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| # 414 |
June 2002 |
Greenpeace, the radical environmental group with a penchant
for publicity, may be treading on treasonous soil in its latest
quest for headlines.
Earlier this month, the group posted a color map on the Internet
showing how a terrorist attack on a New Jersey bleach plant could
choke the New York metro area under a shroud of chlorine vapor.
Greenpeace also posted maps of three other U.S. toxic chemical
plants - actions that could give al Qaeda sleeper cells in the
U.S. blueprints for terrorism that could kill millions.
So far, this outrageous act has drawn little reaction from
federal law enforcement officials.
At best, Greenpeace's posting of the maps is a case of horrendously
bad judgment. At worst, it borders on treason.
If it is later discovered that al Qaeda members actually use Greenpeace's
handy "target triptik" to plot future attacks on U.S.
chemical plants, it would hardly seem unfair if its entire leadership
were to be rounded up and sent to the Navy's Club Med facility
at Guantanamo Bay.
Before September 11, Greenpeace and other environmental groups
had campaigned for the public posting of detailed and previously
confidential information about plants that use or manufacture
hazardous chemicals.
The Clinton Administration's Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
agreed to require chemical companies to publicly release much
of this information despite warnings that public release could
compromise national security.
The federal government has been rethinking its position in recent
months and begun stripping maps of chemical plants, hazardous
materials pipelines and water reservoirs and pumping stations
from its own web sites and reading rooms.
Unfortunately, the cat is out of the bag. On June 4, Greenpeace
posted on the Internet maps of four hazardous chemical plants
in the crowded megapolis the runs from New York south to Baltimore.
Greenpeace obtained the maps because the EPA now requires industrial
companies to post Risk Management Plans (RMPs) for all their facilities
that either produce hazardous materials or store them for use
in the manufacturing process.
The environmental group says a terrorist attack on the Kuehne
Chemical bleach factory in N.J. could unleash a cloud of chlorine
and sulfur that might cover a radius of 25 miles and jeopardize
the lives and health of some 12 million people. An attack on the
other three plants, Greenpeace contends, could release chlorine
gas that could put another four million Americans at risk.
However, Kuehne Chemical's chief operating officer Peter Kuehne
disagrees, noting his plants have strict safety and security standards
and the only release of toxic chemicals from the facility likely
would come from exactly the type of terrorist attack Greenpeace's
actions may aid.
Kuehne told the Wall Street Journal (1)
that Greenpeace's posting of the map on its web site is akin to
painting a gigantic bull's-eye on the facility's roof and providing
the terrorists with snipers' rifles. "I don't think someone
who wants to do us harm has a right to know this," he said.
Carol Browner, who headed the EPA when the decision was made to
post highly-detailed information about the plants on the Internet,
defended her decision even after the first World Trade Center
bombing and subsequent terrorist attacks on U.S. embassy and military
installations overseas. Despite these flashing danger signals,
Browner argued that making the data more available would force
the chemical companies to seek alternative, less toxic materials
for their products.
The American Chemistry Council responded by charging the EPA was in the pocket of "professional environmentalists" seeking to provide "one-stop shopping for terrorists."
It is doubtful that Greenpeace is actually tied to Middle Eastern
terrorists, but it did join with a number of domestic eco-terrorist
groups including Monkey Wrench, the Ruckus Society and the Black
Anarchists to demonstrate against ExxonMobil at the corporation's
recent shareholders' meeting in Dallas.
ExxonMobil became a Greenpeace target by refusing to obey the
group's demand that it embrace the Kyoto global warming treaty.
The company notes that a Clinton Administration study concluded
the pact would devastate the U.S. economy. The U.S. Senate, armed
with that report, voted 95-0 in 1997 to urge the Clinton Administration
not to send the treaty to Capitol Hill for ratification.
Protesting a major U.S. corporation is, of course, a constitutional
right. Showing terrorists how to attack a hazardous chemical plant
and perhaps, slaughter millions of innocents, is far different.
The U.S. Justice Department, the FBI and local law enforcement
agencies should act quickly to make sure Greenpeace's latest publicity
stunt doesn't contribute to the next American tragedy.
Amy Ridenour is president of The National Center for Public Policy Research in Washington, DC. Comments may be sent to aridenour@nationalcenter.org.
(1) Ann Davis, "New Alarms
Heat Up Debate On Publicizing Chemical Risks," Wall Street
Journal, May 30, 2002.
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