Bush administration declares
war on whales
by Mark J. Palmer
Earth Island Journal, Summer
2003
IMMP and Seaflow, Protect Our Living Oceans,
have denounced a new effort in Congress by the Navy and the Bush
administration to seriously weaken the Marine Mammal Protection
Act (MMPA) supposedly for "national defense." The MMPA
protects whales and other marine mammals from harm, but the Bush
administration is hiding extensive Navy exemptions from the law
in the unrelated National Defense Authorization Act.
"The proposed Bush administration
2004 Defense Authorization Bill is the most egregious assault
in history on the integrity of the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA) and the world's whales, dolphins and seals it protects,"
says Mark J. Palmer, assistant director of IMMP
Michael Stocker, bioacoustician and member
of Seaflow's board of directors, comments: "While the legislation
has direct effects on marine mammals, the resulting Navy actions
will also result in severe harm to fisheries, other marine life,
and marine ecosystems. If Congress goes along with this proposal,
Navy activities, including use of underwater explosives, loud
active sonars, and other actions that harm marine life will no
longer be restricted to protect the environment. "
The Navy proposes to gut the MMPA in four
principal ways:
The proposed bill would weaken the definition
of "harassment" of marine mammals in the MMPA;
The bill proposes a process for exempting
actions of the Navy for "military training." This "alternative
track" for approving Navy training with Low Frequency Active
(LFA) Sonar and other active sonars, as well as bombing practice
and use of underwater explosives, will exempt the Navy against
active enforcement of current MMPA restrictions for protection
of marine mammals all over the Earth;
The proposed bill further allows the Secretary
of Defense to grant the Navy exemptions for any activity with
a "defense purpose" from provisions of the MMPA, and;
The proposed amendments would further
eliminate current MMPA permit restrictions that limit take (any
harassment, killing, injuring, etc.) of marine mammals to small
numbers and limited geographic areas, issues that are the subject
of current environmental lawsuits against the Navy's active sonar
program, including the controversial LFA Sonar.
The legislation is on a fast track in
Congress. The National Defense Authorization Bill is intended
to set budget levels for the Department of Defense in the coming
fiscal year. But the Bush administration is trying to hijack this
must-pass measure by placing anti-environmental riders, including
attacks on the Clean Air Act and Endangered Species Act, as well
as the MMPA.
A similar effort in 2002 was defeated
in Congress, but the Pentagon is banking on public fears about
war and terrorism, along with a Republican majority in Congress,
to gut environmental laws. The result, environmentalists contend,
will be a global war on whales and other sensitive species that
require protection.
"We strongly believe that our national
security is dependent on healthy oceans to support us," notes
Palmer. "The military and the Bush administration are throwing
away the future health of our oceans in search of minor convenience
today."
"If the Department of Defense is
successful in gaining exemptions to environmental laws,"
says Stocker, "we can be sure that industry groups and polluters
will be asking Congress to exempt them as well. This is a zero-sum
game that threatens 30 years of environmental progress in America."
"Congress must stand up to the Bush
administration's war on whales,' concludes Palmer. "We cannot
allow the Pentagon to use fear to stampede a wholesale repeal
of the environmental laws that protect whales, dolphins, and seals."
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