Menendez’s home.

    A recent investigation by NBC New York revealed that at least four of the gold bars could be linked to Daibes. The connection was established through unique engraved serial numbers on the bars and corroborated by court documents related to a 2013 robbery, in which Daibes was a victim. In 2013, Daibes was assaulted and robbed at gunpoint in his Edgewater, New Jersey, apartment, resulting in the loss of 22 gold bars, jewelry, and cash.

    “Each gold bar has its own serial number,” Daibes explained in a 2014 transcript obtained by NBC New York. “They’re all stamped … you’ll never see two stamped the same way.” In a significant development, photographs released by the Department of Justice in September show a gold bar discovered at Menendez’s home bearing the serial number “590005,” which was a number reported by Daibes as one of the stolen gold bars during the 2013 incident.

    READ MORE: Democrat senator Menendez charged with bribery

    Furthermore, the federal indictment explicitly states that the serial numbers on the gold bars indicate previous possession by Daibes. Additionally, the indictment claims that Daibes sold 22 gold bars to Wael Hana, another defendant allegedly involved in the bribery scheme.

    In the aftermath of the 2013 robbery, police apprehended and charged four individuals, who were ultimately sentenced to several months in prison following their guilty pleas in 2015. Meanwhile, Menendez, who continues his tenure in the Senate, has vehemently asserted his innocence since the unsealing of the bribery indictment earlier this year.

    “The allegations leveled against me are just that, allegations,” Menendez stated. “For anyone who has known me throughout my 50 years of public service, they know I have always fought for what is right. My advocacy has always been grounded. And what I learned from growing up as the son of Cuban refugees, especially my mom, my hero, Evangelina Menendez.”

    Menendez claimed that he “worked for” everything that he has accomplished throughout his political career, regardless of “the nay sayers” and everyone who has underestimated him. He expressed confidence that he will be “exonerated” when the facts are presented in court and that he will continue to serve as a New Jersey senator.

    “The court of public opinion is no substitute for our revered justice system,” he added. “We cannot set aside the presumption of innocence for political expediency when the harm is irrevocable.”

    This news article was partially created with the assistance of artificial intelligence and edited and fact-checked by a human editor.



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  • Concerns remain as crews pull Navy plane out of Kaneohe Bay

    After the P-8A is back on land, divers with the state Department of Land and Natural resources will be able to document any damage.

    Thirteen days after a Navy P-8A Poseidon slid off the runway in rainy weather while trying to land at Marine Corps Base Hawaii, the Navy, Marines and civilian contractors spent Saturday floating the plane and pulling it backward onto the base runway.

    The recovery operation began at 6 :30 a.m. and progressed slowly and methodically. By sundown, most of the 130-foot-long P-8A was on the runway while the front portion continued to float on “roller bags ” that lifted the 60-ton warplane from two points of contact with the coral reef.

    The Navy had planned to spend no more than 16 hours bringing the Poseidon ashore to ensure the operation would occur during daylight and because the work was expected to be exhaustive. Navy officials estimate that it will cost $1.5 million to salvage the plane.

    “The conditions have been ideal and the operation is progressing exactly as planned, ” Rear Adm. Kevin P. Lenox, the salvage operation’s on-scene commander, said in a statement at midafternoon Saturday. “This morning we floated the aircraft and moved it towards land. As of early afternoon we have begun the stage where we pull the aircraft out of the water and onto the runway. Throughout the process, divers in the water have maintained close observation of the aircraft to ensure no further contact with coral or the sea bottom.”

    After skidding off the runway while trying to land from the makai side of the base Nov. 20, the plane ended up 100 feet off the mauka end of the runway in waters no deeper than 30 feet, with the front landing gear coming to rest in a pocket of coral and the left engine sitting on other parts of the reef.

    But last week’s storm caused the front landing gear to rotate about 30 degrees inside the coral pocket, leading to fears that the shift damaged more sections of reef.

    After the P-8A is back on land, divers with the state Department of Land and Natural Resources will be able to document any damage.

