Washington was aware that a deadly Tidal Wave was building
up in the Indian Ocean
- December 29 2004
Michel Chossudovsky, Director,
Centre for Research on Globalisation (CRG),
Centre de recherche sur la mondialisation (CRM),
Montréal, Qc. Canada.
The US Military and the State Department were given advanced
warning. America's Navy base on the island of Diego Garcia in
the Indian Ocean was notified.
Why were fishermen in India, Sri Lanka and Thailand not provided
with the same warnings as the US Navy and the US State Department?
Why did the US State Department remain mum on the existence
of an impending catastrophe?
With a modern communications system, why did the information
not get out? By email, telephone, fax, satellite TV... ?
It could have saved the lives of more than 80,000 people. And
the death toll is rising.
The earthquake was a Magnitude 9.0 on the Richter scale, among
the highest in recorded history. US authorities had initially
recorded 8.0 on the Richter scale.
As confirmed by several reports, US scientists in Hawaii, had
advanced knowledge regarding an impending catastrophe, but failed
to contact their Asian counterparts.
Charles McCreery of the Pacific Warning Center in Hawaii confirmed
that his team tried desperately to get in touch with his counterparts
in Asia. According to McCreery, director of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's center in Honolulu, the team
did its utmost to contact the countries. (The NOAA in Hawaii's
Report at: http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2004/s2357.htm
)
His team contacted the US State Department, which apparently
contacted the Asian governments. The Indian government confirms
that no such warning was received. (The Hindu, 27 Dec 2004)
Nine (9.0) on the Richter scale: The Director of the Hawaii
Warning Center stated that "they did not know" that the earthquake
would generate a deadly tidal wave until it had hit Sri Lanka,
more than one and a half hours later, at 2.30 GMT. (see Timeline
below)
"Not until the deadly wave hit Sri Lanka and the scientists
in Honolulu saw news reports of the damage there did they recognize
what was happening... 'Then we knew there was something moving
across the Indian Ocean,' said Charles McCreery. (quoted in the
NYT, 28 Dec 2004 ).
This statement is at odds with the Timeline of the tidal wave
disaster. Thailand was hit almost an hour before Sri Lanka and
the news reports were already out. Surely, these reports out of
Thailand were known to the scientists in Hawaii, not to mention
the office of Sec. Colin Powell, well before the tidal wave reached
Sri Lanka.
''We wanted to try to do something, but without a plan in place
then, it was not an effective way to issue a warning, or to have
it acted upon,'' Dr. McCreery said. ''There would have still been
some time -- not a lot of time, but some time -- if there was
something that could be done in Madagascar, or on the coast of
Africa.''
The above statement is also inconsistent.
The tidal wave reached the East African coastline several hours
after it reached The Maldives islands. According to news reports,
Male, the capital of the Maldives was hit three hours after the
earthquake, at approximately 4.00 GMT. By that time everybody
around the World knew.
It is worth noting that the US Navy was fully aware of the deadly
tidal wave, because the Navy was on the Pacific Warning Center's
list of contacts. Moreover, America's strategic Naval base on
the island of Diego Garcia had also been notified. Although directly
in the path of the tidal wave (see animated chart below), the
Diego Garcia military base reported "no damage".
"One of the few places in the Indian Ocean that got the message
of the quake was Diego Garcia, a speck of an island with a United
States Navy base, because the Pacific warning center's contact
list includes the Navy. Finding the appropriate people in Sri
Lanka or India was harder." (NYT, 28 Dec 2004, emphasis added)
Now how hard is it to pick up the phone and call Sri Lanka?
According to Charles McCreery, director of the Pacific Tsunami
Warning Center.
"We don't have contacts in our address book for anybody in that
part of the world."
Only after the first waves hit Sri Lanka did workers at National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center [PTWC] and others in Hawaii start making phone calls to
US diplomats in Madagascar and Mauritius in an attempt to head
off further disaster.
"We didn't have a contact in place where you could just pick
up the phone," Dolores Clark, spokeswoman for the International
Tsunami Information Center in Hawaii said. "We were starting from
scratch."
These statement on the surface are inconsistent, since several
Indian Ocean Asian countries are in fact members of the Tsunami
Warning System.
There are 26 member countries of the International Coordination
Group for the Tsunami Warning System, including Thailand, Singapore
and Indonesia. All these countries would normally be in the address
book of the PTWC, which works in close coordination with its sister
organization the ICGTWS, which has its offices in Honolulu at
the headquarters of the National Weather Service Pacific Region
Headquarters in downtown Honolulu.
