Thursday, July 10, 2025

OMNI MILITARISM IN ARKANSAS ANTHOLOGY #4 JULY 10, 2025

 

OMNI

MILITARISM IN ARKANSAS ANTHOLOGY #4

JULY 10, 2025

Compiled by Dick Bennett for a CULTURE OF PEACE, JUSTICE, AND ECOLOGY.

HTTPS://omnicenter.org/donate/

 

Anthology #1, October 8, 2008.

Anthology #2, October 10, 2012. 

https://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2018/11/omni-militarism-in-arkansas-2-oct-10.html

Anthology #3, November 28, 2021.
 http://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2021/11/militarismmilitary-industrial.html

 

 

What’s at Stake: The extent of militarism and violence in the US.  Here are some examples in Arkansas.

 

 

CONTENTS ARKANSAS MILITARISM #4

ARKANSAS

Friends of Palestine NWA.  “Protest War Profiteering in Arkansas.”

“Arkansas Aerospace Companies Map” and Camden.
CAMDEN, AR’S MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX

Arkansas Business Staff.  “Voters Pick Lockheed Rocket System as 'Coolest Thing Made in Arkansas.'”

Lisa Hammersly.  “South Arkansas home to weapon that, generals say, is turning Ukrainian war’s tide.”  

Dick.  An Ad for Camden, AR’s War-making Town.

EBBING AIR FORCE BASE, FT. SMITH
AR National Guard 188th Fighter Wing.   The Warthogs, now phased out, then drones, and global pilot training in the latest fighter jets..  The Republic of Singapore pilot training center.    
US approves location for Singaporean F-16, F-35 training.”

HIGHER EDUCATION
Armed Forces Alumni Society.  UAF Armed Forces Alumni Society Newsletter.
Industrial Engineering Faculty Member Named Editor-in-Chief of Military Operations Research Journal.”
“…Alumna's Research Helps Keep Army Aviators Safe.”

UAF’s “Schola Cantorum Partners with Huntsville High School Choir to Record” In Remembrance of a Veteran.”

AND MORE

“Berryville's Wilson Combat expanding.”

ROBERT E. LEE’S BIRTHDAY

 

USA
Thirty Six Percent of Mass Shooters Were Trained by the U.S. Military, But Few Americans Know This Because the Media Never Report ItBy Jack Gilroy.
“Resisting the War Industry on Campus” by Felice and Jack Cohen-Joppa.

 



 

 

TEXTS ARKANSAS MILITARISM #4

 

 

“July 11th [ 2025] Protest: War Profiteering in Arkansas.”

Friendsofpalestinenwa   j

Tue, Jul 8, 4:04 PM (17 hours ago)

to bcc: jdickbennett

Friends,

 

In both 2022 and 2023, the years’ U.S. firearms exports to Israel held steady at $18 million. Then in 2024, that number skyrocketed to $114 million, a 505% increase. We continue to bear witness to what the increased funds mean, directly fueling the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

 

Many Arkansas-based companies are profiting from war and enabling mass violence, contributing to the ethnic cleansing in Palestine. Companies like Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Raytheon, Aerojet, and more are raking in profits by participating in genocide.

 

Join us on this Friday, July 11th from 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm, at the Washington County Courthouse to demand an end to WARKANSAS exports of death.

 

#FreePalestine #StopArmingIsrael #Warkansas

 

In solidarity,

Friends of Palestine NWA

One attachment • Scanned by Gmail

 

 

 

“Arkansas Aerospace Companies Map” and Camden
  April 25, 2023.     The aerospace and defense industry is soaring in Arkansas. The state is attracting investment and expansions, growing its workforce, and exporting essential aerospace and defense products.

Dassault Falcon Jet’s largest facility in the world located in Arkansas – at the Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport in Little Rock. Companies like Lockheed Martin and Aerojet Rocketdyne have made recent significant investments in Arkansas.

Highland Industrial Park in East Camden is a major center of aerospace and defense production in the United States. This industrial park is home to a wide range of companies that are manufacturing essential defense products, like components for the M142 HIMARS.

There are more than 4,600 employees at 31 aerospace and defense industry operations throughout Arkansas, according to the Arkansas Department of Workforce Services. This workforce is supported by 15 four-year universities and 22 two-year colleges in the state, providing a wide range of certification programs and degrees related to aerospace and defense.

