Minutes from missiles, Guam islanders get
to grips with uncertain fate
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[August 12, 2017]
By Martin Petty
GUAM (Reuters) - Fourteen minutes is not
long to prepare for a potential catastrophe. That's the estimated time
taken from a launch of a mid-range ballistic missile in North Korea
until impact on Guam, where residents seem resigned to the belief that
their fate is out of their control.
The local government of this tiny U.S. Pacific island issued preparation
guidance to its 163,000 people on Friday on how best to hide and deal
with radiation after threats by Pyongyang to strike Guam, or test its
missiles in its surrounding waters.
But islanders don't seem in a hurry to get ready.
Mike Benavente, 37, who maintains air conditioners, said he saw the
advisory on Facebook, but preferred family time at a beach barbecue to
stocking up on supplies and thinking about suitable shelter options.
"Preparation for attack? I'm doing it!" he said, pointing to a grill he
was readying for burgers and hot dogs. "If we have a big missile coming
here, everyone's gonna die. How can I prepare for a missile?"
In a guidance note titled "Preparing for an Imminent Missile Threat",
Guam Homeland Security advised seeking out in advance windowless
shelters in homes, schools and offices, with concrete "dense enough to
absorb radiation".
It said if an attack warning came, residents should seek shelter and
stay there for at least 24 hours. Those caught outside should lay down,
cover their heads and "not look at the flash or fireball" to avoid going
blind.
Plush hotels along Guam's Tumon beach didn't seem in a rush to prepare
either. Staff at several hotels and resorts said they knew guidelines
had been issued but already had procedures in place for emergencies.
"We have an evacuation plan for typhoon, tsunami, terrorism, but we
don't have anything for a North Korean missile attack," said a
supervisor at one resort, who asked that neither he nor his hotel be
identified because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media.
A manager at a hotel nearby had a printed copy of the guidelines, but
said there was no instruction yet to distribute it to guests.
TIME LIMITED
North Korea on Thursday said plans would be completed by mid-August to
fire four intermediate-range missiles to land near Guam, some 3,500
kilometers (2,175 miles) away, after U.S. President Donald Trump said
any threat would be "met with fire and fury like the world has never
seen."
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A hotel receptionist reads a local newspaper in Tamuning, Guam, a
U.S. Pacific Territory, August 12, 2017. REUTERS/Erik De Castro
Guam, an island half the size of Hong Kong and some 7,000 km from
the U.S. mainland, is a target because of its naval base and air
force base, from which two B-1B supersonic bombers were deployed
close to the Korean peninsula on Tuesday.
It is also a permanent home to a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense
(THAAD) interceptor.
Local authorities have been reassuring residents and tourists that a
"strategic defense umbrella" across the Western Pacific can counter
any missile attacks, and the chance of a successful North Korean
strike on Guam was minimal.
"Our confidence is it's point zero zero, zero zero, zero - that's
five zeros - and a one," the governor's homeland security advisor,
George Charfauros, said on Friday.
"The threat level has not changed. It's business as usual."
That was the case on Saturday in Guam's malls and along its pristine
beaches, where children played in the turquoise sea as parents drank
beer and prepared picnics.
"I haven't really thought about preparation. We really don't know
what to do if there's a missile attack," said Marlene, 37, an
accountant.
"We get just 14 minutes. The military says they'll be ready, so
we're banking on them."
Auto parts seller Mitch Aguon, 51, spent his day off fishing and
said preparation was pointless.
"By the time we hear about it, it'll be too late and there's no room
for us ordinary Joes in the bomb shelters. We're dead meat," he
said.
(Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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