The mandate of the ICGTWS is to "assist member states in establishing
national warning systems, and makes information available on current
technologies for tsunami warning systems."
Australia and Indonesia were notified. The US Congress is to
investigate why the US government did not notify all the Indian
Ocean nations in the affected area: "Only two countries in the
affected region, Indonesia and Australia, received the warning"
"Although Thailand belongs to the international tsunami-warning
network, its west coast does not have the system's wave sensors
mounted on ocean buoys.
The northern tip of the earthquake fault is located near the
Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and tsunamis appear to have rushed
eastward toward the Thai resort of Phuket.
"They had no tidal gauges and they had no warning," said Waverly
Person, a geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information
Centre in Golden, Colorado, U.S., which monitors seismic activity
worldwide. "There are no buoys in the Indian Ocean and that's
where this tsunami occurred."" (Hindu, 27 Dec 2004)
The issue of the Ocean sensors is a Red Herring
We were not able to warn them because we had no sensors in the
Indian Ocean: This argument is a Red Herring.
We are not dealing with advanced information based on the Ocean
sensors, but on an emergency warning transmitted in the immediate
wake of the earthquake. The latter took place at 00.58 GMT on
the 26th of Dec. That information was sent to The State Department
and the US Navy.
With modern communications, the information of an impending
disaster could have been sent around the World in a matter of
minutes, by email, by telephone, by fax, not to mention by live
satellite Television.
Coastguards, municipalities, local governments, tourist hotels,
etc. could have been warned.
According to Tsunami Society President Prof. Tad Murty of the
University of Manitoba:
'There's no reason for a single individual to get killed in
a tsunami,' since most areas had anywhere from 25 minutes to four
hours before a wave hit. So, once again, because of indifference
and corruption thousands of innocent people have died needlessly."
(Calgary Sun, 28 Dec 2004)
Key Questions
1 - Why were the Indian Ocean countries' governments
not informed?
Were there "guidelines" from the US military or the State Department
regarding the release of an advanced warning?
According to the statement of the Hawaii based PTWC, advanced
warning was released but on a selective basis. Indonesia was already
hit, so the warning was in any event redundant and Australia was
several thousand miles from the epicentre of the earthquake and
was, therefore, under no immediate threat.
2 - Did US authorities monitoring seismographic data
have knowledge of the earthquake prior to its actual occurrence
at 00.57 GMT on the 26th of December?
The question is whether there were indications of abnormal seismic
activity prior to 01.00 GMT on the 26th of Dec.
The US Geological Survey confirmed that the earthquake which
triggered the tidal wave measured 9.0 on the Richter scale and
was the fourth largest quake since 1900. In such cases, one would
expect evidence of abnormal seismic activity before the actual
occurrence of a major earthquake.
3 - Why is the US military Calling the Shots on Humanitarian
Relief?
Why in the wake of the disaster, is the US military (rather
than civilian humanitarian/aid organizations operating under UN
auspices) taking a lead role?
The US Pacific Command has been designated to coordinate the
channeling of emergency relief? Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Rusty Blackman,
commander of the 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force based in Okinawa,
has been designated to lead the emergency relief program
Lieutenant General Blackman was previously Chief of Staff for
Coalition Forces Land Component Command, responsible for leading
the Marines into Baghdad during "Operation Iraqi Freedom."
Three "Marine disaster relief assessment teams" under Blackman's
command have been sent to Thailand, Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
US military aircraft are conducting observation missions.
In a bitter irony, part of this operation is being coordinated
out of America's Naval base in Diego Garcia, which was not struck
by the tidal wave. Meanwhile, "USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike
group, which was in Hong Kong when the earthquake and tsunamis
struck, has been diverted to the Gulf of Thailand to support recovery
operations."
- Press Conference of Pacific Command, http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Dec2004/n12292004_2004122905.html
-
Two Aircraft Carriers have been sent to the region. Why is it
necessary for the US to mobilize so much military equipment? The
pattern is unprecedented:
Conway said the Lincoln carrier strike group has 12 helicopters
embarked that he said could be "extremely valuable" in recovery
missions.
An additional 25 helicopters are aboard USS Bonhomme Richard,
headed to the Bay of Bengal. Conway said the expeditionary strike
group was in Guam and is forgoing port visits in Guam and Singapore
and expects to arrive in the Bay of Bengal by Jan. 7.