The Arkansas Aerospace Companies Map below highlights aerospace and defense companies operating in Arkansas, demonstrating the diversity of A&D businesses in the state. 

Sign up for the quarterly Aerospace & Defense Beacon to stay up-to-date on the latest news and trends in the aerospace and defense industry in Arkansas. Sign up here.

 

CAMDEN, AR’S MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX

 

“Voters Pick Lockheed Rocket System as 'Coolest Thing Made in Arkansas'” by Arkansas Business Staff.  Friday, Oct. 7, 2022.

https://www.arkansasbusiness.com/article/141720/voters-pick-lockheed-rocket-system-as-coolest-thing-made-in-arkansas


   

Lockheed Martin's High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (www.lockheedmartin.com)

Voters have selected Lockheed Martin's High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) as the winner of the "Coolest Thing Made in Arkansas" contest.

The rocket system, manufactured at the defense company's facility in Camden, is known for its "shoot and scoot" capability, which improves crew and platform survivability in high-threat environments. It can emplace, fire, relocate and reload in a matter of minutes, dramatically reducing an enemy’s ability to locate and target it.

Voters picked the rocket system as the "Coolest Thing Made in Arkansas" from a field of 16 products made by companies across the state. 

Along with Lockheed's product, the final four nominees included:

The rocket system will be featured at the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce Annual Meeting in November.

The competition is presented by the Arkansas State Chamber, Associated Industries of Arkansas and Arkansas Business.

 

“South Arkansas home to weapon that, generals say, is turning Ukrainian war’s tide” Lisa Hammersly.    | September 18, 2022.

Defense contractors clustered in Camden’s World-War-II-era Highland Industrial Park are making weapons and equipment .

https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2022/sep/18/defense-contractors-clustered-in-camdens-world/

Airmen load Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System munitions from Lockheed Martin’s plant outside Camden bound for Ukraine aboard a Boeing 767 at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J., on Aug. 13. In late August, the company received $600 million from defense officials for replenishing stockpiles of the multiple rocket and HIMARs systems. (Special to the Democrat-Gazette)

 

CAMDEN --As Ukraine's battlefield successes against Russia mount, this shrinking south Arkansas river city and its sprawling neighbor, Highland Industrial Park, are enjoying a moment of international recognition.  Highland's Lockheed Martin and the other major defense manufacturers located there are constructing weapons key to turning around the war in Ukraine, say military generals and other experts.

 

And Camden, population 10,300, is working to shore up a dwindling downtown and other amenities to maintain the area's most important industry -- the launchers, missiles and defense weapons built by 2,800 workers at Highland.

 

Lockheed's HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) made in Camden has "been key to the turnaround in Ukraine, no doubt about it," said retired U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark of Little Rock in an interview last week .   The former NATO Supreme Allied Commander, now strategic adviser, still has working ties to Ukraine. He had just returned from the annual Yalta European Strategy meeting in Kyiv.  

HIMARS serves as "a substitute for the Ukrainian Air Force," Clark said. The missiles are satellite guided with a 200-pound explosive warhead that travels about 50 miles, he said. It's accurate within about 10 feet, military experts say.   "It's a very easy-to-use system, usually mounted on a truck," Clark said. "It does what is called 'Shoot and Scoot.' It's very hard for the enemy to take out in advance. It's also able to get away after the rocket is fired."   The artillery rocket system is built only at Lockheed's installation in south Arkansas, according to Aaron Huckaby, site director of Lockheed's Camden operations.

 

Military leaders including Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have appeared in international news reports in recent weeks applauding the HIMARS successes in Ukraine. HIMARS-launched missiles by last month had struck more than 400 Russian targets, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.   Ukranian defense authorities have said the weapon has far exceeded expectations. It's been instrumental in reclaiming 1,158 square miles of formerly Russian-occupied territory.

 

The attention has spilled over to HIMARS' builders in Arkansas and Camden as its city of origin.

A CBS "Sunday Morning" broadcast Sept. 4 talked about the weapon's production in rural south Arkansas. Politico, a politics and policy news website, on Sept. 9 examined Camden and Highland Industrial Park in a magazine-length article, "The Struggling Arkansas Town That Helped Stop Russia in Its Tracks."

