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Author Topic: Russian mini-subs plant flag at North Pole sea bed  (Read 114 times)
Description: Russian mini-subs plant flag at North Pole sea bed
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Jesus of Lubeck
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« on: August 02, 2007, 07:55:02 PM »

The ghosts of nineteenth century foreign policy continue to haunt the present.  The British Library has a nice short summary of the quest for the Northwest Passage.  The section treating the early nineteenth century states:
In the first half of the 19th century the search for a Northwest Passage moved further north in the Arctic regions and became a scientific and geographical venture largely promoted by John Barrow, Second Secretary of the Admiralty from 1804 to 1845. Barrow was also prompted by his belief, expressed in an anonymous article in the Quarterly Review of October 1817, that Russian exploration posed a threat to British North America.

Below is an interesting news development that demonstrates how history�s continuities, moving for long periods below the surface of events, can suddenly reappear.

Russian mini-subs plant flag at North Pole sea bed

UNNATI GANDHI AND ALAN FREEMAN
Globe and Mail Update
August 2, 2007 at 9:36 AM EDT

Russian explorers dived deep below the North Pole in a submersible on Thursday and planted a national flag on the seabed to stake a symbolic claim to the energy riches of the Arctic.

A mechanical arm dropped a specially made rust-proof titanium flag onto the Arctic seabed at a depth of 4,261 metres under the surface, Itar-Tass news agency quoted expedition officials as saying.

The expedition leader, Artur Chilingarov, who was aboard one MIR 1 three-person sub, told colleagues on a research ship on the surface that his craft had reached the seabed.

"The landing was smooth, the yellowish ground is around us, no sea dwellers are seen," he said, according to the ITAR-Tass news agency.
 
As part of the expedition aimed at claiming vast swaths of the Arctic Ocean seabed, the Rossiya atomic icebreaker burrowed a path to the Pole through a sheet of multiyear ice, clearing the way for the Akademik Fedorov research ship. But the Russian effort, which will also gather geologic samples and look into the possibility of the Arctic shelf containing nine billion tonnes of oil and gas deposits, is seen by Canadian experts as not much more than a symbolic gesture.

In Ottawa, the Department of Foreign Affairs wouldn't comment on the Russian actions but reiterated Canada's traditional claim to Arctic sovereignty.
"Canada's sovereignty over the lands and waters of the Canadian Arctic is long-standing, well established and based on historic title," said a Foreign Affairs spokesman.

Michael Byers, Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and International Law at the University of British Columbia, said the planting of the titanium Russian flag in the waters at the Pole has no legal significance but it does make a point.

"The planting of the flag is purely political symbolism and most of that is directed at a Russian audience but it does send a reminder to places like Ottawa of the very impressive Arctic capabilities that the Russians have," he said in an interview.
However, he does give credit to the Harper government for placing more emphasis on Arctic sovereignty, most notably the announcement last month of plans to spend $3.1-billion on six to eight patrol vessels capable of operating in ice up to a metre thick and on construction of a deep-water port in the North to service them.
The Russian moves put extra importance on the Prime Minister's planned visit to the Arctic next week. "That trip to the Arctic will not hurt," Prof. Byers said.

But the real urgency is for Canada to undertake seismic mapping of the ocean floor, which is essential to Canada's scientific assertion of sovereignty over the far reaches of the Arctic. The government is planning to use Canada's aging icebreaker, the Louis S. St-Laurent, to undertake some of the work but Prof. Byers said it's essential to charter a heavy icebreaker from the Finns or even the Russians to get the work done in time.

Canada must make its claim to the continental shelf by the end of 2013 under terms of its ratification of the UN Law of the Sea. Russia is making its own claim by the end of this year to the same UN agency.

But there are only five extreme-depth submarines in the world that can reach the depths of the Arctic Ocean: the French, the Americans and the Japanese each have one, while the Russians have two.

The fact that Canada, of which 40 per cent is the Arctic, does not have the capability of getting to the sea floor at the Pole is significant, according to Joe MacInnes, a Canadian diver who led the first team of scientists to dive under the ice at the North Pole.

"I've always taken the position that it's one thing to claim sovereignty. It's another thing to be able to go to the place that you claim. The Russians at least have got a sub that takes them to the bottom, that's the place that they're claiming."
Sergey Petrov, charg� d'affaires at the Russian embassy in Ottawa, said the expedition is an extension of the historic interest Russia has taken in the Arctic, dating as far back as the 1930s. The placement of the Russian flag is only part of the reason they'll descend to the sea floor.
"I'm sure that every nation that would do such a heroic [expedition] would put something precious at the place, and the national flag is something that's respected and is considered the most precious symbol."

