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Science & Technology
Navy to Shut Down Sub Radio Transmitters
2004-09-27
With terrorism the new global threat, a network of radio antennas that let the Navy maintain secure communications with submarines at sea has become yet another Cold War relic. On Thursday, the Navy will shut off its extremely low frequency (ELF) radio transmitters in northern Wisconsin and Michigan, saying the 15-year-old system, first proposed in the 1960s, is outdated and no longer needed. The Navy now will use 12 ``very low frequency'' transmitters located worldwide.

For years, peace activists and environmentalists targeted the two huge transmitters in the Chequamegon National Forest near Clam Lake and in Upper Michigan's Escanaba State Forest. Each transmitter consists of an antenna strung on 600 40-foot poles across dozens of miles of forest. Critics contended that the system was for use during a first-strike nuclear attack, and that the radio waves could cause health and environmental problems. Demonstrations led to hundreds of arrests, some for trespassing onto the site and sawing down poles.
The critics were the usual LLL moonbats who had no evidence of any kind. Typical.
It was the nuclear strike part that got to them. If you can't do it, you won't do it. Even if the Russers were in the process of obliterating Des Moines and Peoria.
Steven Davis, spokesman for the Navy's Space and Navy Warfare Systems Command in San Diego, said the Navy spent about $25 million on research and studies into public and environmental safety and found no problems. But Sen. Russ Feingold, who has wanted to shut down ELF since 1993, said the Navy had a ``bunker mentality'' in trying to pretend the facility had a purpose. ``I do think the war on terror had something to do with this,'' Feingold said. ``I think people are finally realizing we need to equip our military and everything we do toward the real threats.''
Posted by:Steve White

#6  in San Diego we have had a couple radio tower sites for Navy communications that have been taken down - latest was by Chollas reservoir near 94 and college. Building Navy housing there now..
Posted by: Frank G   2004-09-27 11:50:06 AM  

#5  I don't know about weather control, shipman, but it is one hell of a ground grid. Put it on Ebay.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2004-09-27 11:45:59 AM  

#4  Now it can be used full time for weather control.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-09-27 9:49:17 AM  

#3  Is this thing on…
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom   2004-09-27 6:41:25 AM  

#2  Satellites isnt same as a replacement system, ELF and VLF can be received under water while sat needs that sub put an antenna or buoy at surface. So suppose the replacement syst. is the VLF´s they are talking about
Posted by: Anonymous6361   2004-09-27 2:20:49 AM  

#1  How much will be spent on a replacement system (e.g. satellites)?
Posted by: ed   2004-09-27 1:39:26 AM  

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