Two top military officials -- William LaPlante, undersecretary for defense, and Assistant Secretary of the Army Doug Bush -- visited Highland and Lockheed Martin late last month for an announcement regarding HIMARS and Lockheed's Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems, or GMLRS.

 

"We have received nearly $400 million to replenish HIMARS and GMLRS" in defense department stockpiles, LaPlante said, according to a Camden News newspaper report. "In addition, we are planning nearly $200 million to expand and accelerate production…."

LaPlante and Bush also thanked Lockheed workers for the "impact their efforts are having on the battlefield" in Ukraine.

 

When Ramona Crain, a real estate agent in Camden, read the Politico article, she was "very pleased" at the attention for the Camden area and its defense contractor industry.

"I had known by hearing around town that some of the industries were producing weapons for the fight in Ukraine," she said. "I am proud of their contribution. Many hard-working individuals are contributing to the success of these plants. . . ."  

 

At the entrance, pass a hulking orange-and-tan billboard advertising the industrial park's 25-plus tenants.  Among the largest: Lockheed Martin -- "We never forget who we're working for;" Aerojet Rocketdyne; General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems; Raytheon Missiles and Defense.   A white-and-blue Lockheed building sits alongside the billboard, across from the Highland Industrial Park administrative building.

 

The park also includes SAU Tech community college, which trains workers including engineers, and Arkansas' state fire and police training academies.   [For more on the Arkansas Military-Industrial-Educational Complex see below Armed Forces Alumni Society ]. . . .  MORE

   High Mobility Artillery Rocket System vehicles, known as HIMARS, fire away during maneuvers at Bemoko Piskie, Poland, in June 2017. The system, built only at Lockheed Martin’s facilities near Camden, has been key in Ukraine’s gains against Russia. (U.S. Army/Markus Rauchenberger).       (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Lisa Hammersly)

 

 

EBBING AIR FORCE BASE

9-12-24 report on tv of 85th Fighter Group at Ebbing AFB training pilots from around the world. 

AR National Guard 188th Wing.   Construction for the Warthogs, now phased out, more for the new 188th drones, and more for global pilot training.  The Republic of Singapore has a training center there.  And AR National Guard. With new buildings, all together a major expansion for AR.  Our Senators, the Mayor of Ft. Smith, the Gov. of Arkansas (Sarah Sanders) are promoting it.      For growth for Empire!

 

Ebbing Air National Guard Base is an airfield adjacent to the Fort Smith Regional Airport which it shares runways with.     Public relations release:

It was established in 1953. Since 1953, the Arkansas Air National Guard's 188th Wing (188 WG) has been based at the airfield. Formerly a fighter wing that previously operated F-4 Phantom IIF-16 Fighting Falcon, and A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft, the 188th Wing currently features three primary mission sets: Remotely Piloted Aircraft (MQ-9 Reaper); ISR (Distributed Ground Station-Arkansas); and Targeting (Space-Focused).

Air traffic services are provided by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) from an air traffic control (ATC) tower and TRACON (terminal radar approach control).

An F-16C of 140 Sqn.

The 188th Wing is based there, currently operating drones. The Republic of Singapore Air Force is planning to set up its F-16 and F-35 training detachment starting with the first aircraft to be based there in 2023.[2]

 

EBBING AFB, SINGAPORE, AND OTHER GLIMPSES OF US EMPIRE

“US approves location for Singaporean F-16, F-35 training”

 June 4, 2021.

US approves location for Singaporean F-16, F-35 training (defensenews.com)

A Republic of Singapore Air Force F-16D is shown at Luke Air Force Base. (Singapore's Defence Ministry)

MELBOURNE, Australia — The U.S. and Singaporean governments have chosen Ebbing Air National Guard Base in Fort Smith, Arkansas, to host the Southeast Asian nation’s Lockheed Martin F-16 Fighter Falcon and future F-35B fighter jet training detachments.

The Arkansas National Guard’s Public Affairs Office said Singapore’s fleet of 12 F-16s is expected to begin arriving in 2023, and its first of up to 12 F-35Bs are to follow in 2026. . . .   Singapore was approved to acquire four short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing F-35 variants with an option for eight more of the “B” models. Deliveries are due to begin in 2026. Singapore has decided to consolidate its U.S.-based F-35 training together with its F-16 detachment at one location. . . .

