Breaking: Saudis don’t want war with Iran. Checkmate!

Kinda blows a hole in the argument that Saudis want us to attack Iran!

  Gulf Arabs offer to provide uranium to Iran: report

34 minutes ago

    DUBAI (Reuters) – U.S.-allied Gulf states are willing to set up a body to provide enriched uranium to Iran to defuse Tehran’s stand-off with the West over its nuclear plan, Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister told a newspaper on Thursday.

    Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries — Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates — share Western concerns that Iran’s nuclear energy program will lead to it acquiring atomic bombs, a claim Tehran denies.

    “We have proposed a solution, which is to create a consortium for all users of enriched uranium in the Middle East,” foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told the Middle East Economic Digest (MEED).

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071101/ts_nm/iran_nuclear_saudi_dc_2

With permission, summer of 2006:

Iran: Another Oil War in the Making

By A.K. Gupta

    As preparations for war against Iraq intensified in the fall of 2002, neo-conservatives in Washington were fond of remarking that “the road to Tehran runs through Baghdad.” The toppling of Saddam Hussein was to be the first step in remaking the map of the Middle East through military force. Syria and Iran were on the hit list, and even Saudi Arabia was suggested as a candidate for regime change.

    Three years after invading Iraq, the U.S. military is bogged down but that hasn’t cooled the ardor for invading Iran. Since late last year, the Bush administration has stepped up pressure on Iran. While there is no certainty that the United States will attack, the timing is suspicious: Why threaten a military strike possibly involving nuclear weapons against a country that, even by CIA estimates, is ten years away from building an A-bomb? In many ways, it seems a replay of the Iraq War: attack a reactionary Middle East regime with vast oil reserves over the issue of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism, pressure or bribe other countries and international institutions to join in the campaign, talk diplomacy but place intolerable conditions that doom any negotiations, all the while preparing for war.

    The maneuvering against Iran is part of a larger neo-conservative project to ensure U.S. global supremacy for the 21st century. The plans have been kicking around since 1992 when then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney oversaw Undersecretary for Policy Paul Wolfowitz in drafting a Pentagon planning document that stated, “In the Middle East and Southwest Asia, our overall objective is to remain the predominant outside power in the region and preserve U.S. and Western access to the region’s oil.”

    The larger goal was to prevent the emergence of a “new rival” on the scale of the Soviet Union, or even significant regional powers. After being formalized as the Project for a New American Century in 1997, the plan was put into action after the September 11 attacks. The network of U.S. bases established since then have been aimed at intervening in “critical” regions: the Middle East, Southwest Asia, Russia and former Soviet republics, East Europe, and East Asia. The main targets are China and Russia, which are seen as potential rivals. But Western Europe and Japan are targets in a different way. While they are defined as allies, the U.S. goal is to keep them dependent through military might and control of strategic oil and natural gas reserves.

    All about oil
    With regard to Iraq and Iran, it’s all about the oil. Tom O’Donnell, a physicist at the University of Michigan who studies the “globalized oil order,” says the reason a conflict with Iran is coming to a head now is because “there is a shortage of capacity in the oil sector and that can only be made up by the Gulf States in the Middle East, and Iraq and Iran are way below potential.” O’Donnell says that the International Energy Agency estimates that by 2020 the world will need a three-quarter increase in pumping capacity over 2001 to meet growing demand and that big oil projects “take seven to ten years to come on line.” Hence, the urgency felt by the U.S. government to deal with Iran now.

    Even today, the world is facing limits on crude oil production, as evidenced by record-high oil and gasoline prices. This is not due to “peak oil”-the idea that there are present-day geological limits to production-but rather U.S. foreign policy. The Middle East contains about two-thirds of the world’s known liquid crude oil reserves. After Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran are number two and three in the region and world, but have seen their oil industry hobbled by U.S. policy.

    For Iraq, sanctions kept oil exports under two million barrels a day after the oil-for-food program was established in 1997 (and virtually nothing for the six years prior to that). Iraq was also thwarted from making basic repairs to its oil industry. From 1998 to 2001, Iraq applied to purchase some $2.5 billion in spare parts for its oil industry allowed to it under the sanctions, but received only $953 million in goods.

