“This was a sight not to be missed!! All the
passengers had joined our Captain on the bridge as he called out directions to
the helmsman to maneuver the ship through the ice which was no easy feat
because we were surrounded by it.” ~ August 1996 – Run For Wrangel (click the
pic for the story of a modern-day visit to Wrangel).
The Island is named for Russian
explorer Baron Wrangel who had heard of the island but didn’t set eyes on it,
let alone a foot. The U.S. had reason to believe we owned the island(s) and to
back that up, there is a Treaty ceding land to the U.S. and the GiveAway
“Agreement” ratified by the U.S. Congress but never signed by Russia. While the
later document is an “Agreement” our State Department refers to it as a
“Treaty.” Never mind the truth.
There is a concern about Alaskan
fishing rights as well as thousands of miles of “rich sea beds” at stake. Today
Alaska says their state was never consulted, and did not consent before the
giveaway that Russia DID NOT accept. AND HERE’S THE KICKER, the original
maps used to draw the boundary lines governing the Agreement are lost. Neither
side can produce the maps, and as you can guess, both sides dispute what
belongs to their side.
Wrangel Island is not a desirable
place to live unless you are a polar bear or other Arctic animal or a scientist
studying an ecosphere that has lain undisturbed, never completely encased in
ice, and never completely under water – lying in the coldest part of our planet
just 88 miles northeast of Siberia.
Since ships first set sail in the
harsh and often frozen ocean of the Arctic, until 1881, no one was certain
Wrangel was an Island. Some thought it a continent, some thought it a myth. It
is was often, usually, enshrouded in fog with, if you were lucky, a mountain
top the only land to sight, but Captain Calvin Hooper and his crew aboard the
Corwin settled the question once and for all.
So explorers planted an American
flag, named it the island of New Columbia with Scottish-American John Muir
aboard to document the finding in a San Francisco newspaper.
Not until about 1913 did new visitors
arrive – from Canada, Britain and eventually the Russians in 1921. A small
group of Russians were taken to the island and left there – whether willingly
or not, I haven’t discovered.
From that time, it has been
assumed that Wrangel Island was a part of the Soviet Union, yet there is that
pesky 1867 Treaty and the 1990 Agreement.
The Agreement exists, signed by a
U.S. Secretary of State James Baker in 1990 and ratified by Congress in June
1990, and signed by President G. H. W. Bush. Russia has not signed on,
originally declaring that they would receive too little from it.
Secondly, it is important to know
that the Agreement was negotiated completely in secret as far as we know. It
began with Henry Kissinger when he was Secretary of State under President
Gerald Ford. Ford left office in 1977. The U.S. ratification didn’t happen
until June 1, 1990 under President G. H. W. Bush. ‘Ratification’ does not mean
that Congress created legislation. It means that an ‘agent’ presented the
language and Congress ‘ratified’ (consented to) it. Source
The 1990 Agreement refers to an 1867
Treaty. First came the 1867 Treaty wherein the U.S. purchased what was
then Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million, an area about twice the size of
Texas. Article 1 in the 1990 Agreement refers to Article 1 of the 1867
Treaty/Convention:
From the 1990 Agreement:
Article 1
1. The Parties agree that the line described as the “western limit” in article 1 of the 1867 Convention, as defined in article 2 of this Agreement, is the maritime boundary between the United States and the Soviet Union.
2. Each Party shall respect the
maritime boundary as limiting the extent of its coastal State jurisdiction
otherwise permitted by international law for any purpose.1. The Parties agree that the line described as the “western limit” in article 1 of the 1867 Convention, as defined in article 2 of this Agreement, is the maritime boundary between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Article I
His Majesty the emperor of all the Russias agrees to cede to the United States, by this convention, immediately upon the exchange of the ratifications thereof, all the territory and dominion now possessed by his said Majesty on the continent of America and in the adjacent islands, the same being contained within the geographical limits herein set forth, to wit:
The eastern limit is the line of
demarcation between the Russian and the British possessions in North America,
as established by the convention between Russia and Great Britain, of February
28-16, 1825, and described in Articles III and IV of said convention, in the
following terms:…(beginning at the pertinent information for this article)
[ceded to the U.S.] …thence, from
the intersection of that meridian, in a southwesterly direction, so as to pass
midway between the island of Attou and Copper island of the Kormandorski cuplet
or group in the North Pacific ocean, to the meridian of one hundred and
ninety-three degrees west longitude, so as to include the territory conveyed
the whole of the Aleutian islands east of that meridian.A year or so ago, Joe Miller, a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Alaska brought up the “Seven Island Giveaway,” here as well. He believed the Obama administration is actively working to get Russia to sign-on – just one more Obama strategy to thwart energy in the U.S. I believe the intimation was that the Obama administration, and specifically the State Department under Hillary Clinton, was actively involved. Is the Kerry State Department involved now? I don’t know.
I see nothing new that has happened
since, other than the National Geographic article leaving a clear impression
that Russia owns, at least, Wrangel Island an no one is questioning or
searching for the truth.
Is Congress doing anything about an
Agreement that wasn’t an Agreement as Russia agreed to nothing? Perhaps the Nat
Geo article is just that, an article – an uninformed article, or an article of
half-truths.Russia has informed the U.S. that it “continues to perform” its rights without signing the Agreement, which the State Department says is a “treaty,” but not titled so and not ratified by Russia.
Lest you think dredging this up is
just some conservative type of American Imperialism (as does FactCheck.org),
in 1987 the Chicago Tribune said the “Agreement” was the “most serious foreign policy
blunder since the Panama Canal giveaway.” In September 2004, the BBC, freshly
roused by a Sustainable Development Conference took the side of Russia.
Wouldn’t you know. They saw the Agreement as giving the U.S. millions in
fishing rights and a mineral-rich continental shelf. Russian publications said
the U.S. violated the boundaries that official maps are not available for
consult, courtesy of some very sloppy diplomatic record keeping on both sides –
or perhaps purposeful record keeping. Apparently Russia felt they were getting
the wrong end of the deal, so they didn’t sign. Are we quietly insisting that
they do – it’s the dirty oil, you know. (Not that the U.S. insisting
anything has weight today.)
Once again, my closing
from my previous article:
What we learn from this story is
that a Secretary of State can engineer giving away sovereign land with no input
from the U.S. Congress or the state holding ownership. The other side is, if
the co-ordinates of the 1867 Treaty referring to the “western” and “eastern”
boundaries clearly put all of the disputed islands on the Russian side, that’s
a problem for the U.S. But then…apparently the style of map used can make a
difference and the maps are no where to be found, and the style of map is not
named. AND there are the explorers who claimed these islands for the U.S. AND
Russia has not ratified. AND how about the unconfirmed ‘rumors’ that the
Obama administration is working to get Russia’s signature on the 1990
Agreement? One last question: if the 1867 Treaty set out the boundaries, why
did we need the 1990 Agreement?
Source: Tea Party .org http://www.maggiesnotebook.com/2013/06/national-geographic-article-on-wrangel-island-a-part-of-obamas-plan-to-kill-american-energy/
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