Google – AFP, 22 July 2013
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A coral
reef on in Australia's Great Barrier Reef, October 2, 2012 (AIMS/
AFP/File, Ray
Berkelmans)
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SYDNEY —
The United States military said Monday it had jettisoned four unarmed bombs on
Australia's Great Barrier Reef during a training exercise only because civilian
boats had strayed into the drop zone.
The US 7th
Fleet had earlier said only that the planned target range was "not clear
of hazards" at the time, forcing the two Harrier jets to dump their
ordnance within the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park off Queensland state.
But
Commander William Marks revealed Monday that the crews had made the decision,
which has been criticised by environmentalists, because civilian vessels were
detected inside the drop range.
"The
approved area where they could do some of this live training with these
500-pound bombs, it was not safe to drop the bombs," he told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation.
"There
were civilian boats right below them."
The joint
Australia-US training which began on July 15 involves 28,000 troops and Marks
was unable to say how civilian vessels had strayed into the Shoalwater Bay
military training area.
"I
don't have any more information about what they were doing and why they were
there," Marks said.
"But
it's part of our procedures just to do that safety check and if we do see that,
then for safety reasons we do not drop any ordnance."
Officials
on Sunday said the fighter jets had conducted an "emergency jettison"
of two BDU 45s, which are inert ordnance, and two GBU 12s, which were dropped
in an unarmed state on the iconic reef's marine park on July 16.
The two
AV-8B Harrier planes had intended to drop the bombs on a range on a nearby
island but were unsuccessful despite several attempts. Running low on fuel, and
unable to land carrying such a large load, they decided to jettison the bombs.
"Their
priority was to get to a place which would create the least impact, which we
believe we did -- dropping them in between 50 and 60 metres of water in a place
where it is not a hazard to shipping and not a hazard to navigation,"
Marks said.
The drop
was coordinated with Australian authorities, he said, adding that the
environment was a priority for the US military.
The Great
Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which will work with the defence department
to recover the bombs, said they were considered low risk and about 30
kilometres from the nearest reef.
But the
Queensland Greens Sunday described the incident as outrageous.


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