    In terms of Iran’s oil industry, U.S. policy has been to throttle its development. On March 15, 1995, President Clinton issued Executive Order 12957, which banned U.S. companies from investing in Iran’s oil and natural gas industries. This was followed up two months later by another executive order forbidding all U.S. trade and investment with Iran. Then, in December 1995, Congress passed the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act, which threatened punishment of any foreign company investing more than $20 million in Iran’s energy sector in a single year.

    O’Donnell says few foreign companies are willing to make substantial investments in Iran’s energy sector because of the U.S. sanctions and recent threats by the Bush administration to penalize banks that provide financing to Iran. But “everyone is clamoring for investment, including American companies,” he adds. The Bush administration won’t allow Iran’s oil production to grow under the clerical regime, argues O’Donnell, because that will allow Iran to use oil as a weapon. Iran pumps 3.8 million barrels of oil a day, but it only exports 2.7 million. In an interview with Reuters Television on April 19, International Energy Agency Executive Director Claude Mandil underscored why Iran is currently unable to use oil as a weapon. Mandil said, “If we have to offset Iranian exports … we have kept over 4 billion barrels (of stocks), which can last several years.”

    Iran has repeatedly offered to give up uranium enrichment almost completely, as part of a “grand bargain” with the United States. In return, Iran wants a security guarantee that it will not be attacked, and sanctions lifted off its energy sector. After the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, Iran offered the Bush administration a “respectable effort to lay out a comprehensive agenda for U.S.-Iranian rapprochement,” the Washington Post reported on June 18. Iran “suggested everything was on the table-including full cooperation on nuclear programs, acceptance of Israel, and the termination of Iranian support for Palestinian militant groups.” Flush with “victory” however, the Bush administration spurned the proposal.

    As a precursor to negotiations, the Bush administration is demanding that Iran suspend all enrichment activity. In return, it’s offering Iran spare parts for aging airliners (from Boeing), support for entry into the World Trade Organization and light-water reactors. Iran has turned down the offer of light-water reactors, however, noting that it would be required to import enriched uranium to fuel them, leaving the country vulnerable to political pressure. Light-water reactors are also less efficient at producing plutonium than heavy-water reactors, one of which Iran has at Arak. Abundant in natural uranium, Iran says the issue is its legal right to enrich uranium for whatever type of reactor it employs.

    By giving up its one trump card- uranium enrichment-this deal would leave Iran with almost no bargaining power, no security guarantee, and no lifting of sanctions. The United States is essentially making an impossible demand on Iran, says O’Donnell, “because they want to inflame the conflict. They want to do it over nuclear weapons because it would look bad to do it over oil.”

    Domestic discontent
    At the same time, Iran’s ruling elite, often referred to as hardliners, as opposed to the opposition labeled reformists, also benefits from the confrontation with the United States. Faramaz Farbod, a native of Iran and an adjunct professor of political science at Moravian College in Bethlehem, PA, explains that President Mahmoud Ahmadenijad is “a second-generation revolutionary, a throwback to the 1979 era.” During the Islamic revolution in the late seventies, the hardliners used the hostage crisis to sweep away dissent. Now, says Farbod, “some would probably welcome a limited U.S. attack. It would allow them to get rid of all their opponents. Even short of a military confrontation, the present political confrontation also helps the hardliners in repressing dissent.”

    “These guys are not Saddam Hussein,” says Farbod, “they have a social base, albeit probably a shrinking one.” He describes the hardliners’ base as the domestic petite bourgeoisie, while their discourse is aimed at the poorer classes. Ahmadenijad’s government promises them “cheaper bank loans and tapping into oil reserve” funds to prop up the system of food and fuel subsidies.

    If Ahmadenijad “can’t remove the U.S. sanctions on Iran, he can’t deliver on these promises,” says Farbod. “This is one of their goals [in trying] to remove U.S. sanctions with the bargaining chip of uranium.” Iran is in an economic crisis that will only worsen, says Farbod. “The official unemployment rate is 15 percent. To keep pace with this rate, the government needs to create about 700,000 jobs a year. Most economists point to the fact that the government can produce only half of this. With unemployment, we have the problem of poverty. The population in Iran has doubled since the revolution. The economic situation is worse than in the late nineties. Many people have two, three jobs.”

