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Orwellian_Ghost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 01:37 PM
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The Military-Leisure Golf Complex




The Military-Leisure Golf Complex
By Nick Turse, Metropolitan Books. Posted April 12, 2008.

Pentagon elites and high government officials are tee-ing off at taxpayer expense at hundreds of courses all over the planet.

The following is an excerpt from Nick Turse's new book "The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives" (Metropolitan, 2008).

Back in 1975, Senator William Proxmire (D-Wisconsin) decried the fact that the Department of Defense spent nearly $14 million each year to maintain and operate 300 military-run golf courses scattered across the globe. In 1996, the weekly television series America's Defense Monitor noted that "Pentagon elites and high government officials tee-ing off at taxpayer expense" at some "234 golf courses maintained by the U.S. armed forces worldwide." In the intervening twenty-one years, despite a modest decrease in the number of military golf courses, not much had changed. The military was still out on the links. Today, the military claims to operate a mere 172 golf courses worldwide, suggesting that over thirty years after Proxmire's criticisms, a modicum of reform has taken place. Don't believe it.

In actuality, the military has cooked the books. For example, the Department of Defense reported that the U.S. Air Force operates 68 courses. A closer examination indicates that the DoD counts the 3 separate golf courses, a total of fifty-four holes, at Andrews Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., as 1 course. The same is true for the navy, which claims 37 courses (including facilities in Guam, Italy, and Spain) but counts, for example, its Admiral Baker Golf Course in San Diego, which boasts 2 eighteen-hole courses, as a single unit. Similarly, while the DoD claims that the army operates 56 golf facilities, it appears that this translates into no fewer than 68 actual courses, stretching from the U.S. to Germany, Japan, and South Korea.

Moreover, some military golf facilities are mysteriously missing from all lists. In 2005, according to the Pentagon, the U.S. military operated courses on twenty-five bases overseas.

A closer look, however, indicates that the military apparently forgot about some of its golf courses -- especially those in unsavory or unmentionable locales. Take the unlisted eighteen-hole golf course -- where hot-pink balls are used so as not to lose them in the barren terrain -- at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Also absent is the army's Tournament Players Club, a golf course built, in 2003, by army personnel in Mosul, Iraq. Another forgotten course can be found in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, at Kwajalein, a little-discussed island filled with missile and rocket launchers and radar equipment that serves as the home of the U.S. Army's Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test Site. Similarly unlisted is a nine-hole golf course located on the shadowy island of Diego Garcia, a British Indian Ocean Territory occupied by the U.S. military and long suspected as the site of one of the CIA's post-9/11 secret "ghost" prisons. But even courses not operating on secret sites, in war zones, or near prisons and possible torture centers have been conveniently lost. For example, while the Pentagon lists the navy's Admiral Nimitz Golf Course in Barrigada, Guam, in its inventory of overseas courses, it seems to have skipped Andersen Air Force Base's eighteen-hole Palm Tree Golf Course, also on the island. And you'd think the Pentagon would be proud of the USAF's island links; after all, it was the runner-up, in 2002, for the title of "Guam's Most Beautiful Golf Course."

...

http://www.alternet.org/workplace/82009/
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SKKY Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 01:44 PM
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1. Actually, this is very, very misleading...
...Here in Rota, our golf course is paid for and maintained by MWR, Morale, Welfare, and Recreation. MWR is funded by us, the service members. I can't speak for the Army or Air Force, but I'm sure it's similar. The courses are maintained by green fees, club house sales, etc. There are also restaurants attached to the golf courses that help fund it. If the tax payers are paying for it, why does it cost me 18 dollars every time I play?
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A HERETIC I AM Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 01:51 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Would it be more accurate to say the taxpayers paid to build them?
I am aware of a short, par 3, 9 hole course (on a US built but now co-operated installation) in Australia that was installed when the facility was built. I would think the original cost of building the course was part of the overall cost of the entire facility.
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SKKY Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 02:39 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Again, I'm only speaking for the Navy...
...so this may not hold true for the Army or Air Force. The costs for things like golf courses are paid for by MWR. MWR gets their money from us, the service members and our families, who support their endeavors. Here in Rota, Spain for example. Our golf course is pretty much self sufficient. It has a good flow of traffic, all paying green fees, and shopping the pro shop. Attached to that is another MWR facility called "Pizza Villa" which is probably the most popular eats joint on base. The income from those two facilities more than pays for the costs to run them. I don't know about that facility (Canbera?), but I'm sure MWR footed the bill, since it's part of their deal.
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A HERETIC I AM Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 04:10 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Pine gap, NT.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_Gap

My Dad was stationed/worked there in the early 70's and we lived in Alice Springs.
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lpbk2713 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Apr-12-08 04:12 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. I was stationed in Rota 66-69.



:thumbsup: :hi: :thumbsup:



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