Winter
2003 - The Bush Administration
The Price of Security
by Alison
Bickerstaff
Photos by Photographer
After an eerie silence,
nearly 5,000 dead fish rose from the harbors depths.
Jim Muck, a biologist in a boat about 200 feet away, said the Navys
five-pound C-4 underwater explosive went off prematurely. Muck and other
government officials werent paying attention. Then a shock wave
rocked the boat.
"I thought we had hit a log or something," he said. "The
Navy drove us back and forth and thats how we estimated the number
of fish killed."
Muck, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, witnessed this military
training exercise in October 2001 in Crescent Harbor near Whidbey Naval
Air Station, Wash. The Navy invited state and federal officials and local
tribes to observe the exercise.
The Navy said that since the early 1980s similar underwater detonation
exercises have occurred in Puget Sound. The Navy is authorized to conduct
up to 60 exercises per year.
These activities became widely public in late 2002 after a government
whistle blower informed Public Employees for Envi-ronmental Responsibility,
an activist group representing state and federal employees.
Though military training activities have helped the United States win
two world wars and defend the nation, some activities harm the environment.
Concerned citizens and advocacy groups worry the increasing secrecy afforded
to the military masks potentially harmful and perhaps unnecessary
practices.
At the same time, the George W. Bush administration insists current interpretations
of several environmental laws hinder military readiness and deserve redress.
In December 2002, PEER encouraged the White House Council on Environmental
Quality to consider filing criminal charges against the Navy for failing
to comply with the National Environment Policy Act.
PEER said the Navy should have started the NEPA review process several
years ago.
Navy Region Northwest spokeswoman, Commander Karen Sellers said the Navy
has waited until now to initiate the NEPA process because federal fish
biologists are nearing completion of their federally-mandated Endangered
Species Act consultation.
"The main concern was the number of fish that were floating on the
surface," Muck said.
He said his second concern is that as few as 10 percent of corpses float.
The death toll might have been as high as 50,000 fish, mostly surf smelt
food for the endangered bull trout.
"PEERs broad concerns regard the militarys pattern of
shielding its actions from the public and trying to avoid or subvert environmental
compliance," said Lea Mitchell, director of PEERs Washington
state office. "I think its being allowed in the name of national
security. We hope this wont be allowed once the public becomes aware
and raises concerns about it."
The Bush administration introduced the Readiness and Range Preservation
Initiative into the Defense Authorization Act of 2002. The legislation
would have clarified the interpretation of key provisions of several landmark
environmental laws on military installations, including the Endangered
Species Act, Clean Air Act, Marine Mammal Protection Act and Migratory
Bird Treaty. Much of that legislation failed in Congress.
The provisions that failed in 2002 will be considered again this year,
said Bruce Beard, policy analyst of the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary
of Defense for Installations and Environment.
He said the administration has not yet submitted the new legislative package
to Congress.
External influences that inhibit the sustainability of training on military
installations are at the heart of the matter. Beard said these so-called
encroachment pressures include increased urbanization around military
facilities that, for instance, force at-risk species onto military installations
and into testing areas. The designation of critical habitat area at some
military bases in the United States has hampered training activities,
he said.
"A lot of military facilities were put out in the middle of nowhere,
but since then communities have grown around installations and ranges
to the point where theres urban growth up to the fence line,"
he said.
At the 86,000-acre Fort Lewis military installation south of Tacoma, rows
of sandwiched houses and seemingly endless strip malls meet miles of barbed-wire
fencing. Vast stretches of native woodland oak prairies, once extensive
throughout the South Puget Sound, lie protected within the perimeter.
Last year, the U.S. General Accounting Office analyzed the impacts of
encroachment pressures the military faces at Fort Lewis and three other
installations.
According to its report issued in June 2002, the GAO concluded that Fort
Lewis has been able to accommodate endangered species, set aside critical
habitat areas and mitigate most impediments to training.
Tahoma Audubon Society member Kirk Kirkland said the Army cooperates with
the Nature Conservancy, for instance, to remove scotch broom, an invasive
plant that chokes out prairies where endangered species live.
"Fort Lewis does an excellent job as environmental stewards and balancing
their military training mission," Beard said.
Kirkland said urban sprawl in communities adjacent to Fort Lewis, such
as Lakewood and Spanaway, have forced at-risk species onto the base.
"About 2 percent of those native prairies are left in Puget Sound,
mostly on the base," Kirkland said. "So where do all the species
go? They run over to Fort Lewis."
He said the base puts up signs to guard breeding grounds and fragile prairie
habitat as well as wetlands. Fort Lewis deserves praise for its work,
he said.
"We have been pretty creative in meeting obligations," said
James Van Ness, Department of Defense associate general counsel for Environment
and Installations. "But every workaround comes at some price."
The Bush administration was not willing to pay that price, however, concerning
deployment of the Navys Low Frequency Active Sonar operations.
Early in 2001, PEER intercepted Department of Defense "Pre-Decision
Working Papers" dated December 2000. The paper outlined specific
provisions or interpretations of environmental laws it alleged encroach
on military training and readiness in the marine environment. The memo
also cited public review processes and disclosure regarding environmental
concerns as delaying training.
Complying with provisions of the Marine Mammal Protection Act, according
to the memo, might hinder or delay deployment of the Navys LFA Sonar
operations.
In July 2002, the Bush administration granted the Navy an exemption from
the MMPA to "take" or harass endangered species, including whales,
when deploying LFA Sonar to detect foreign submarines.
Mark Palmer works for Earth Island Institutes International Marine
Mammal Project. He said the Navys use of sonar around the world
has coincided with mass whale strandings.
