Hawaii folks aren't the only ones
unhappy with the Navy conducting war games in their local waters.
Fishermen are also
protesting the Navy's plans to use sonar and live ordnance in
training exercises in the Gulf of Alaska. Some 6,000 to 14,000 military personnel from the U.S. and allied
nations are expected to converge on
the Gulf for the “Northern Edge” training exercises between June
15-29.
The Cordova Times reports James
Mykland, a Prince William Sound Area E commercial fisherman, as
saying:
The harm and long-lasting detrimental
effects to millions of salmon and marine species by the U.S. Navy
exploding bombs, shooting missiles and deploying sonar buoys in
the Gulf of Alaska is not worth whatever ultimate goal the Navy is
striving for. Our oceans cannot be healthy if we keep dumping toxic
chemicals into them. Tell the U.S. Navy they are not welcome in the
Gulf of Alaska.
Though the Navy has been training in
Alaska for more than 30 years, the Eyak Preservation Council says
the upcoming Northern Edge exercises are significantly more intense
than any conducted before, with “a 6,500 percent increase in
sonobuoys, a 200 percent increase in bombs and missile, and the
potential to leave more than 352,000 lbs. of expended and hazardous
materials in the Gulf of Alaska.”
The Council contends “the Navy's
exercises would affect state Marine Protected Areas, NOAA Fisheries
protected areas and essential fish habitat, taking place during the
most prolific breeding and migratory periods of the marine-supported
life in the region.”
Just like in Hawaii, the Navy cites a
need to maintain “fleet readiness.” Its supplemental EIS contends
that “very few injuries and no mortalities [are] expected or
predicted” among marine mammals, and offers this rationale:
Compared to the potential mortality,
stranding, and injury resulting from commercial ship strikes,
bycatch, entanglement, ocean pollution and other human causes, the
maximum of three potential predicted injuries (a permanent loss of
hearing sensitivity) to Dall’s porpoises will have no measurable
population‐level effects.
As in, yeah, maybe we're bad, but others are worse. It's the same argument raised repeatedly in the comment section of this blog to justify all sorts of behavior and activities.
The Alaska fishermen protest brought to mind a letter from Steve
McMacken in The Garden Island yesterday, supporting the expansion of
the humpback whale sanctuary to protect whales from Navy sonar and
other military activities.
But what Steve and others apparently
don't realize is the Navy is routinely exempted from such
designations. As I reported in the Honolulu Weekly back in 2008, the
Navy is still free to use the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and
surrounding waters, even though it's been declared a national
monument:
Military activities that could be
conducted within the monument include shooting down aerial targets
and using high- and mid-intensity sonar, which has been linked to
death and stranding in whales and other marine mammals.
Capt. Dean Leech, environmental counsel
for the U.S. Pacific Fleet, says the Navy wants to operate in the
monument, which lies within the Hawai’i Range Complex, “because
when these guys are training, they need a lot of space.” And they
can’t train outside the monument’s boundaries, he says, because
the Navy often is “integrating a number of exercises
simultaneously” within the Range that must be proximate to one
another.
Capt. Leech says that while the Navy is
allowed to conduct sonar activities within the monument, “I don’t
foresee guys going up there much, if at all,” because most of the
acoustic monitoring devices are placed on the ocean floor off the
west coast of Kaua’i.
Navy activities that likely will be
conducted within the monument, according to Leech, include “sink
exercises,” in which old boats and other unmanned craft are
destroyed with missiles or torpedoes, and using missiles launched
from Kaua’i to shoot down targets over Nihoa and Necker (also known
as Mokumanamana).
It seems that no place is safe from the long reach of the Navy.
And that brought to mind a video clip that a friend sent over this morning, in one of those intriguing instances of serendipity: "It's just a ride….and we can change it any time we want."
7 comments:
Link is not a clip.
Welp. I wonder what the nutjobs on Kauai would do if there was a violent attack on the island?
Run for their gun, for which it is pertneer impossible to get a permit? Hide behind a GMO free Cheese Goat? Wave their l'il fistees in the air and chant?
Nope. The limp wristed nutjobs would expect to be protected by the cops and the Military.
Gag me with an AK-47 Batman, freedom and liberty come with a cost.
On this little green island which run by a bunch of First Cousin Commies, we feel we are immune to the big bad world.
The Navy exercise is Kauai's part in keeping the wolves at bay.
Nothing but fear & war mongering bs.
I guess Archie Bunker is still alive
3:22 PM You hit it on the head! We have the freedom to whine and bitch because of our strong military; the most technologically advance force in the world.
Not sure if all of these military exercises are necessary and I have heard from marine biologists that these exercises DO negatively impact marine life.
3:22PM wrote:
"The Navy exercise is Kauai's part in keeping the wolves at bay."
No, it's not. It's because it's convenient, and because it's less expensive. It's because the Navy knows that since the U.S. Armed Forces have Hawaii by the economic short hairs, the state government won't make the waves that other places would.
Another thing it isn't, is connected in any fashion to your myth of the military as Noble Protector of Freedom. That died decades ago, when even the most boneheaded warrior wannabes got it through their shaved skulls that the military's true role in this country is as an economic mega-engine and major political player. So please, spare us the 1950s militaristic jingoism.
"No bastard won a war by dying for his country. They won by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."
- George S. Patton
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