Our Russian friends have apparently “claimed” the seabed under the north pole by planting their specially crafted Deep Sea Flag. (Is it still a flag when it is underwater or is it just a stick with a wet cloth on it?) In the grand tradition of empirialist land grabbing, these folks believe that they have staked a claim to the vast untold, untapped mineral riches of the arctic floor. Of course, the Canucks were not impressed-
Peter Mackay, Canada’s minister of foreign affairs, dismissed the voyage to the Arctic floor as “just a show.”
“Look, this isn’t the 15th century,” he said, according to the Web site of Canadian Television. “You can’t go around the world and just plant flags and say ‘We’re claiming this territory.'”
According to Douglas Birch at Forbes magazine, the flag was planted in the sea floor 2 1/2 miles below the surface on what is called the Arctic Shelf. [Th’ Gaussling didn’t realize that a shelf could be that deep. Sounds like an abyssal plain to me, but, hey… I’m not in real estate.] The basis of the claim, Birch reports, is that the region is a part of the Eurasian continental shelf. Russia’s public claim seems to be based on a kind of geographic tidiness. But like all big issues today, it is really about resources.
In December 2001, Moscow claimed that the ridge was an extension of the Eurasian continent, and therefore part of Russia’s continental shelf under international law. The U.N. rejected Moscow’s claim, citing a lack of evidence, but Russia is set to resubmit it in 2009.
The good news is that there won’t be any aboriginals to cruelly displace. Seems to me that the Palestinians missed another big opportunity here- their sub must have been in the shop. I would offer the suggestion that they give Putin an office on site there so he can keep an eye on the place.

This whole issue is front-page news up here. The thing is that we apparently dropped our own flag up there sometime in the 90s…
As for aboriginals, for many years the Canadian government had a program that moved Inuit communities progressively farther north in order to bolster our sovereignty claims in the high Arctic. The suffering was unbelievable as established communities were moved to even more extreme climates (and different wildlife migration patterns, etc.) than they were used to.
Ultimately, if Russia seeks to claim the North Pole by force, there is not a lot we can do. They have five times our population and the benefit of having been a superpower in the not too distant past (with the armaments and naval strength that go with this status). For now it’s another irritant in Canada-Russia relations (another memorable one being the 2001 killing of a woman on an Ottawa street by a drunk-driving Russian diplomat — he avoided the breathalyzer by claiming immunity and so couldn’t be tried or punished in Canada.)