Conway said the strike group, with its seven ships, 2,100 Marines
and 1,400 sailors aboard, also has four Cobra helicopters that
will be instrumented in reconnaissance efforts.
Because fresh water is one of the greatest needs in the region,
Fargo has ordered seven ships — each capable of producing 90,000
gallons of fresh water a day — to the region. Conway said five
of these ships are pre-positioned in Guam and two will come from
Diego Garcia.
A field hospital ship pre-positioned in Guam would also be ordered
to the region, depending on findings of the disaster relief assessment
teams and need, Conway said. (Ibid)
Why has a senior commander involved in the invasion of Iraq
been assigned to lead the US emergency relief program?
Website:
http://globalresearch.ca
E-mail/couriel: crgeditor@yahoo.com
Michel Chossudovsky is Professor of Economics,
University of Ottawa,
Ottawa, K1N6N5.
E-mail/couriel: chossudovsky@videotron.ca
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Tsunami Timeline
Sunday 26 December 2004 (GMT)
00.57 GMT: Between 00.57 GMT and 00.59 GMT, an 8.9 magnitude
earthquake occurs on the seafloor near Aceh in northern Indonesia.
(See - http://ioc.unesco.org/itsu/
- and other reports)
00.58 GMT: Saturday 25 December, 2.58 pm Hawaii Time (GMT-10)
26 December 00.58 GMT. US government's Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center registers the earthquake on its seismic instruments, in
other words at the time of its occurrence at 00.58 GMT.
Shortly after 01.00 GMT: Earthquake hits several cities in Indonesia,
creates panic in urban areas in peninsular Malaysia. The news
of the earthquakes is reported immediately.
01.3O GMT: Phuket and Coast of Thailand: The tidal wave hits
to coastline shortly after 8.30 am, 01.30 GMT
02.30 GMT: Colombo Sri Lanka and Eastern Coast of Sri Lanka,
the tidal wave hits the coastal regions close to the capital Colombo,
according to report at 8.30 am local time, 02.30 GMT (an hour
and a half after the earthquake)
02.45 GMT: India's Eastern Coastline. The tsunami hits India's
eastern coast from 6:15 a.m.(2:45 GMT)
04.00 GMT: Male, Maldives: From about 9:00 am (0400 GMT), three
hours after the earthquake, the capital, Male, and other parts
of the country were flooded by the tsunami. (more than three hours
after the earthquake)
11.00 GMT (approximate time according to news dispatches): East
Coast of Africa is hit. More than ten hours after the earthquake
The animation below indicates approximate times at which the
tidal wave hits the coastal areas of Indonesia, Thailand, Myanmar,
Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Bangladesh, The Maldives.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
26 Dec 2004
Seismic Activity on Dec 26
http://www.pgc.nrcan.gc.ca/seisplots/long-period/200412/20041226.PGC.LHZ.24hr.gif
Note: extreme seismic activity prior to 01.00 GMT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Richter Scale
US scientists in Hawaii had initially indicated that the earthquake
was of a magnitude of 8.0 (ten times weaker than in the case a
9.0 earthquake on the Richter scale).
How can an error of this nature be made, with very sophisticated
measuring equipment?
According to Natural Resources Canada: "The magnitude of an
earthquake is a measure of the amount of energy released. Each
earthquake has a unique magnitude assigned to it. This is based
on the amplitude of seismic waves measured at a number of seismograph
sites, after being corrected for distance from the earthquake.
Magnitude estimates often change by up to 0.2 units, as additional
data are included in the estimate.
The Richter scale is logarithmic, that is an increase of 1 magnitude
unit represents a factor of ten times in amplitude. The seismic
waves of a magnitude 6 earthquake are 10 times greater in amplitude
than those of a magnitude 5 earthquake. However, in terms of energy
release, a magnitude 6 earthquake is about 31 times greater than
a magnitude 5. The intensity of an earthquake varies greatly according
to distance from the earthquake, ground conditions, and other
factors. The Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale is used to describe
earthquake effects." ( http://www.pgc.nrcan.gc.ca/seismo/eqinfo/richter.htm
)
The following criteria are given by Natural Resources, Canada:
M=8: "Great" earthquake, great destruction, loss of life over
several 100 km (1906 San Francisco, 1949 Queen Charlotte Islands)
M=9: Rare great earthquake, major damage over a large region
over 1000 km (Chile 1960, Alaska 1964, and west coast of British
Columbia, Washington, Oregon, 1700)
Source Natural Resources Canada:
http://www.pgc.nrcan.gc.ca/seismo/eqinfo/richter.htm