In addition to its Arizona-based F-16 training detachment, the land-scarce island nation also has an F-15 training squadron in Mountain Home, Idaho, and a Boeing AH-64D Apache attack helicopter detachment in Marana, Arizona. Singapore also signed a memorandum of understanding in 2019 with the United States to set up a permanent fighter training detachment in the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam that will begin in 2029.

 

Air Force hosts meeting about proposed program at Fort Smith Ebbing Air National Guard Base.”   The Air Force held the second of two online public scoping meetings Thursday to discuss the proposal to place a permanent Foreign Military Sales Pilot Training ....   ADG, Morning News Update, 2-5-22.     READ MORE

 

 

12-11-22    Militarism USA manifests itself via every niche, nook, and cranny it can grasp, including throughout our educational system.  It’s so pervasive, it seems natural to people, invisible.   To acquire the $800 billion budget, the Pentagon doesn’t need goose-stepping troops, concentration camps, or murder, but only the UAF Armed Forces Alumni Society in our colleges, and a thousand other patriotic reinforcements—for the militarization of our nation under the guise of defense.    -Dick

 

MILITARISM ARKANSAS UAF and Public Schools

December 2022 | UAF Armed Forces Alumni Society Newsletter
Armed Forces Alumni Society afas@arkansasalumni.org via uark.edu  12-11-22

 

 

 

 

AFAS Vice-President William (Bill) Oliver 

Bill served as the CEO of Spearhead Government Services, LLC (a woman-owned small business) which provides consulting, acquisitions planning, services and goods to federal, state and local governments.

 Bill began his enlisted military service with the US Army (active duty) in 1989 and served until 2000. He deployed in both Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm. Bill holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Organizational Management from John Brown University and Master of Science in Operations Management, with master's certificates in both Human Resource Management and Industrial Safety and Healthcare Management, from the University of Arkansas.

 

AFAS Secretary Paul Campbell

 Lieutenant Colonel Paul A. Campbell is the Chief Pilot and an Instructor Pilot for the 327th Airlift Squadron, 913th Airlift Group, Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas. As the Chief Pilot, Lt. Col. Campbell is responsible to the Commander for pilot professional development and hiring.   As an instructor pilot, Lt. Col. Campbell is responsible to the Commander for Aircrew Training, Scheduling and Operational Readiness.   Paul received his commission in December 2003 as a Distinguished Graduate of the Air Force ROTC program at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas. . . .MORE  [You’ll find fascinating the ways the UAF AFAS works its niches.]

 

Industrial Engineering Faculty Member Named Editor-in-Chief of Military Operations Research Journal.”

Ed Pohl, professor and head of the Industrial Engineering Department, was recently announced as the editor-in-chief of the Military Operations Research Society Journal.

“Athletic Training Alumna's Research Helps Keep Army Aviators Safe.”  March 16, 2022.

https://news.uark.edu/articles/59350/athletic-training-alumna-s-research-helps-keep-army-aviators-safe

….The U of A alumna (Hillary Plummer)  now helps keep Army aviators healthy and performing well in her role as a researcher with the U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory. She's a post-doctoral fellow with the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education. . . .  MORE


[
Militarism reaches into nooks and crannies of Arkansas, as part of the US Culture of War, as in the following High School musical celebration of “In Remembrance of a Veteran.”  The UAF’s Schola Cantorum is used by the MIEC.  Perhaps it will lead to a comparable celebration of  a teacher or nurse or fireman.   To the, “Thank you for serving” you have heard in Arkansass (my hardware store gave a discount to vets),  we might reply:  which service, truck driver, or caregiver, or carpenter.?  –D]

“Schola Cantorum Partners with Huntsville High School Choir to Record Newly Commissioned Work.”   May 06, 2022. Photo ofrecording at the Faulkner Performing Arts Center.

The U of A's Schola Cantorum recently joined forces with the Huntsville High School Choir to record a new work, "In Remembrance of a Veteran," composed by Schola Cantorum director, Stephen Caldwell.

