From:

http://www.newsmax.com/articles/?a=2000/5/7/153932

Quietly State Dept. Turns Over American Islands to Russia, Others

Stephan Archer
May 8, 2000


In recent years several U.S. islands have been ceded to Russia
and other countries, without congressional approval or public
debate. These islands, many uninhabited, are significant because
they hold potential mineral, gas, oil and fishing rights – not to
mention potential strategic military value.

So where exactly are these disputed islands?

The Arctic islands, which lie west of Alaska and north of
Siberia, include the islands of Wrangell, Herald, Bennett,
Jeannette and Henrietta.

The islands in the Bering Sea make up the westernmost point in
Alaska’s Aleutian chain and include Copper Island, Sea Otter Rock
and Sea Lion Rock.  These islands together have more square
mileage than the states of Rhode Island and Delaware combined.

Though the United States had staked claim to these islands for
more than a century, the State Department has been anxious to
turn them back to Russia.

The tranfer would have gone unnoticed were it not for State
Department Watch, a Washington-based group that monitors State
Department acitivities.

Retired U.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Carl Olson, who heads State
Department Watch, recently checked with the Census Bureau, asking
if it had plans to count the inhabitants of these disputed
islands in the current census.

Olson was stunned by the response he received from the Census
Bureau.

"Census Bureau officials were informed by the U.S. Department of
State that these islands remain under the jurisdiction of
Russia," wrote Kenneth Prewitt, director of the Census Bureau in
a letter to Olson.

"Without confirmation and appropriate documentation from the
Department of State to the contrary, the Census Bureau cannot
include these islands as part of the State of Alaska," Prewitt
concluded.

Americans Become Russians

Olson notes that the Census Bureau, with the approval of the
State Dept., has just stripped Americans of their citizenship.

Consider the inhabitants of Wrangell Island, the largest of eight
disputed islands – five lying in the Arctic Ocean and three in
the Bering Sea.

Geographically speaking, the island’s inhabitants would also be
citizens of the state of Alaska since no other American state
comes even close to the proximity of the islands.

But if anyone desired to visit Wrangell Island, they would be
greeted not by the Stars and Stripes waving proudly in the brisk
air but by a Russian military tower.

According to Olson, the islands including Wrangell have 18
Russian soldiers and one officer and 50 to 100 inhabitants.

Olson insists these people have been made to endure foreign
occupation by the Russian military and believes the U.S.
government should do something about taking the islands back.

NewsMax.com zcontacted Mark Seidenberg, a former senior traffic
management specialist within the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
and asked him if he believed the United States should pursue its
sovereignty on the islands.  Seidenberg, without hesitation, said
"yes."

U.S. Territory for Long Time

U.S. claims for these islands are strong.

When the United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, the
impending treaty included all of the Aleutian Islands, including
Copper Island, Sea Otter Rock and Sea Lion Rock.

A number of years later, in 1881, U.S. Captain Calvin L. Hooper
landed on Wrangell Island and claimed it for the United States.
One of the landing party was famed explorer John Muir.

Also in 1881, the U.S. Navy claimed Bennett, Jeannette and
Henrietta islands for the United States. Later that century, the
British gave up their claim to Herald Island, allowing the
Americans to take it over.

Claims of these islands, however, didn’t become an important
issue between the former Soviet Union and the United States until
the 1970s, when the concept of international fishing zones 200
miles from national coastlines went into affect.

With both the Soviet Union and Alaska having coastlines within a
much closer proximity than the needed 400-mile buffer zone, a
maritime boundary had to be established.

Secret Transfer

The resulting U.S.-U.S.S.R. Maritime Boundary Treaty was passed
by the Senate and ratified by former President George Bush in
1991. Russia, however, never ratified the treaty because its
leaders complained that the U.S.S.R. didn’t benefit enough from
it.

Nevertheless, former U.S. Secretary of State Jim Baker and the
Soviet Union’s Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze signed a
secretive executive agreement the year before that bound both
governments to the treaty.

Currently, Russia is demanding hundreds of millions of pounds
more fishing rights from the United States that would undermine
the Alaskan fish industry and, subsequently, the state’s economy.

A wealth of petroleum and natural gas hang in the balance as
well.

When NewsMax.com contacted the State Department for an
explanation, a spokesman said he wasn’t aware of any issue
involving the Wrangell Islands and the U.S. government and that
it was his belief that the islands have been recognized as a part
of Russia since the 1800s. During the course of the interview,
the State Department official asked if he was being "put on."

Even though now recognizing Russian jurisdiction over the
islands, the State Department had testified at the June 13, 1991,
treaty hearing that the maritime boundary agreement "does not
recognize Soviet sovereignty over these [five Arctic] islands."

Enraged by the turnover of Alaska’s sovereign land, Rep. John
Coghill Jr. of that state’s legislature sponsored House Joint
Resolution 27, which beseeches the Department of State to inform
the Alaska Legislature of any decisions regarding the maritime
agreement.

The resolution further points out that setting a maritime
boundary between Alaska and Russia is a "constitutional issue of
states’ rights."

One of the issues over these islands and the surrounding waters
are the fishing rights of Alaskan fishermen. Oil, of which Alaska
has the largest national reserves, may also be abundant in the
disputed territory.

Military Value

Olson notes the area's strategic value as well.

Beneath the icy waters around the islands, submarine warfare has
taken place in the past between the former Soviet Union and the
United States. The ice is now one of the last places for
submarines to hide. The islands could also be hosts to vital
facilities tracking hostile government movements.

"Everybody knows that the shortest distance between the U.S.
mainland and Asia is the polar route, giving easy access to
aircraft and whatever else,"  Olson explained. "And the Asian
mainland doesn’t just consist of Russia. It includes China."z

More American Islands Lost

Olson adds that the Arctic islands are not the only American
islands the State Dept. has been giving away without
congressional approval or treaty.

In recent years four American Pacific Islands – Washington,
Fanning, Makin and Little Makin – have been ceded to the island
nation of Kiribati without a treaty.

"Lost” islands include Nassau Island in the Pacific Ocean and
Bajo Nuevo and Serranilla Bank in the Caribbean Sea. The islands
became American territory under the Guano Act in the late 1800s.

Regarding these three lost islands, the Census Bureau's Prewitt,
in a letter dated March 15, stated, "With respect to Nassau
Island, Bajo Nuevo, or Serranilla Bank, the Department of State
has not informed the Census Bureau that claims to these islands
have been certified."

In addition to the abandonment of the islands is the loss of all
resources within a 200-mile economic zone of each island. As is
the case with most of the Arctic islands, the economic zones
around each of the islands may be more important than the islands
themselves.


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