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To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (16464)4/4/2003 3:23:39 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 89467
 
Just another disgusting move by this out of control administration and it's cadre
Press Release
For Immediate Release: Thursday, March 20, 2003
Contact: Dennis McKinney (202) 265-7337

PENTAGON TO INVOKE "NATIONAL SECURITY" EXEMPTIONS IN
ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS
Some Exemptions May Be Permanent,
Says Wolfowitz Memo

Washington, DC — Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz is directing all
military service chiefs to develop plans for President Bush to invoke national
security exemptions to an array of environmental laws, according to a memo
released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).
The memo orders the Army, Navy and Air Force secretaries to forward
domestic military practices they wish to see exempted from anti-pollution, noise
control and wildlife protection laws.

Under current law, many environmental statutes have exemptions for activities
deemed by the President to be “necessary” for reasons “of national security” or
in the “paramount interest of the United States.” These exemptions, however,
have never been used.

In a March 7 memo, Deputy Defense Secretary Wolfowitz states, without
citing specific cases, that “environmental regulation and litigation threaten our
continued ability” to conduct “necessary military training and testing.” The
memo lists ten laws to which the Pentagon will seek national security
exemptions either “for a specified period of time or indefinitely”:

Ø Anti-Pollution Laws: the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act and the
Safe Drinking Water Act;

Ø Toxic Disposal Laws: the Resource Conservation & Recovery Act
(RCRA), the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
& Liability Act (CERCLA or Superfund), and the Toxic Substances
Control Act;

Ø Land Management: Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries
Act and the Coastal Zone Management Act;

Ø Noise Limits: the Noise Control Act; and

Ø Wildlife Protection: the Endangered Species Act.

At the same time, the Pentagon is also asking Congress to rewrite several
environmental laws to eliminate or limit their effects on “military readiness”
activities. The Wolfowitz memo suggests that the Department of Defense has
not used exemptions already available to it due to “our past restraint” for which
“we should be commended.” In a June 2002 report, the General Accounting
Office concluded that there was no identifiable loss of military readiness due to
the need to comply with environmental laws
[www.gao.gov/new.items/d02614.pdf ]. Tacitly conceding this lack of
quantification, the Wolfowitz memo directs the services to come up with
examples of where environmental laws hinder military readiness and to forward
them up the chain-of-command.

“This smug directive portrays a Pentagon cynically playing politics with public
health and environmental protection,” commented PEER Executive Director
Jeff Ruch, whose organization exposed a Pentagon plan for a three-year
campaign to immunize itself from virtually all environmental restraints [
www.peer.org/press/304.html]. “This memo is, in effect, an all points bulletin
begging for examples to establish an illusory case that environmental
compliance hurts national security. It is the height of chutzpah that the Defense
Department wants Congress to change laws even though the Pentagon has yet
to explore the options and flexibility available under the current statutes.”

###

Read the Wolfowitz memo.

Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) is a national
alliance of local, state and federal resource professionals, working to
protect the environment.

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