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Bush tells Canada's Harper
energy-rich Arctic belongs to world
RIA
Novosti
Tuesday Aug 21, 2007
The U.S. president reiterated Washington's commitment to
international status for the energy-rich Arctic shelf during a
meeting with the Canadian premier Monday, a senior White House
official said.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been insisting on Canada's
sovereignty over the Arctic shelf, but other Arctic Circle countries
- the U.S., Denmark, Norway and Russia - have also applied with
the UN for control over the area.
Dan Fisk, senior director for Western Hemisphere Affairs of the
U.S. National Security Council, said Harper conveyed his concerns
to George W. Bush during their summit meeting in Montebello, on
the north shore of the Ottawa River, about 44 miles east of Ottawa.
Harper cited remarks made by Paul Cellucci, a former U.S. ambassador
to Canada, who told Canada's CTV Sunday that it would make sense
to recognize Canada's sovereignty over the Northwest Passage in
the Arctic. Bush promised to take Cellucci's opinion into consideration,
a Canadian government official said.
(Article continues below)
The Canada-based newspaper The Globe and Mail said Monday the
country had been building up a military presence in the Arctic
and had already held four exercises in the area this year.
The Canadian premier also recently announced plans to build a
deep sea port and a military training center in the Arctic to
back Canada's bid for the region, the paper said.
Under international law, the five Arctic Circle countries each
have a 322-kilometer (200-mile) economic zone in the Arctic Ocean
at the moment.
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