    There are three facets to the economic crisis, explains Farbod. The first is “the petroleum curse, which makes for laziness on the side of the economic sector of countries that rely on petroleum.” About half of Iran’s governmental budget comes from oil and gas exports. The second is “the massive control that secretive foundations have over the economic lifeline of the republic, which are unaccountable. These are pseudo-religious foundations, since religion is political in Iran. They control almost all the domestic economic activities-service, agriculture, manufacturing. They have their tentacles everywhere…. We have no idea how the funds are used.”

    The third aspect is the U.S. sanctions, which “have limited the amount of direct foreign investment.” The sanctions also negatively affect “the climate of domestic investment by increasing the general insecurity of economic activity. Removing the sanctions would lead to greater growth, greater Foreign Direct Investment, increase the investment security domestically, and domestic sources of capital would feel more secure to invest their resources.”

    Ahmadenijad came to power following the failures of the reformists under former President Mohammad Khatami. Stymied by conservative factions, Khatami was “more interested in maintaining the regime of clerical power than reforming it.” Farbod says during the 1990s, “The whole dominant political discourse inaugurated by Khatami was on social freedoms, social democracy, participatory democracy, religious democracy, and civil society.” These themes have now been supplanted by “the economy, security, nuclear development.”

    But, Farbod adds, “These are code words. Ahmadenijad has introduced this discourse of independence that goes in part to the 1979 revolution as well as to the early 1950s when Iran’s popular Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeq nationalized the oil industry, took on the British empire, and gained tremendous popular respect at home. The regime’s focus on security and nuclear development is aimed-at least in part-at reproducing this legitimizing discourse.”

    Looking ahead, it would be a mistake to think that the United States will not attack Iran because it’s bogged down in Iraq, argues O’Donnell. Writing in the June issue of Z Magazine, he suggests that the United States would first try to cripple Iran’s air force, making Iran “susceptible to ground incursions by various forces hostile to the regime. These might include Kurdish, Azerbaijani, and other nationalist separatist forces, which have long fought against Iran’s central government.”

    Iran is clearly in a fix. The mullahs are loath to capitulate to U.S. demands since this would imperil them at home, while the United States has succeeded in uniting all the major capitalist powers behind it. Even Russia and China have demanded that Iran suspend uranium enrichment. Having had numerous chances to resolve the conflict peacefully, the Bush administration seems eager for war. An attack against Iran may come this fall, in an attempt to influence congressional elections. But even if it doesn’t, the Bush administration still has two-and-a-half years left to stir up trouble.

    A.K. Gupta is an editor of the Indypendent, a biweekly newspaper based in New York, indypendent.org, and a member of WIN’s publication committee.
    http://www.warresist…

Options? Full ceasefire in West Bank and Gaza!

Ever since Hamas was voted into power, they have wanted a comprehensive ceasefire. And this is the one thing that Israel has never agreed to consider, with IDF insisting that it would just give Hamas the opportunity to rearm, and of course insisting they will not open diplomacy with a group that they have defined as terrorists.

A year and a half after the Hamas elections, and a year after the IDF shelling of a Palestinian family on a Gaza beach, they are still no closer to stopping the Qassum rockets.

But the gangs are now in control of Gaza:

Qassam rockets endangering Peace Initiative in Israel
http://www.dailykos.com/...

What does the current Israeli plan look like?

IDF arresting 33 more Hamas political leaders:

    Special envoy to the Middle East expresses concern over Hamas leaders’ arrests in West Bank. IDF sources: We have not seen the last of these arrests

    snip

    “I’m troubled when I see Israeli soldiers arresting Palestinian legislators. I’m troubled that the education minister was arrested,” said Williams.

    Arrest Operation
    Israel arrests Palestinian minister of education / Ali Waked
    Palestinians report IDF forces raid Nablus overnight in arrest operation, taking 33 Hamas leaders into custody, including PA minister of education, mayors of Nablus, Qalqiliya

    “Of course legislators cannot be immune from the law. But what worries me is that in most cases, as I understand it, there haven’t been any charges…Let alone trials,” added Williams, referring to Israel’s arrest of Hamas lawmakers last year.
    http://www.ynetnews.com/...

And missile strikes recently killed a child and women just this week.

2006 looked like this:

IDF kills 28 Palestinians in West Bank and Gaza on Wednesday

    Israel Defense Forces soldiers killed 28 Palestinians across the West Bank and Gaza Strip on Wednesday. More than half of the fatalities were civilians killed by an errant IDF shell on the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanun.

