Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING SESSION Remote Viewer LB Interviewer FA Observer(s) Date 02/12/85 Starting Time 1325 hours,local Site 0084 Site Acquisit.: CRV (CRV ERV PRV ARV BRV Other Working Mode GT (GT HE Other Feedback class: C A B C Other Ending time 1356 hours, local Notes 56 30'N 169 38' 15"W Highest stage 02 Evaluation DESCRIPTION OF SITE Actual Pribilof Islands, St. George, Alaska RV summ.: Land/water interface, land is flat.Rocks, rising-very tall, green, cold, wind sounds, misty-AOL feels like a cliff Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 ES 6b I-S Sc. S 'A L A9 4--~ ILJ A- 10 A-V' j,',z A' -3 P,e Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789RO01 5WW0001 -6 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789RO015001800T~ J) A-) 2) -5b- 31)tj P7 e) ',OPJ 5 6 3b 12 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789RO01 500180001 A-.vt 3 7-A eb ),.o L, Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 d .r6 3b 163 zS Tw A-- '7 13 t, A--4y A_67V 46L e X"' 14 S jA Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release 2000108/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 AJ e 'S (J~ 4-6i- Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 -3 D 'A-) S AJ/& X6 IOT 3 Y Approved For Release 2000/08/08 CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6 Approved For Release S.A N, I I I CPYRGHT P! i 1) .;,:f~d 1.4 Intl(. IL(,C~Lll Sj;,'~Il-101 (it t hW t C L, IN f 1 6 1 cing ptige Hic !ill lilt- A t'lhil- it 1W lit. At. hit 1, I dc If It Vt till 11~ 111 it i !'t h:,; ;j j, 1e 7- 4o. /Goo am $0, Prib flof ls Z, Isl nds XOnl(lds L,.f the Noi-th 13Q~-ific, ftir f:eols "'00.0vt, t Wo n: tion routcs, Tnthespring 70 percerztoft~e ivo~-td population. of 1.4 rizilliort fi!!- seals cortgregat--s on the Prib~lo~, 'j hl-,,cd. The uninhabft~~d vo1cv-:ic is,(,inds m,.re discovered in i 786 1:~y Geras.,.-.iri Pribylov, who hroujvh.t Aleallian island natives to ho rvest seall pe Its. 0 I.,I~,ndswithf.,sea,r,~okeies Migra!ion routes visit'-,!. Pauleach summer. There's alimitto hwv man)- thc Island can handle." The"humaniacs," as some Aleuts call the concede thatseals die most quick.ly and with the least traurna when billed b ,Y stwining and sticking. But they )bject t , o t%t harvest on grounds of unnec- (Issal,V killing and the high cost to the ,overnment ef g the Pribilof program, The iederal government spends 5.3 million dol- lars a year-75 petcent of Pribilof income. Wafter Kirkriess, director of the Pribilof Islands Program for the National, Marine Fisheries Service, offers a rebuttal. "If we halt sealing, it vvould lead to abrogation of the treaty. As afesult, we could easily see the -ezurri of free-for-all slaughter of seals -at sea Withouk ariv interTiational controls at all. That vvould be dev astating to the seals." Mike Zar'nirof had an even more basic objection: "Instead of worrying about seals, Avh,ch are in no danger of extinction, why not worry about an hone st-to- goodness en- da.ngerf!d species --tlao Aleut people?" Since the Russians firsL gained sway over New Dayfor Alaska's PribllQflslanders 16 0' \V DON e,,,6 Walras 911 Istand St Paul Isiand Ale!st. K. I Sea Lion". Rock OtterIIsland 574 PribHof hdands Fur seaf rooke-fes shown in whit.,- 0 K%4 IS St George 0 MILES Is I St. Georg Island Alaska, Aleuts have decreased from an esti- mated 20,000 to a mere 3,200. White man's diseases wilied out Inany. So did a Russian disregard for native lives. Under U. S. administration, a repressive bureaucracy brought little progress until, in 19 "11, the federal government settled aborig- inal claims for land and compensation and gave Alaska's Aleuts, Eskimos, and Indians a means to control their lot. The settlement established profit-making corporations for each native village and region, with every villager a shareholder. For St. Paul's Tan- adgusix, the chief profit makers are hoteis and a restaurant, Islanders won a reprieve for sealing when Congress extended the fur seal treaty through 1994. Theywere helpedloythe Sier- ra Club and National Audubon Society, which supported the treaty and looked upon it asa hallniaxk of wildlife conservatidn and management. Butanew threat to the island ers'econom- ic well-being has suddenly loomed. "It's called Reaganomics," said Agafon 539 For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO1500180001-6