Source: Associated Press and Reuters

MacKenzie, Barrow, and Franklin are no doubt peering down through their ghostly mukluks with some concern.  In any event, I tip my hat to the officers and crew of the Russian expedition.

Best Regards,

Lubby
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Jesus of Lubeck
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« Reply #1 on: August 11, 2007, 11:52:26 PM »

Hello HH Members,

Here is another installment on the developing political tension in the Arctic.

Best Regards,

Lubby

Arctic neighbours draw up battle lines
By Lee Carter
BBC News, Toronto

The Arctic is one of the world's most remote, pristine and for most people, inhospitable parts of the world. But in recent years, there has been intense interest in the region from the countries that border it.

No-one knows for certain, but it is strongly suspected that the seabed below the Arctic Ocean contains vast deposits of oil, minerals and natural gas.

Last week crews aboard Russian submarines, explored and mapped out part of the Lomonosov Ridge which Moscow says extends from Russia's continental shelf.

For good measure one crew took a diversion below the North Pole and in a gesture that made headlines across the world, dropped a Russian flag on the ocean floor.

The Canadian government was not amused by the Russian action, prompting the country's Foreign Affairs Minister Peter Mackay to comment.

"You can't go around the world these days dropping flags somewhere. This isn't the 14th or 15th Century. They're fooling themselves." Mr Mackay said, adding that there was "no question" that the waters belonged to Canada.

The tit-for-tat also gave Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's recent three day visit to the Arctic, a new sense of urgency.

   Politicians in Russia or Canada can never lose domestically by standing up for sovereignty in the Arctic
Professor Michael Byers, University of British Columbia

"Canada has taken its sovereignty too lightly for too long. This government has put a big emphasis on reinforcing and strengthening our sovereignty in the Arctic," Mr Harper declared as he toured the region.

The rhetoric may be bullish, but Canada's claims to Arctic sovereignty are by no means clear cut.

UN control

Jurisdiction over the seabed of the Arctic Ocean is regulated by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, ratified by Russia, Canada and Denmark. It is widely expected that the United States will ratify within the next year.

The future status of the region's ocean floor will be determined on the basis of scientific evidence that demonstrates whether or not the seabed is an extension of a claiming country's continental shelf.

Michael Byers is a professor of international law at the University of British Columbia. He says that the Russian submarine mission was a legitimate research project to collect seismic data to bolster their claim to an area off the Lomonosov Ridge.

   The Arctic Ocean is believed to be rich in oil and gas reserves

"The Russians are fully committed, at a political and scientific level, to filing a comprehensive scientific claim, with the United Nations. They're perfectly entitled to do so, in fact I think we should celebrate that they're working within the framework of international law," he said.

Professor Byers acknowledges that the Russian crew's diversionary flag-planting incident was little more than a publicity stunt, but says that Canadian politicians are also guilty of posturing for domestic consumption.

"Politicians in Russia or Canada can never lose domestically by standing up for sovereignty in the Arctic. But underlying all of the rhetoric is the very important fact that all of the Arctic countries are working within a legal framework."

Vital strait

Experts believe that no one country will gain control over the disputed region of the Arctic near the North Pole and that any future agreement will simply set boundaries, especially in areas where there is some overlap in claims.

But the North Pole is not the only region of the Arctic where Canada has a fight on its hands. Melting ice, has led to the gradual opening up of the fabled Northwest Passage which may one day link up the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

Canada has always assumed that the passage is theirs but the United States says it regards the waterway as an international strait.

The dispute is one of the only recent sources of tension between the normally close allies. Most of Mr Harper's tour of the Arctic was focussed on the strait, in particular his announcement that a winter warfare military school for Canada's armed forces will be built at a point about mid-way along the passage.

Missing from this debate has been the question of how environmentally desirable exploiting the Arctic and its resources will be.

The irony that global warming may have created the melting ice along the Northwest Passage has not been lost on some observers, especially the indigenous groups living in Canada's north .

But with Denmark the latest country to announce that it is sending its own team of scientists to the region, there seems no end to the international scramble for one of the last relatively untouched parts of the world.

RUSSIA'S ARCTIC CLAIM
1) North Pole: Russia leaves its flag on the seabed, 4,000m (13,100ft) beneath the surface, as part of its claims for oil and gas reserves.
2) Lomonosov Ridge: Russia argues that this underwater feature is an extension of its continental territory and is looking for evidence.
3) 200-nautical mile (370km) line: Shows how far countries' agreed economic area extends beyond their coastline. Often set from outlying islands.
4) Russian-claimed territory: The bid to claim a vast area is being closely watched by other countries. Some could follow suit.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/6941569.stm

Published: 2007/08/11 01:41:19 GMT

� BBC MMVII
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Tags: Northwest passage  Russia  Franklin  Barrow  Mackenzie  arctic mini-sub 
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