To: olympiansforpeace@lists.riseup.net Subject: [OMJP] OMJP in the news... The Olympian May 18, 2004 Activists say submarine not welcome Navy quiet on whether USS Olympia will visit JIM SZYMANSKI AND HEATHER WOODWARD THE OLYMPIAN OLYMPIA -- The possibility that a nuclear-powered submarine will visit Olympia this year has peace groups trying to block its arrival. A peace activist asked Thurston County and port commissioners Monday to cancel any planned visit, and activists vowed to make the same request of the Olympia City Council today. Though a Navy spokeswoman has declined to discuss whether the USS Olympia plans a visit here, a spokesperson for Secretary of State Sam Reed said his office has received a Navy message about a possible visit by a vessel this year or next year. "They (Navy) may be making a port call," Patrick McDonald, an assistant to Reed, said Monday. "It's all secret squirrel stuff. That's all we've kind of heard." McDonald said the e-mail message suggested no dates for an Olympia visit. Jim Wright, a liaison to the port for the Navy League of retired servicemen, said he was unaware that any decision has been made regarding a Navy vessel's visit to Olympia. The USS Olympia attack sub, named after a Navy cruiser decommissioned in 1922, has visited the city five times since 1984. The latest was in 1998. It launched in 1983 and calls Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, its homeport. During the 1994 visit, a group of about two dozen protesters held a peace vigil near the boat. An estimated 3,000 people toured the boat on its 1998 visit to Olympia. Lt. Barbara Mertz, a Navy spokeswoman for its submarine group, said Navy policy is not to confirm the arrival of a sub sooner than 48 hours before its arrival. She cited heightened national security concerns following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Peace activist Lawrence Mosqueda, who teaches at Evergreen State College, asked Thurston County commissioners and port commissioners on Monday to consider blocking any visits by a sub to Olympia. "I'm sure a lot of people in the community are upset about this," he said. "This is like bringing a weapon of mass destruction to Olympia." Mosqueda said he was concerned about safety and wondered whether a visit would include the presence of nuclear weapons. John Wolfe, the port's executive director, said he could not confirm any information regarding an Olympia visit by the boat. "There is interest in the call," he told Mosqueda, but declined further comment. Mosqueda asked county and port commissioners to declare the county a "nuclear free" zone. Mosqueda is a member of the Olympia Movement for Justice and Peace. He and other peace activists have declined to discuss why it is that they suspect a visit. "Especially now, when we're engaged in a terrible and brutal war against the people of Iraq ... Olympia should not be celebrating a war machine," Mosqueda told county commissioners. Though county commissioners did not respond to Mosqueda, port commissioners did. If a boat calls, Wolfe said, "there would be multiple layers of security." Commissioner Bob Van Schoorl said he expected protests if a Navy boat calls on Olympia. "I think it's a given," he said. Commissioner Steve Pottle said the region is divided about its support for the military and combat. "There are people who oppose it and people who support it," Pottle said. "I think we'll be very careful if they come. I just don't think we're in a position to disinvite them." County Commissioner Cathy Wolfe told Mosqueda that she and her colleagues rarely take positions on matters over which they have no direct control. For the past week, Olympia peace activist Alice Zillah has been urging sympathizers by e-mail to lobby elected officials to stop any plans for a visit by the Navy. Zillah has protested the presence of nuclear submarines at the naval base in Bangor. "I'm very concerned about it for reasons of safety," Zillah said on Monday. "And I don't feel that Olympia officials should be celebrating a machine of war while this terrible conflict is on in Iraq." Jim Szymanski covers business for The Olympian. He can be reached at 360-357-0748 or jszymans@olympia.gannett.com. Heather Woodward covers county government and Tumwater for The Olympian. She can be reached at 360-754-5435 or hwoodward@olympia.gannett.com.