The work was commissioned by U of A alumna and Huntsville choir director, Mindy Williams, in memory of her father who passed away at the beginning of the academic year. Williams' father was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps and a huge fan of the Razorbacks [the influential Military-Sports Complex at UAF].  "As the choir sings, one can hear Taps played in the background to honor his service," Caldwell said.   Caldwell said Williams was a clarinet major during her time at the U of A, so she specifically requested that instrument be used in the composition.   "Nophachai Cholthichanta, associate professor of clarinet, generously volunteered to record the clarinet solo with the choirs," Caldwell said. "It is an empowering experience for all involved in a project like this. . . . “

AND MORE

Berryville's Wilson Combat expanding
“Gun-maker cites U.S. surge in demand as it plans to increase workforce by 20%”
 by John Magsam.   December 13, 2020. https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2020/dec/13/berryvilles-wilson-combat-expanding/

Berryville-based gun-maker Wilson Combat is expanding, adding 16,000 square feet and expecting to increase its workforce by 20%. . . .   Guy Joubert, director of manufacturing at Wilson Combat, said demand for firearms and parts has been high across all the products the company offers with Wilson hustling to try to keep pace.  "Demand is overwhelming across the country," Joubert said. . . .

 

ROBERT E. LEE’S BIRTHDAY

An example of the glorification of warriors in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette appears on the editorial page January 19, 2009, birthday of Robert E. Lee and MLK, Jr.  The anonymous editorial (I guess by the page’s editor, Paul Greenberg), “The Shadow of Lee,” celebrates Lee’s superlative “wholeness.”  A column written by Paul Greenberg, “Two Southerners, One Holiday,” compares Lee and MLK, Jr. and complains of the national primacy given to MLK’s, when the two “had much in common.”    

 

 

 

USA

 

 US MILITARISM AND  US VIOLENCE

Thirty Six Percent of Mass Shooters Were Trained by the U.S. Military, But Few Americans Know This Because the Media Never Report It By Jack Gilroy.  CovertAction Magazine (Aug 30, 2022).

Media pundits and politicians blame lax gun laws, social isolation and mental illness for mass shootings, but ignore the advent of a fascist culture that venerates the U.S. military.

In the wake of a barrage of mass shootings, the media have offered a variety of explanations centering predominantly on the social isolation and mental illness of shooters and their easy access to military-style weaponry due to lax gun regulations.  These factors are significant but almost all media pundits avoid the gorilla sitting in the psyche of the American mind—that of the huge military budget and culture of military veneration, which is reminiscent of fascist cultures.  In a July 8 column entitled “Why Shooters Do the Evil They Do,” New York Times columnist David Brooks characteristically cites mental illness, loneliness and the need for recognition and power as lying at the root of recent mass shootings.

What is missing is any discussion of American-style militarism, something Brooks has whitewashed throughout his writing career.   According to David Swanson, Director of World Beyond War, 36% of mass shooters have been trained by the U.S. military—when only one percent of Americans serve in the military.Many of the mass shooters also have used military-style weapons and have worn military-style clothing.

 

VIOLENCE BY OMISSION

Jillian Peterson and James Densley recently published a detailed study of mass shooters sponsored by the the National Institute of Justice entitled The Violence Project: How to Stop a Mass Shooting Epidemic, which has been widely cited by the media.  The book casts light on many dark corners of American life but characteristically ignores among the darkest—the military-industrial complex. […]

 

Resisting the War Industry on Campus - Upcoming Zoom

Felice and Jack Cohen-Joppa via googlegroups.com 7-21-22  [Jack and Felice are editors of The Nuclear Resister.]       

Hi,

Yesterday Jack was at an online meeting of the War Industry Resisters Network and this Zoom was publicized in the chat (see below). We’re going to attend.

Peace, Felice

Topic
Resisting the War Industry on Campus

Description
Across the country students are coming together to oppose their universities' connections to fossil fuel companies, corporations tied to incarceration, and the WAR INDUSTRY.
We'll be talking to experts and activists to learn about making contact to these groups and working in solidarity.
Lillian Mauldin is the founder of Women for Weapons Trade Transparency , a growing cohort of scholars, students and activists committed to producing quality research on international weapons sales and advocating for corporate and government divestment from war. Their main focus has been on divestment of war company holdings of the University of Texas/Texas A&M Investment Management Company (UTIMCO), the largest public endowment fund in the U.S. They have been mobilizing student governance bodies at the University of Texas, Austin (including the Graduate Student Assembly, Student Government, and the Senate of College Councils) to develop support for University of Texas system divestment from weapons manufacturers.

https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMpfu2spzwvE91gabi2aREabaWuqd44nOuT

 

 

END MILITARISM ARKANSAS WATCH #4

 

 

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