Greenpeace Denounces Sea Shepherd Society. Paul Watson Replies…

by TRI

Greenpeace Condemns Sea Shepherd in Japan

Commentary by Captain Paul Watson

First they launch a campaign where Greenpeace activists eat whale meat, then they show up in the Antarctic Whale Sanctuary to offer aid and assistance to the damaged Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru and now the Greenpeace ship Esperanza has berthed in Yokohama, Japan with a message for the Japanese people.

And that message is that they love Japan, but please don’t kill whales in the Antarctic Sanctuary and oh, by the way, we have no connection with, and we condemn the activists of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.

Gee, I wonder what happened to the aggressive in their face media savvy hard hitting environmental organization that I co-founded way back in 1972. Back then we shut down whalers on the high seas and equated eating whale meat with cannibalism.

Greenpeace is wrong when they say there is no connection between Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd. Not only am I a co-founder of Greenpeace and Greenpeace International in 1979, the ship we confronted the Japanese whalers with is named the Robert Hunter, also a co-founder and the first President of the Greenpeace Foundation. In fact the lateRobert Hunter is THE founding father of Greenpeace and without his vision, there would be no Greenpeace Foundation today and all those hired crew on the Esperanza would not be so well paid and sitting down to their steak and seafood dinners on the Esperanza each day. (Greenpeace ridicules the vegetarian menu of the Sea Shepherd ships)

This year I had Emily Hunter on the crew of our ship the Robert Hunter. The daughter of Robert Hunter was also joined by Rod Marining, another co-founder of Greenpeace.

What was really shocking is that none of the crew on the Esperanza appeared to have even heard of Robert Hunter.

Despite this, Sea Shepherd provided Greenpeace with the daily coordinates to find the Japanese whaling fleet. They took their time arriving, having stayed in Auckland milking the public for donations as the Sea Shepherd crew undertook high profile confrontations with the whale killers. The Greenpeace ship Esperanza arrived just in time to make a show of offering assistance to the damaged whaling ship.

And now they are in Japan. For the last few days they have been whining about the fact that the Japanese refused to allow them to dock. The issue was that the agent they had hired had withdrawn his services in protest. Officially they were allowed to dock and they have. But they got some ink out of the incident.

Sea Shepherd would not be allowed to dock and we would not be expected to be allowed to dock. The difference is that Sea Shepherd is a direct threat to Japanese whaling interests and Greenpeace is not. The other irony is that New Zealand and Australia deny docking privileges to the whalers so why would anyone be surprised that the Japanese would retaliate.

Lets hope that the Japanese don’t appeal to Australia and New Zealand to be treated the same way Japan is treating Greenpeace. We don’t want Japanese whaling ships docking in New Zealand and Australia.

I wish Greenpeace all the success in the world in their efforts to initiate a “debate” over the whaling issue in Japan. It’s their money and they can spend it how they see fit although I anticipate lots of debates in the sushi bars accompanied by large volumes of sake.

They can all toast their hosts, eat whale meat to show they are not opposed to Japanese culture and they can come together on the one thing they disagree with and that is both the whalers and the Greenpeacers condemn Sea Shepherd.

And so they should, because we are a threat to both. The only thing making more money off whaling than the Japanese whalers is the Greenpeace Foundation. Last year Greenpeace brought in tens of millions of dollars from their millions of members to “save the whales”.

There is lots of money in saving whales if you invest the money into direct mail campaigns, television and internet advertising and door to door solicitation campaigns. That is where Greenpeace funding primarily is directed – towards raising more funds in order to pay the wages and the operating expenses of what has become one of the largest feel good organizations in the world. Let’s face it Greenpeace has become the generic environmental organization and people feel when they join Greenpeace that they are part of the solution and not part of the problem.

This is somewhat similar to when Pope Rodrigo Borgia once promised heaven to large donors to the church. It’s now special ecological dispensation.

But the fact is that the strength of any movement lies in diversity and it is the diversity of tens of thousands of small grass roots organizations and individuals that is making the difference. As activists struggle in the field financially, the larger organizations rake in hundreds of millions of dollars pretending to address the issues but not wanting to rock the boat for fear of offending part of their donor base.

I know of what I speak. Not only am I a founding director of Greenpeace, I was also a Board member of the Sierra Club USA (2003-2006) and I saw incredible waste of funds and a smoke and mirrors approach of appearing to address problems but not doing very much at all.

The best way to tell the difference between the Sea Shepherd approach to whaling and that of Greenpeace is this: When Greenpeace shows up in Antarctica, they film whaling and buzz the whalers in inflatable boats. The whalers simply continue whaling looking at Greenpeacers as a minor annoyance. When Sea Shepherd ships show up, the whalers stop the killing and they run.

