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What's
Good for Daschle . . .
Michelle Malkin
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle
has seen the light. People — specifically, people who live and vote
in his home state of South Dakota — must come before plant life.
This sudden insight was illuminated by the glare of 50,000 forest
fires, which have burned through nearly 4 million acres across the
country so far this summer, threatening residents and firefighters
alike.
Mr. Daschle wasn't going to let some ridiculous gubmint regulations
get in the way of protecting his vulnerable Black Hills from the
flames. So, as The Washington Times reported earlier last week, the
Sierra Club-backed Democrat slipped a special exemption from
environmental rules into a defense supplemental spending bill. The
exemption allows logging in the forests of South Dakota to reduce the
fuel supply and snuffs out environmental lawsuits that have obstructed
timber projects for the past two decades.
Not a peep has been heard from the green attack dogs at the Sierra
Club, but lawmakers in other tinderbox states are rightly voicing
their outrage. Rep. J.D. Hayworth, Arizona Republican, said: "It
certainly can only be described as blatant hypocrisy on behalf of the
Senate leader to claim on one hand to be the champion of the
environment and then on the other hand to cut a special deal for his
home state." Republicans in both the House and Senate plan to
introduce legislation extending logging and lawsuit exemptions to
federal forest lands in every other state at risk of catastrophic
wildfire.
That is a good start. But we need to take this bold, new Daschle
principle — people before obstructionist environmental rules —
much further. What's good for Mr. Daschle and South Dakota must be
good not only for the rest of the country, but also for the U.S.
military.
As I wrote last week, the House rejected a request by our armed forces
to allow the Navy to conduct training exercises at sea without the
constant threat of marine mammal "harassment" lawsuits. The
military also faces opposition to a broader request to exempt some
military training grounds from the Endangered Species Act and
Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which currently contains no exemption for
national security.
Now, more than ever, preparing our men and women in uniform for combat
in the most realistic circumstances possible is imperative. That's
hard to do when soldiers must tiptoe around the habitats of endangered
desert tortoises, sidestep hundreds of species of plants, and refrain
from nighttime exercises, beach exercises, amphibious landings and
live-fire training exercises — lest they be sued by the nearest
anti-military environmental group.
The Defense Department isn't asking to run roughshod over the
environment. It has owned up to past pollution and eco-sins, and
invests billions of dollars and thousands of man-hours in
environmental protection and mitigation measures. The exemption
request is focused narrowly on military readiness. It seeks to
preserve training grounds in places such as Fort Bragg, N.C., where
the designation of 14 critical habitats has severely limited where
recruits can camp, fire weapons and dig.
The story's the same at the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base, Coronado
Naval Amphibious Base and San Clemente Island in California, at Fort
Hood, Texas, Fort Polk, La., and at Farallon de Medinilla. The latter
is an uninhabited island in the West Pacific that served as a critical
firing range for the Navy and Marine Corps until it was shut down this
spring by an environmental lawsuit over migratory birds that might be
unintentionally harmed during exercises.
The plaintiffs have also targeted Navy bombing exercises at the site.
As military experts point out, the Farallon de Medinilla ruling could
potentially put at risk a wide range of aviation, telecommunications
and live-fire training activities nationwide.
Tom Daschle supports the need to "avoid costly, time-consuming
lawsuits" over environmental rules when wildfires threaten the
lives of South Dakotans. Why doesn't the Democrat leader do the same
for American soldiers and sailors, who deserve the best training
possible before being sent to face enemy fire around the world?
Michelle Malkin is a nationally
syndicated columnist.
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