Is
there a word to adequately describe this?
US
Navy to deploy combat dolphins for Black Sea military drills –
report
American
combat dolphins and sea lions will undergo a lengthy plane flight in
order to participate in NATO war games in the Black Sea, a spokesman
for the US Navy's marine mammals program reportedly said.
RT,
21
April, 2014
Twenty
dolphins and ten sea lions will take part in the drills, which will
last between one and two weeks, spokesman Tom LaPuzza said, as cited
by Izvestia newspaper.
The
war games are one of eight joint NATO-Ukrainian military exercises
scheduled to take place this year.
During
their Black Sea stay, the US dolphins will test a new anti-radar
system, designed to disorientate enemy sonars. Both sea lions and
dolphins will look for mines and military divers, LaPuzza said.
According
to the spokesman, the exercises will be held within the framework of
the marine mammals training program, which includes the protection of
ships and harbors, as well as mine detection by animals.
New
armor for dolphins, developed at a specialized research center at the
University of Hawaii, will also be put to the test in the Black Sea,
he added.
The
marine mammals will be transferred from their base in San Diego,
California to the Black Sea via a plane equipped with a special bath,
the spokesman told the paper.
Such
means of transportation were previously used to deliver dolphins to a
drill on the island of New Caledonia in the Pacific Ocean back in
2009.
This
will be the first time in history that dolphins have participated in
a NATO drill, LaPuzza stressed.
The
exercise may also become the first time that US military dolphins
meet their Russian counterparts in the open seas, as San Diego and
Sevastopol host the world’s only military dolphin training
facilities.
A USS Navy trained dolphin jumps from
the sea revealing a detecting device on the fin during a patrol in
Manama, Bahrain, August 11, 2003. (Reuters/Hamad I Mohammed)
Around
100 bottlenose dolphins, California sea lions, and beluga whales are
currently active in the US Navy, according to LaPuzza.
The
transportation of US combat dolphins to the Black Sea by air is a
very expensive task which comes with a huge risk to the health of the
animals, Yury Plyachenko, who commanded the Black Sea Fleet’s
military dolphins in 1988-92, said.
“There
must be a very good reason to make the animals travel over such
distances in a plane. We shouldn’t forget that a lot of money was
invested into their training,” he
told RIA Novosti.
Plyachenko
believes the US plans are likely to prompt outcry from Greenpeace and
other animal rights groups.
During
the USSR, the Soviet Navy planned to take their dolphins to the
Mediterranean Sea for training, but the exercise was cancelled under
pressure from the international community, he reminded.
The
flight from the US Pacific coast to the Black Sea would be harmful
for the dolphins, said Konstantin Zgurovsky, head of the maritime
program at World Wide Fund Russia.
“Transport
by an aircraft, loading and unloading – it’s all stressful for
the animals. Strong pressure drops and confined space is unhealthy
for the marine mammals,” Zgurovsky
stressed.
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