THE ALASKA PIPELINE
In
1973, following years of study and judicial delay, Senator Gravel
introduced an amendment to empower the Congress to make the policy
decision about the construction of the Alaska Oil Pipeline. Initially,
the amendment was opposed in all quarters, by state and federal
officials, the labor movement, and the oil industry. Alone at the
beginning, Mike Gravel built support and gained allies who, in the end,
helped secure the amendment's passage in the Senate by a single vote.
This accomplishment placed Alaska on a new economic footing. The
pipeline has been responsible for 20% of the U.S. oil supply, has
contributed substantially to the nation's balance of payments, and has
yielded economic benefits that dramatically improved the quality of life
across Alaskan society. A recent retrospective analysis has revealed
that, absent Senator Gravel's amendment, the pipeline would probably not
have been built, relegating the nation to greater foreign dependency and
environmental pollution.
CANNIKIN NUCLEAR TESTS
In the
late 1960s and early 1970s, the Pentagon was performing five calibration
tests for a nuclear missile warhead that, upon investigation, was
revealed to be obsolete. Yet the tests, involving the detonation of
nuclear warheads under the seabed of the North Pacific at Amchitka
Island, Alaska (an earthquake prone area) were scheduled to continue.
These tests created large caverns under the seabed, encapsulating
nuclear wastes with life-threatening properties that would last more
than a thousand years. These caverns could rupture during an earthquake,
spewing contaminated wastes into the food chain of the North Pacific,
thereby compromising one of the planet’s major sources of food. Mike
Gravel fought the tests in Congress, but he also went beyond his role as
a Senator to organize worldwide environmental opposition to the
Pentagon's plans. He succeeded in halting the program after the second
test, limiting the expansion of this threat to the marine environment of
the North Pacific.
“THE PEACEFUL ATOM”
In the
decades of the 1950s and 1960s, nuclear fission was considered an
environmentally clean alternative for the generation of commercial
electricity and was part of a popular national policy for the peaceful
use of atomic energy. Mike Gravel was the first in Congress to publicly
oppose this national nuclear policy in 1970, and he used his office to
organize citizen opposition, successfully persuading Ralph Nader's
organization to join the fight. Senator Gravel's initial efforts, and
later those of the environmental movement that had coalesced in
opposition, contributed to making the production of commercial
electricity through nuclear fission uneconomical. The wisdom of this
change in policy, was confirmed by the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl
disasters. Mike Gravel had applied the brakes to a headlong policy that
was threatening the global environment by producing nuclear wastes and
proliferating bomb-grade nuclear materials.
PEACETIME DRAFT
In May
1971, Senator Gravel began a one-man filibuster that continued into
September, forcing a deal to let the military draft expire. The drafting
of the nation's youth had been defense policy since 1947. In order to
save face and break the Senator's filibuster, the Nixon administration
agreed to let the draft expire in 1973 if given a two-year extension in
1971.
THE PENTAGON
PAPERS
Daniel Ellsberg, a former Pentagon analyst who
helped write the secret Pentagon Papers, attempted to secure the Papers’
release through a member of Congress in order to provide legal
protection for the release of this highly classified historical study
that detailed how the United States had ensnared itself in the Vietnam
War. After congressional leaders Ellsberg initially approached failed to
act, he turned to the New York Times and Washington
Post, which then published excerpts of the study in June 1971.
The Nixon Justice Department sought an injunction against the
newspapers, and a Supreme Court decision that was due at the end of June
put the publishers at risk. The day before the Supreme Court decision,
in an effort to moot any action that might intimidate the newspapers,
Mike Gravel officially released the Pentagon Papers in his capacity as a
Senator communicating with his constituency. As it happened, the Supreme
Court did not rule against the Fourth Estate, but Senator Gravel
continued to press for release of the full text of the Pentagon Papers
by publishing the papers in book form. He was turned down by every major
(and not-so-major) publishing house in the nation, save one. Beacon
Press, the publishing arm of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship,
faced down the Nixon Administration by publishingThe Senator Gravel
Edition, The Pentagon Papers.
The Justice Department next brought legal action against Beacon Press and against the Senator's editor, Dr. David Rotberg. Mike Gravel intervened in the case, using his Senate office as a shield for Beacon Press and Rotberg. Decisions at the District Court and the Court of Appeals protected the Senator from prosecution but left Beacon Press and Rotberg at risk, so, against the advice of his attorneys, Gravel took the matter to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court rendered a landmark constitutional decision in the spring of 1972, narrowly defining the prerogatives of an elected representative with respect to the “speech or debate” clause of the constitution. Senator Gravel's defeat before the Supreme Court placed him at risk of prosecution, along with Beacon Press and Rotberg. With Watergate afoot, the Nixon Justice Department lost interest in the prosecution of Ellsberg, Gravel and Rotberg. However, the Court's decision did set the stage for its later decision on the Nixon Tapes, forcing Nixon's resignation from the Presidency.