When people ask us why we don’t have video images of whales being killed our answer is that since 1977, the year I left Greenpeace, I have not seen a whale die. I saw plenty of whales die when I was with Greenpeace and I was forced to watch frustrated and helpless as the whales screamed in agony and died in their own blood and we were forbidden to interfere.

Greenpeace accuses Sea Shepherd of being violent yet in 30 years of operations we have not injured a single person nor have we had a single crewmember seriously injured. We have not been convicted of a single felony. Greenpeace has had numerous felony convictions and they have had activists killed and injured.

But Greenpeace is desperate to appease the Japanese and towards this end they are condemning the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society as an eco-terrorist organization and trying to convince the Japanese whalers that there is no connection between Sea Shepherd and Greenpeace.

There is a connection and that is the fact that the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is the original Greenpeace Foundation the way it was before the six figure executive salaries and the thirty million dollar luxury ships that they can no longer afford to lose.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is not interested in touring Japan, sharing whale meat and sake with whale killers and we are not interested in entering years of fruitless debates with the Japanese public over whaling. The majority of the Canadian public is against the seal hunt yet it continues.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is interested in simply upholding international conservation law by directly intervening against criminal whaling operations. We are not interested in protesting whaling or profiting on the save the whales movement. We are interested in only one thing and that is shutting down the whalers.

If Greenpeace wishes to condemn that objective and to condemn our interventions, that is their choice, but that kind of approach is not going to save a single whale but it may get some drinks bought for them in Tokyo this week.

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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Vivienne of Heidelberg 04.22.07 at 10:53 pm

It is a shame these two great anti-whaling organisations can’t agree to differ and work together to fight this evil. Sea Shepherd is a law enforcement agency, and Greenpeace is a protest environmental organisation. With two of them working together and actually supporting each other, they may have a greater support base. Japan’s government is so arrogant they do not need lapping up to. Australia should not allow any Japanese ships into our ports and the navy should stop whaling. The Whale Sanctuary is being left to non-government organisations to patrol - this is the tragedy - and it is hard and expensive to be effective against the great wealth of this Japanese industry.

tovorinok 07.05.07 at 7:37 am

Hello

Great book. I just want to say what a fantastic thing you are doing! Good luck!

G’night

mallory 11.20.07 at 8:25 am

This is quite untrue. Seafood is not allowed on the boats. Strangely, some are meat eaters but most are vegetarian. But seafood is not allowed.

A lot of your comments about greenpeace are wrong too. if you read their campaigns correctly..they did not eat whale meat…they served canned meat to the danish embassy.

Can’t you save your nasty comments for the real environmental criminals?

Ashley Friedrich 01.16.08 at 11:52 am

The sanctuary is located at your country. I hope the whole Australian community will be so vigilant in protecting these santuaries. If any Japanese vessel is caught without prior notice before entering the area of responsiblity, should be heavily penalized.

The United Nations should make an immediate action on this serious issues. The world should start to punish Japan for lying:

1.Lying that the whales caught are for research??
2.Outsmarting their buyers that dolphins,sharks meat are whale meats.
3.That the two men they held are terrorists 4.

Japanese from the start has been so ruthless and abusive. I wonder why they dont slaughter and eat themselves and spare these animals.

They havent evolved and it is seen here who are the animals.

AM SO PROUD OF GREENPEACE AND CAPTAIN WATSON!

Amber 05.22.08 at 7:14 pm

I’m sorry, but I have to disagree with many of the things written in this article. How does being anti-Japanese help the anti-whaling campaigns? Most of the environmental problems of today are global- and that requires global cooperation, and the one of the best way to do this is through political avenues. This requires debates- it is hardly wasting time and money. It keeps political and government avenues open for environmental issues, which in an increasingly globalised world, is of extreme importance.
While a presence in the Southern Ocean physically stopping whalers from killing whales is extremely important, it is a short term solution, that in the long run could prove to be very costly. Greenpeace is interested in a long term solution, which is why they are seeking political avenues to solve the problem. Greenpeace campaign includes high level campaign work and a campaign in Japan, to educate the Japanese people about whaling, so that the Japanese public can put pressure on their own government.
I think it is very important to remember that Greenpeace also has many other important projects, such as climate change, nuclear energy, genetically modified foods and other oceanic issues, such as the overfishing in the Pacific islands. Whaling is just one of the campaigns and the money it collects get distributed to many different areas.
Also, I think Greenpeace and the Sea Shepard simply have different ideas about violent and non-violent protest. Greenpeace is a non-violent organization, and ramming ships, for Greenpeace, is a violent form of protest, regardless of whether someone gets hurt or not.

TRI 11.10.08 at 2:35 pm

If you saw a pedophile picking up a kid near a school, would you stop, let him get away with the kid, and call the cops? Or would you cut him off, harass him, and even “ram” his car to save the kid from a lifetime of hell?

How you answer that question defines you as either a human being, or something else.

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