    Twenty-one Qassam rockets were fired toward Israel on Wednesday, Army Radio reported, after IDF artillery shells struck a residential area in Beit Hanun in the early hours of the day, killing 19 and wounding dozens of others.

and this:

Why? Does Israel continue assassinations?
http://www.dailykos.com/...

Very little is said about Palestinian civilian casualties in the MSM.

Haartez staff tries to articulate how this situation was created:

    Without a doubt, a series of reasons – political, economic, social and others – have brought these troubles down on the Palestinians. However, the direct cause of what is happening now in the Gaza Strip is that the traditional Palestinian leadership (i.e. the top echelon of Fatah) was not prepared to transfer authority to the elected Hamas leadership.

    Many helped the Fatah leadership persist in its refusal to share rule with Hamas; this applies to all those who imposed a boycott on the Hamas government and the national unity government, including Israel, most of the Arab regimes and nearly the entire international community. All of them, rightly or not, tried and are still trying to help Fatah while trying to suppress Hamas.

    In the meantime, the result is bringing Gaza closer to Somalia.

    http://www.haaretz.com/...

What does USA do when it doesn’t like Democracy in Middle East?
http://www.dailykos.com/...

Israel and Bush and Company have put Haniyeh in an impossible situation since he was elected. For him to bring the radical gangs under control the Unity government must get support, and without a ceasefire in the West Bank it would be suicidal for him to confront the gangs now shooting the Qussams:

Qassam rockets endangering Peace Initiative in Israel
http://www.dailykos.com/...

One years and a half later and 100s killed, will we finally give the unity government a chance?

    Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas made a new push Wednesday to restore a cease-fire with Israel that collapsed under a barrage of Hamas rocket fire.

    The two leaders met for the first time since Hamas-Fatah fighting broke out two weeks ago and killed more than 50 Palestinians. The two sides reached a truce over the weekend, but tensions remain high because a key dispute over control of the security forces remains unresolved.
    snip
    A Haniyeh aide, Ahmed Yousef, said a renewed cease-fire with Israel would have to be comprehensive, and include the West Bank in addition to Gaza. The previous truce, brokered in November, applied only to the Gaza-Israel border, and Israel rejected repeated Palestinian demands that it also halt arrest raids in the West Bank.

    “If it is going to be for Gaza only, then no one will be able to convince the Palestinian resistance factions to commit to that,” Yousef said.
    http://www.jpost.com/...

Then Israel will have to confront the Settement issue head-on:

The Cottage Industry of Settlements in the West Bank
http://www.dailykos.com/...

Voices for a change in policy continue:

Are we finally “We are losing our belief in war?” I/P Diary.
http://www.dailykos.com/...

Some are questioning Israel long term motives:

Israel doesn’t want peace

An opinion piece from al Haaretz a popular Israeli newspaper:
By Gideon Levy
http://www.dailykos.com/...

Hamas moves:
Minister Ismail Haniyeh will recognize Israel UPDATED. War and Peace in the Palestine? Next move?
http://www.dailykos.com/...

And when even Elie Wiesel questions the Israeli governments actions and motives, it’s time to reassess.
Palestine: Nobel peace laureate Corrigan injured in anti-fence protest
http://www.dailykos.com/...

All kossacks want peace. If there is one thing that unities us all, it’s that. But we differ as to what actions must be taken, and how much pressure should be placed on Israel.

What do you think?

Israeli Right Winged Fanatic now in Charge of Iran Strategy

….In Israel of course. Olmert is claiming that he now needs a larger coalition after the criticism of his invasion of Lebanon, but instead of bringing in a more moderate politician, he has chosen instead to bring in the rightist of the right neo cons, Avigdor Lieberman, head of the Yisrael Beitenu and founder of Our Home Israel [http://en.wikipedia.org/...]. Lieberman represents a party that believes in further expansions in the west bank, then annexing all settlements into Israel and removing Palestinians from Israel proper. He has also been put in charge of a very sensitive area, Iran Strategic Defense. Olmert has been unsuccessful getting support for his aggression against Iran during his world tour, and since he has totally disregarded Bush’s Roadmap to Peace by continuing to build more and more settlements in the west bank, what makes anyone believe Israel cares one bit what the United States of America says. They seem to have both parties in their pockets anyway. UPDATED that is a very snarky comment, but I am leaving it to give context to comments down stream.