"In March 2000 in the Bahamas, 16 whales beached within range of
the Navys use of midrange frequency sonar," he said.
In December 2001, Earth Island Institute filed a Freedom of Information
Act request, asking that the National Marine Fisheries Service release
the whales autopsy results. Following that request, NMFS issued
a report citing the Navys use of midrange frequency sonar as the
most plausible cause of the whales deaths.
The whales that died suffered bleeding of the ears and ear channels, injuries
consistent with an acoustically induced trauma that caused them to strand.
No other acoustic sources in the vicinity could have caused the whales
injuries, according to the report.
"But the LFA Sonar is more powerful and has a longer range than the
midrange frequency sonar that killed those whales," Palmer said.
"Were concerned it could kill even more marine mammals."
In November 2002, a coalition of environmental groups sued the Navy and
convinced U.S. Magistrate Elizabeth LaPorte in San Francisco to temporarily
limit the LFA Sonar testing until the courts resolve the coalitions
lawsuit.
Fred Felleman Northwest, director of Ocean Advocates and board member
of the Orca Conservancy, said he is concerned that the Navys sonar
testing played a role in the death of a female whale that beached off
Washington states Olympic coast in January 2002.
He said Palmer filed a FOIA request on his behalf regarding Navy training
near the location of the beached whale.
"They wanted to charge us over a couple thousand dollars for the
request," Palmer said. "They dont want to give out this
kind of information because they say, theres terrorists out
there, so were not going to tell you anything."
Felleman said he remains skeptical about the whales death.
"If you cant get this kind of information, and if the Navy
exempts themselves further, then how can you even begin to look at ways
to mitigate these kinds of possible effects?" he said.
Since the attacks of Sept. 11, citizen activists and advocacy groups who
traditionally try to shed light on military activities have been denied
requests or charged higher fees.
The Navy said these charges cover the cost of copying and time spent collecting
the requested materials.
Peace activist Glen Milner said he uses FOIA to research environmental
compliance at the Naval Submarine Base Bangor located approximately
15 miles west of Seattle on Hood Canal.
"Theyve denied some of my requests due to national security,"
he said.
Milner said the Bush administrations attempts to prevent public
disclosure by denying FOIA requests make public scrutiny impossible.
"Several years ago they would have granted a similar FOIA request,
without fees, because they said it was in the public interest to do so,"
he said.
In late 2001, the Navy responded to one of Milners requests. The
response confirmed that the Navy tests weapons using depleted uranium
munitions off the Washington state coast the same radioactive heavy
metal that the United States littered over Iraq during the Gulf War in
1991.
Some fear that if the United States declares war on Iraq, the military
will rain down more of the toxic metal on the country and its inhabitants.
Sellers said the Navy fires depleted uranium rounds off the Washington
coast with its Phalanx Close-In-Weapons-System from ships.
"Tests of CIWS are required twice per month when a naval vessel is
at sea," Sellers said.
According to the Navys official Web site, it started using a tungsten
penetrator for CIWS and stopped using depleted uranium fifteen
years ago. Milners discovery, however, made it clear that this is
not true.
"The Navy is in the process of phasing out the (depleted uranium),"
Sellers said. "The phase out should be complete by 2008."
She said the Navy takes precautions at sea when operating CIWS and, in
doing so, it does not think it has any adverse effects on endangered species
or critical habitat.
"The radiation exposure to marine life is very low," she said.
The militarys use of depleted uranium, which some believe causes
environmental damage and might have contributed to the so-called Gulf
War Syndrome, began during the Gulf War in 1991.
Saul Bloom, executive director of Arc Ecology, recently spoke at Western
Washington University about the environmental impacts of military training
and war. Arc Ecology is an environmental and social advocacy organization
that addresses military activities.
He said the environmental damage caused by the Gulf War was tremendous.
But, he said, damage occurs well before troops are deployed. A legacy
of weapons research, development and testing, as well as military training
and war games have contaminated many military facilities, he said.
"Nothing in war gets used that hasnt been tested," Bloom
said. "Think about it."
The Puget Sound region has six Navy and two Army National Priorities List
Superfund sites, according to the Environmental Protection Agency Web
site. NPLS sites are the most hazardous waste sites identified by EPAs
Superfund program, which provides trust money for clean-up.
The various sites include contaminants such as heavy metals, volatile
organic compounds, polychlorinated biphenyls and other pollutants in the
soil, marine sediments, groundwater and shellfish, according to the EPA
Web site. Some might pose health effects and several sites are located
adjacent to commercial or tribal fishing grounds.
Nancy Harney, EPA Region 10 Federal Facilities program manager, said the
EPA has a good working relationships at the Puget Sound NPLS sites with
the Navy and Army.
"A lot of clean up has gone on," she said. "But, nationally,
the EPA has a hard enough time getting (the Department of Defense) to
comply with enforcement."
Harney said she personally thinks the Bush administration has emboldened
the Department of Defense.
"If this legislation gets passed, this will be a huge nail in the
coffin (of environmental protection) as far as Im concerned,"
she said.
The administration might introduce legislation to clarify interpretations
of several major environmental laws in the coming weeks.
Bloom said he does not think the military needs more clarification of
existing environmental laws.
He said public disclosure regarding the impacts of readiness training
and testing is vital to addressing environmental concerns. Environmental
compliance with existing interpretations of environmental laws have worked,
he said, like at Fort Lewis, at least for now.
"The president has asked us to fight on the front lines in Iraq,"
he said. "People who live near military bases are already on the
front lines."
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