A GREEK
RELATIONSHIP
In the 1970s, Elias Demetracopoulos, an
exiled Greek journalist living in Washington, D.C., recruited Mike
Gravel to use his position in the U.S. Senate to speak out against the
Nixon Administration's support of the Colonels in Athens. Both the Greek
Junta and the Nixon Administration were trying to silence Mr.
Demetracopoulos' effective leadership in building American opposition to
the military dictatorship in Greece. Senator Gravel was an outspoken
ally in this effort and gave Demetracopoulos personal succor. The
Senator also counseled with Merlena Mercouri and her husband, Jules
Dassin, in their opposition to the Junta, and used his influence,
publicly and privately, to side with the Greek national position on the
Cyprus Question.
ENVIRONMENT
The decade of
the 1970s saw the awakening by federal and state legislatures to the
need to control environmental pollution. Mike Gravel ’s service on the
Environment and Public Works Committee throughout his Senate career
placed him in a leadership role on every major piece of environmental
legislation dealing with air, water, waste, and energy that emerged from
the U.S. Congress during this period.
LAW OF THE SEA
In the
mid-1970s, the United Nations was moving toward the codification of a
legal regime for the oceans that cover two-thirds of the earth's
surface. Senator Gravel worked with UN leaders and committees, the
Secretary of State, our UN ambassador, and other agencies of government
to advance the UN's adoption of the Convention on the Law of the Sea --
despite the opposition of the fishing industry in his home state of
Alaska. The momentum behind the UN effort was undermined by legislation
introduced by the powerful Senator Warren Magnuson and his Alaskan
colleague, Senator Ted Stevens -- legislation that permitted the U.S. to
unilaterally take control of the 200-mile waters bordering its land
mass. Senator Gravel successfully delayed this legislation for two years
in the hope that the UN would act first, but his opposition ultimately
failed to stop its passage. Efforts at the UN lost momentum, and
agreement was not reached until 1982. Shamefully, the U.S. is the only
nation in the world that has failed to ratify the Law of the Sea
Convention.
RED
CHINA
Six months before Henry Kissinger's secret mission
to the People's Republic of China (PRC), Senator Gravel introduced
unpopular legislation to recognize and normalize relations with the PRC,
in the hope of bringing about a re-examination of our outdated policy
towards the Chinese people.
NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT
ACT
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act was the
first major political settlement of aboriginal claims, which were
customarily dealt with what came to be recognized as a biased process.
Senator Gravel co-authored the legislation and provided outspoken
leadership for some of its important, but less popular, land-use
features in the Settlement Act. He was responsible for removing the
federal government's paternalistic role in the management of native
economic affairs once the settlement had been approved by Congress.
SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
In
the early 1970s, Senator Gravel pioneered satellite communications
through a demonstration project that established links between Alaskan
villages and the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland,
for medical diagnostic communications. He then developed a proposal for
the Alaska Legislature for a satellite communications and video
transmission system, which has since been implemented, making Alaska's
system the most advanced in the U.S.
AGSOC
In
an effort to broaden the ownership of capital in our society, Senator
Gravel authored and secured the passage into law of the General Stock
Ownership Corporation (GSOC), Subchapter U of the Tax Code. With the
hope of first using this law in Alaska, he brought about a ballot
initiative in the state's general election of 1980 on the creation of an
Alaska General Stock Ownership Corporation (AGSOG). As part of this
effort, he negotiated a tentative agreement with the British Petroleum
Company to sell its interest in the Alaska Pipeline to the AGSOC. The
electorate failed to approve the AGSOC initiative. BP now considers its
pipeline interest to be one of the most profitable of its Alaska
holdings. Had the AGSOC been approved and the purchase consummated, it
would be paying out dividends of several hundred dollars annually to
every citizen/shareholder in Alaska.
CIRCUMPOLAR CONFERENCE
The
Inuit peoples populate the Arctic regions of the globe. At Senator
Gravel's instigation, and with a private grant he secured, the Alaskan
North Slope native leadership organized a circumpolar conference
attended by Inuit representatives from Canada, Greenland, and Norway.
Their periodic convocations on culture, environment, and other regional
concerns now include representation from Russia.
RECORD IN ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE
Mike
Gravel served in the Alaska House of Representatives from 1963 to 1966,
and as Speaker from 1965 to 1966. Among his accomplishments at the state
include:
ALASKAN HIGH SCHOOL
SYSTEM
Authored legislation that established the
structure and budget for a regional high school system for rural
Alaska, permitting native students to receive their education near
their homes rather than travel to the Bureau of Indian Affairs'
schools outside Alaska.
LEGISLATIVE AND OTHER
REFORMS
He effected legislative reforms, securing
budgets to provide staffs for members and to expand research and
support facilities, initiated electronic voting, and developed an
intra-session hearing process throughout the state that fostered
citizen participation.