Originally posted by W.I.N.T.E.R
ok- whatever, I still consider being called an "idiot" to be an insult.
ok- whatever, I still consider being called an "idiot" to be an insult.
Besides- other country's shores are close, and their area of influence will overlapp with that of Germany- so how is it explainable that you are claiming that these 200 miles are one countries national borders if mor that one country share these?
If we can impound a foreign vessel, in this case a Spanish fish factory, then deport the crew, how is that any different from having "National Sovereignty" over those waters. What exactly is your criteria? We told the Spanish to leave, the UN backed us up. It certainly indicates to me that those are our waters.
Granted I'm not a lawyer, but I fail to see the distinction.
Canada was in fact not allowed to use force against the Spanish vessels-
Nonetheless, this fact does not change the reality that Cnada has been conceeded authority over the resources and shipping regulations in this zone- yet is not, for instance, allowed to make arrests or the like yet to protect its property (in this case the fish stock).
And like I said, I'm no lawyer so there's no doubt some subtlety I'm missing. But it seems to me that for all intensive purposes, those 200 miles belong to the coastal nation, not the international community. Whether it's economic or national sovereignty, the end result remains the same. If we don't want someone in our waters, we can tell them to leave. And they will have to go or face the consequences.

). Now, in the Caspian the Iranies are patroling south of these new finds within their 200 mile zone and do not allow anybody to actually make probes their (or build a rigg)- they are even questioning the common believe that the Caspian is truelly a sea- they say it is a lake... and this would mean that the entire water area would be split according to the coastal % of each state- and Iran would therefor gain legal and unique access to the otherwise disputed oil fields (if the Caspian "Sea" is really a lake then they are likely to get away with that and in fact incorporate large parts of the Caspian into its national territory). The problem is that the treaties between Iran and the USSR are not up-to -date anymore and the small former Soviet republics have no concrete treaties with Iran that would regulate such a find within the shared economic zone. And since Russia is far and has no chance of getting hold of the oild through international maritime regulation Iran is the runner up at the time.
A bit out of league of Al-quaeidea (sp?), hmmm?
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