Sea Shepherd Australia however is not answerable to the U.S. Court but they feel duty bound to uphold the court order of the Australian Federal Court prohibiting whaling in Australian waters.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society of all nations have never been convicted of a criminal action in the entire history of the Sea Shepherd movement and this is a record that Sea Shepherd groups of all nations intend to keep.
One of the problems in the modern world however is that wealthy nations and wealthy corporations consistently abuse the law.
Australia is presently working to bring Japan to the International Court of Justice and hopefully this case will be heard sometime within the next year. Australia and Japan hold the position that Japanese whaling in the Southern Ocean under the guise of “scientific research” whaling is illegal.
The United States government has chosen to sit on the fence although the U.S. Ninth District Court has apparently taken a pro whaling stance.
Although I disagree with the injunction imposed by the U.S. Court I am duty bound to comply with it because I am a citizen of the United States. Sea Shepherd USA is also duty bound to comply with the injunction.
Sea Shepherd groups outside of the United States are not bound by a U.S. Court order and in the case of Australia, Sea Shepherd Australia is operating in a manner to uphold the rulings of the Australian Federal Court.
Sea Shepherd ships are allowed unrestricted access to Australian and New Zealand ports. Japanese whaling ships are banned from entry into Australian and New Zealand ports. Any Japanese whaling ship that enters an Australian port would be subject to arrest by Australian authorities for contempt and for unlawfully killing whales in Australian waters.
Sea Shepherd Australia led Operation Zero Tolerance which successfully brought down the kill figures by the Japanese whalers to just under 10%. Operation Zero Tolerance was the most successful of the nine campaigns Sea Shepherd has undertaken to the Southern Ocean.
The Japanese whalers described Operation Zero Tolerance as “violent, relentless” and strangely they also described it as “inhumane”. George Orwell would have chuckled at the irony of that statement.
During Operation Zero Tolerance there was not a single violent action initiated by the Sea Shepherd crew. The whaling ships deliberately and violently attacked the Sea Shepherd ships.
But because the whalers described Sea Shepherd as “relentless”, Sea Shepherd Australia decided to name the next campaign as “Operation Relentless.”
I led the first eight campaigns to the Southern Ocean but over the years, an experienced network of Sea Shepherd directors and crew have evolved so that the helm that I was forced to step away from by the U.S. Court imposed injunction was immediately taken over by Sea Shepherd activists outside of the United States to keep the campaigns on course.
Last month Peter Bethune signed a declaration that he was forced to accuse me of ordering him to board the Japanese security ship Shonan Maru #2. This accusation is the sole basis for the Japanese issuing an arrest warrant for me that has placed me on the Interpol Red List.
In 2010, Japan gave Bethune a suspended sentence in return for that accusation. The question now is whether Interpol will take this into account and drop this listing on the grounds that the listing was politically motivated and without substantial evidence.
I hope they will see the justice of the case but the fact remains that Japan has a army of lawyers to throw at Sea Shepherd and I and the reality is that we am up against one of the great economic super powers on the planet.
But despite the obstacles and the inconvenience of my situation, I am happy with what Sea Shepherd has achieved over the last decade. The thousands of whales that we have saved have been worth the sacrifices.
It has never been easy. From the days of challenging the Soviet whaling fleet in the North Pacific in 1975 to our landing in Siberia in 1981 to get evidence on illegal Soviet whaling in 1981 to stopping the pirate whalers in the Atlantic throughout the Eighties to challenging the illegal operations of the Japanese whaling fleet for the last ten years, my life has been dedicated to saving the lives of whales and doing so aggressively but nonviolently. Thousands of lives saved and none taken and no injuries caused.
No matter what our critics say, not matter what the consequences, the one thing that can never be taken away from us are the lives we have saved, the laws we have helped to bring into play and the criminal operations we have shut down.
Although I am no longer directing Sea Shepherd campaigns I am confident that the Southern Ocean campaigns are in competent hands and that the Sea Shepherd crews will continue to save the lives of whales from the criminal operations of the Japanese whaling fleet.