How do you Stir Iran anger and Palestinian anger on cue:

        Olmert brings in far right

        Olmert has reached a deal to broaden his shaky coalition by adding a far-right party that seeks to annex parts of the West Bank and reduce Israel’s Arab population.

        The move is seen as an attempt to stabilise the faltering coalition Government, which has been struggling for months. But the new partner — Israel Beiteinu, or Israel Is Our Home — strongly opposes concessions to the Palestinians.

        The deal signals that Mr Olmert is now more concerned with internal Israeli politics than with initiatives to deal with the Palestinians.

        The agreement changes the complexion of the Government, which previously presented itself as centrist. The shift has been caused largely by the two military crises in Gaza and Lebanon. Polls suggest Mr Olmert would be heavily defeated in an election now by more traditional, right-wing parties.

        The Prime Minister has already indicated that the central theme of his election campaign, a withdrawal from some Jewish settlements in the West Bank, has been put on indefinite hold. The latest development reinforces that notion.
        http://www.theage.com.au/….

        Hawkish Israeli party to join Olmert’s coalition
        Far-right leader to take charge of dealing with ‘strategic threats’

        (10-24) 04:00 PDT Jerusalem — Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert moved Monday to shore up his unpopular center-left coalition by adding a far-right party whose leader has advocated annexing parts of the occupied West Bank.

        Avigdor Lieberman, head of the hawkish Yisrael Beiteinu party, announced the deal after meeting with Olmert. “We are joining the government,” he said.

        Olmert said Lieberman will be given the rank of deputy prime minister and be put in charge of dealing with “strategic threats” to Israel, including Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
        http://www.sfgate.com/….

What party does Leiberman represent?
Out Home Land read more:
http://en.wikipedia.org/….

        West Bank settlements expanding steadily: report
        (AP)

        24 October 2006

        JERUSALEM – Jewish settlements are expanding in the occupied West Bank despite the building freeze demanded by a U.S.-led peace plan and sometimes in defiance of Israeli law, a paper said on Tuesday citing a government report.

        The left-leaning Haaretz daily said the findings came from a secret two-year study that came across what the newspaper called `rampant construction’. The report accused some unnamed Israeli officials of intentionally deleting records from a settlement database in order to conceal the scale of the expansion.

        `Construction there has been ongoing for years, in blatant violation of the law,’ the paper quoted the report as saying.

        snip
        Although Israel says it has the right to continue building inside existing settlements, Haaretz said construction had often been beyond the settlement boundaries and sometimes on privately owned Palestinian land.
        http://www.khaleejtimes.com/….

Trees and Whales, so what?

At a time when there are so many important issues, fires to put out literally, why does this subject tug at my very soul. When ever I see clear-cut, I mourn the giants. When I hear the word whaling my hair catches fire. A couple of years ago I moved to Washington state, and I could hardly wait to see my first old growth forest. I thought I was moving to the “real” north woods. Imagine my dismay when I had to buy a book to tell me where the small patches of old growth still existed, and they were miles and miles away. On the trip there, I would see miles and miles and miles of clear-cut. Like a desert that shouldn’t be.

And now when I thought we had put this issue to bed, today’s headlines:

Pro-whaling nations set to take control
Pro-whalers eye whaling commission
Japan buys votes to take control of whaling body
The forces that drive Japanese whaling

Below are snippets from the 4 articles:

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – Pro-whaling nations are expected to take control of the International Whaling Commission this week, giving them a majority of seats on the panel for the first time since it banned commercial hunting 20 years ago.

    snip

    Raphael Archibald, a spokesman for the St. Kitts delegation, said the commission’s focus should shift from strict conservation to sustainable fishing and whaling.

