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[A-List] US military: licensed to spill
Pentagon seeks freedom to pollute land, air and sea
By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles
The Independent
13 March 2003
The Pentagon is quietly seeking exemptions from some of America's main
environmental laws, which would give the military free rein to dump spent
munitions, pollute the air and poison endangered species at its bases
without risk of liability for any damage.
The proposal, slipped into the fine print of the 2004 military budget last
week, is enraging environmentalists and some senior figures on Capitol Hill,
who say the Pentagon is taking shameless advantage of the 11 September
attacks and the looming war against Iraq to wriggle out of its
responsibilities to public health and the country's natural heritage.
"There is no justification whatsoever for the exemptions they are seeking.
They do not even present examples of why they are seeking this exemption,"
John Walke, a clean air specialist with the National Resources Defence
Council, said.
Among the laws the military is seeking to circumvent are the Clean Air Act,
the Endangered Species Act, important pieces of legislation governing the
clean-up of environmental disasters and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
Navy sonars have been blamed for the deaths of whales found washed up on
beaches.
The Pentagon argues that it needs the exemptions because environmental laws
get in the way of training troops. That assessment is contradicted by a
recent report from Congress's General Accounting Office, which saw no
negative impact from environmental statutes on military readiness.
Environmentalists point out that the White House already has the authority
to grant case-by-case exemptions where national security might be at stake -
something that has rarely happened. They also cite last year's Pentagon
budget report estimating the military's liability for environmental
degradation at about $28bn (£17bn). "This is not about military readiness,"
said Brock Evans, a former marine now with the Endangered Species Coalition.
"There are alternatives to exempting themselves from environmental laws."
The Pentagon made a similar exemption proposal last year, only to see it
shot down by the Senate, controlled by Democrats at the time.
The move appears to be controversial even within the Bush administration.
Christine Todd Whitman, the White House's top environmental official, told a
Senate committee recently: "I don't believe that there is a training mission
anywhere in the country that is being held up or not taking place because of
environmental protection regulation." And John Ashcroft, the
ultra-conservative Attorney General, said protecting the environment was an
important element of national security. "These laws do more than just
protect the health and safety of our citizens," he said. "Compliance with
and enforcement of these laws makes a real difference in our level of
national preparedness."
The issue will be discussed today by two congressional subcommittees on
armed services readiness. One leading Democratic congressman, John Dingell
of Michigan, said the military had been trying for years to "get out from
under" environmental laws. "But using the threat of 9/11 and al-Qa'ida to
get unprecedented environmental immunity is despicable."
Pollution from the military has provoked regular environmental scandals -
from rocket fuel contaminating drinking water to reports of cancer clusters
and other illnesses possibly caused by jet fuel emissions or pipelines
carrying heavy-duty fuel beneath houses.
- Thread context:
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- [A-List] US military: the Rumsfeld agenda,
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- [A-List] Tautological Hubris,
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