    U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda grew up in Kaneohe, where she lives with her husband and two school-age boys. She told the Honolulu Star-­Advertiser on Saturday that the military cannot do enough testing to measure water quality and document any harm to Kaneohe Bay’s marine life, including how a sea turtle in the area ended up discovered dead on Friday.

    “We have to recognize that there was a plane in our bay, ” Tokuda said. “This is not a normal condition. As a result we’re going to have to look at potential impacts on the bay for marine life, for water quality.”

    As for what killed the sea turtle, she said “we cannot rule out anything.”

    “The real work begins after we get the Poseidon out of the water, ” Tokuda said. “As I’ve said, you can’t test enough, you can’t evaluate this enough. Water quality for the bay is absolutely critical. Assessing damage and repairing damage to the coral, that’s going to be the big work ahead.”

    Kaneohe Bay serves as a source of marine food for numerous families and has a rich cultural history. The base also was a military target during the Japanese attack on Dec. 7, 1941, that launched America into World War II.

    Donald Sakamoto was born and raised in Kaneohe, serves as treasurer of the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board and worked on the Marine Corps base for 21 years as a civilian product specialist in electronics at the Marine Corps exchange until 2009.

    “I appreciate the marine life and I appreciate what the service men and women do to protect us, so I see it from different perspectives, ” Sakamoto told the Star-­Advertiser on Saturday. “Accidents do happen. There was a lot of rain (when the crew and plane skidded off the runway ). But they need to do whatever they can to repair the reef and protect the natural habitat.”

    Fellow Kaneohe Neighborhood Board member Neil Fleitell emphasized that “it was an accident. We’ve got to cut them a break. This is our U.S. military, all of our military.”

    At the same time, Fleitell said, “I want to protect all of the bay, the reef, everything. I can see the bay from the front of my house. … I’m a scuba diver. I love the bay and we need to protect the bay.”

    Immediately after the P-8A and its nine-member crew missed the landing, elected officials and environmentalists began demanding transparency from the Navy and Marines in detailing any environmental damage to Kaneohe Bay—particularly following years of fuel leaks at the Navy’s Red Hill storage facility that contaminated Oahu’s drinking supply and were only recently disclosed.

    But it took more than a week for the Navy and Marines to hold their first news conference on the accident.

    Wayne Tanaka, executive director of the Sierra Club, grew up fishing around and on Kaneohe Bay and wants DLNR to conduct a thorough assessment of the plane’s impact on the water, marine life and coral reef—followed by “appropriate ” monetary compensation that’s costly enough so the military works to prevent a repeat of the accident.

    “The Navy needs to do the right thing and provide adequate compensation to remediate the harm, ” Tanaka said. “We need to count our blessings because it could have been a lot worse—fire, toxins in the water. But there need to be consequences. It shouldn’t be on Hawaii residents to bear all of the burden of the Navy’s mistakes that may have damaged our ecosystem. I just hope the Navy does the right thing, which is what they said they wanted to.”

    Civilian contractors SMIT Salvage and Center Lift on Saturday deployed inflatable roller bags beneath the plane to lift it off the reef and then roll it backward onto the runway using heavy machinery.

    The P-8A crew of three pilots and six crew members assigned to the Whidbey Island, Wash.-based Patrol Squadron 4 “Skinny Dragon ” was arriving at Marine Corps Base Hawaii around 2 p.m. Nov. 20 for “maritime homeland defense ” operations.

    No one was injured when the plane failed to land and ended up in the water.

    The plane’s presence in the bay caused fixed-wing takeoffs and landings to shut down out of concern their exhaust blasts could cause the P-8A to shift in the water and cause further environmental damage.

    A replacement crew and plane later landed at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam to fill in for the crew that skidded into Kaneohe Bay.

    The Navy planned to conduct an off-the-record safety investigation designed to prevent similar mishaps, followed by an official accident investigation that could have disciplinary and legal implications.

    None of the information uncovered in the safety investigation can be used in the formal investigation into the cause of the mishap, Lenox previously said.

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    (c) 2023 The Honolulu Star-Advertiser

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