    “There are stocks of whales that are very abundant. What’s the idea of having them just there, increasing, increasing and increasing,” he said.

    snip

    In the Caribbean, Japan has given six countries — St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Antigua, Dominica, Grenada and St. Kitts — more than $100 million in fishing aid since 1998. Most of them have backed Japan on whaling.

    snip

    Pro-whaling countries need a 75 percent majority of those voting to repeal the commercial ban — considered unlikely — but a simple majority will allow them to make significant changes.

    snip

    “They’ll be able to control the voice of the IWC and make statements under the organization’s banner in support of commercial whaling,” said Bill Hogarth, head of the U.S. delegation.

    snip

    The pro-whaling nations likely will push for secret balloting, Papastavrou said.

    snip

    Iceland, Norway and Japan have killed 2,500 whales in the past 12 months, more than in any year since the ban took effect in 1986.

    link

    Japan has succeeded in buying the votes that will give it control of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) later this week, in a major step towards bringing back commercial hunting of whales.

    snip

    It will be a considerable propaganda victory not only for the Japanese, but also for other nations who are determined to continue whale hunting in spite of international opinion, principally Norway and Iceland.

    snip

    But it will enable it to make major changes in the IWC, such as stopping all its conservation work, stopping all discussions of animal welfare in relation to whaling, promoting the trade in whale products and reshaping the organisation in a more pro-whaling fashion.

    It will also allow the Japanese to get resolutions passed approving their so-called scientific whaling – the commercial whaling in disguise that the Japanese have resolutely continued since the ban. (This year they have been hunting nearly 1,000 minke whales in the Southern Ocean.)

    [linkhttp://news.independent.co.uk/...}

    As the International Whaling Commission prepares for its annual meeting on Friday, the BBC’s Chris Hogg in Tokyo says that for Japan, the whaling debate is more about culture than science.
    snip
    Japan’s government says its whaling fleet culled 863 whales last winter. The justification was science.
    snip
    Japan says it needs to collect data about whales – what are they eating? How old are they?
    snip
    …government says it needs to kill the whales in order to examine them closely and ensure the data is accurate.
    snip
    Masayuki Komatsu is the executive director of the government-funded Marine Fisheries Research and Development Department. Like many supporters of whaling he gives two main reasons for the cull. “Whale is abundant,” he says. “The number of fish is falling while the number of whales is rising. Surely the rapid increase in the whale population influences the level of the fish stocks? We need to know more about it.”
    snip

    Vocal minority

    Jeff Kingston, an academic who has studied the industry, is not so sure that is the case. This is “invented tradition”, he believes. The support for whaling, he says, is rooted in more nationalistic traditions.
    “This has become a touchstone issue for Japanese people who are sick and tired of being pushed around and told what to do by other countries like the United States,” he argues.
    “If the media and a few leaders tell them that whaling and eating whale meat is part of Japanese tradition and culture, people are willing to believe it.”
    Privately some senior officials in government admit that whaling policy has been hijacked by a small but vocal minority.

    ‘Natural right’

    At Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Deputy Press Secretary Tomohiko Taniguchi insists that official support for the whaling industry is based on more than simply pacifying a small group of activists.
    snip
    The Japanese government says people want to eat whale meat
    snip
    “They try to frame this in terms of culinary imperialism, saying, ‘The West is trying to tell us what to eat. We don’t tell them not to eat pigs or lambs that we find cute, so why should they tell us not to eat whales?’

    Impact abroad

    “This is not an industry that dictates the national interest,” he insists. “The whaling industry provides far less income than companies like Toyota or Nissan. So you have to put everything into perspective.”
    snip
    “They try to frame this in terms of culinary imperialism, saying, ‘The West is trying to tell us what to eat. We don’t tell them not to eat pigs or lambs that we find cute, so why should they tell us not to eat whales?’

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/...

I have but one question, if the whaling issue is driven by a small minority of culturely sensitive people and it accounts for very little of their GDP, how would the Japanese feel if Americans quit buying their cars and toys? Buy a Japanese car, kill a whale? How important is it to us? After all….it’s only an animal. An animal with a language, a beautiful magestic creature, that since the ban on whaling has gone to effect, has now started approaching humans in boats. They, just as curious about us, as we of them. Will they now run in fear when humans are around, like their ancestors? Please tell me we can stop this. Close your wallets to the whaling nations. Please.

One very simple thing to do is call all the Japanese car dealers in your area and complain. They will tell there is nothing they can do, but believe me, if they get enough calls the message will get through.

Are the whales worth saving?
Would you ban products from countries promoting whaling?
This is a non-issue we have more important problems to resolve?
It is a spiritual issue for me and I will do what I can?