This year鈥檚 Rim of the Pacific maritime military exercises, known as RIMPAC, have ended and any attention we鈥檝e given the biennial war games will quickly turn elsewhere.

But before we let RIMPAC drop from view, it鈥檚 worth pausing to consider what we鈥檝e just witnessed 鈥 or not witnessed, since most of the military exercises takes place out of sight.

RIMPAC says its objective is 鈥渢o enhance the interoperability 鈥 and improve individual war-fighting competencies.鈥 In more human terms, RIMPAC is pitched as an opportunity for the militaries of 22 nations to foster better understanding, coordination and cooperation.

Ongoing tensions from the Korean Peninsula to the South China Sea underscore the potential for conflict among regional powers that include North and South Korea, Japan, China and the Philippines, so who could argue against better understanding and communication?

Ships and submarines participating in Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise in 2012 sailed in formation in the waters around the Hawaiian islands. Those war games included 22 nations, more than 40 ships and submarines, more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel in the biennial exercise that aim to foster cooperative relationships.

U.S. Navy, Keith DeVinney

Likewise, as the military increasingly plays up its potential for (HA/DR) and tries to paint itself as a 鈥溾 champion, RIMPAC uses these positive attributes to help shape its narrative.

Speaking on Kauai鈥檚 KKCR radio in May, Pacific Missile Range Facility commanding officer Captain Bruce Hay said RIMPAC provide an opportunity to establish dialogues and practices 鈥渟o that we can all enjoy the giant Pacific Ocean.鈥

RIMPAC presents the public with a sanitized version of conflict completely devoid of war鈥檚 most brutal reality: civilian women and children overwhelmingly bear the brunt of military actions no matter where they take place.

Hay pointed out that RIMPAC involves 鈥渢hings as benign as sports competitions between the crews of the ships 鈥 receptions and dialogues.鈥

And while this is true, RIMPAC is much more than a chummy maritime get-together with in tight formation. It鈥檚 about planning for future wars. It鈥檚 about , , and the kind of that would come in handy for subduing places like Fallujah or Kandahar.

RIMPAC also includes (Sinking Exercises) in which live ammunition is used to blow apart and sink decommissioned war ships in Hawaiian waters and testing , drones and newly developed .

By framing 鈥渃ooperation鈥 and 鈥減artnership鈥 in military terms, RIMPAC gives the U.S. the opportunity to assume the role of older brother, leading the younger siblings as it shows off its overwhelming war-making capabilities. As one CCTV reporter : 鈥淥ne fact becomes obvious: the over-arching dominance of the U.S. Navy in this part of the Pacific.鈥

With including Colombia, Peru, Indonesia, Mexico, China and the Philippines, as well as close U.S. allies like South Korea, Japan, Canada and Australia, you can be sure that in the when military forces sweep into a violence-wracked city or suppress an uprising in some far-flung place you鈥檝e never heard of, will likely be in the mix.

If you visit RIMPAC鈥檚 , , , or pages, you鈥檒l find dozens of photos and videos. It all looks pretty impressive: a steady stream of cool-looking military hardware in action and lots of crisp, white uniforms. Like other branches of the military and , the Navy dishes up its own version of war-nography in an easy-to-digest .

But RIMPAC presents the public with a sanitized version of conflict completely devoid of war鈥檚 most brutal reality: civilian women and children overwhelmingly bear the brunt of military actions no matter where they take place.

When surface-to-air weapons are used in Ukraine, it鈥檚 an international outrage. But when similar weapons are used at RIMPAC, it鈥檚 a tweet.

For each of us in Hawaii, it鈥檚 important to view RIMPAC in its broader context and remember that as war games were being played in Hawaii, real wars 鈥 bloody, savage wars all marked with American thumbprints 鈥 were raging in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Gaza.

In July, 298 people died when Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was blown out of the sky by a surface-to-air missile near the Ukraine-Russia border. That very same day RIMPAC posted of its own surface-to-air missile exercise (SAMEX).

In a second bitter twist of irony, July is the same month that the U.S. Navy warship USS Vincennes an Iran Air civilian airplane in Iranian airspace in 1988 killing all 290 passengers, including 66 children.

When surface-to-air weapons are used in Ukraine, it鈥檚 an international outrage. But when similar weapons are used at RIMPAC, it鈥檚 a tweet. Both air disasters highlight how remaining in a perpetual militarized state increases the likelihood of mistakes and miscalculations.

As RIMPAC 2014 was taking place the world also recoiled as it watched a vastly superior Israeli military wage a lopsided campaign against Hamas. Overwhelmingly, the victims are the 1.8 million Palestinians 鈥 half of whom are under 18 鈥 squeezed into Gaza, a sliver of land barely twice the size of Washington, D.C.

This assault plays out against the backdrop of the U.S. providing a to Israel offered concurrently with multimillion and billion dollar U.S. to , , and .

Meanwhile, the U.S. continues periodic undeclared drone strikes in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen, which have been condemned as illegal and for producing scores of civilian victims.

Earlier this spring the U.S. signed 10-year military agreements with and the and started to dip its toes into , and elsewhere. And in Europe, the being tested on Kauai will be deployed in Romania in 2015 and Poland in 2018.

So what鈥檚 this got to do with RIMPAC? Quite a lot, actually.

As Hawaii Public Radio鈥檚 Bill Dorman , Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has announced the U.S. plans to increase the number of military exercises it participates in the Asia-Pacific region to 130 a year.

It鈥檚 important to remember that while RIMPAC only happens for a few weeks every two years, the testing, training, promotion of and preparation for war 鈥 and the very lucrative ongoing relationships between defense contractors, militaries and governments 鈥 is ceaseless and growing.

We are told that RIMPAC is about improving cooperation and increasing security, yet it鈥檚 hard to take these claims seriously when the U.S. Pacific Command鈥檚 top officer posed by North Korean missiles even as the US to modernize its own nuclear weapons.

Very soon RIMPAC will disappear from the public eye for two more years, but the militaristic framework on which it is founded continues to tie Hawaii to the rest of the world.

From the to the war ships and submarines we navigate, to the and , RIMPAC serves as another tether lashing these islands to a world full of war in Europe and the Middle East across Africa and Asia, over the Pacific and back home to each of us here in Hawaii.

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