November
22, 2023
"For
centuries, the U.S. government has broken every promise it's made to Native
tribes," says Standing Rock Sioux Chair Janet Alkire. "It's time for
that to stop."
Leaders
of the Standing Rock and Oglala Sioux said Wednesday that the two Native
American tribes are joining forces in an effort to pressure the Biden
administration into a reckoning over a dubious 19th-century treaty that—like
just about every other one signed between the U.S. and Indigenous peoples—was
broken by Washington.
The
two tribes are seeking nation-to-nation consultations between U.S. Interior
Secretary Deb Haaland and Assistant Indian Affairs Secretary Bryan Newland—both
Native Americans—and the remaining signatory tribes to the Fort Laramie Treaty.
"This
is about correcting an injustice," Standing Rock Chair Janet Alkire said.
"For centuries, the U.S. government has broken every promise it's made to
Native tribes. It's time for that to stop."
"Furthermore,"
she added, "we're calling on the Biden-Harris administration to take
active steps to correct the record."
Treaty
rights remain a critical point of contention for the Sioux, who in recent years
have fought against violations of their land, water, and sovereignty, including
the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines—the latter of which was canceled by
President Joe Biden.
In
the 1860s, fierce Indigenous resistance to Euro-American encroachment on the
Great Plains and an Army already weakened by the Civil War resulted in a series
of U.S. defeats, including a December 1866 ambush led by Lakota, Cheyenne, and
Arapaho warriors that killed all 81 soldiers under the command of Capt. William
Fetterman during the Powder River War. It was the worst defeat of U.S. forces
on the Great Plains until Little Bighorn a decade later.
In
1868, the U.S. signed the Fort Laramie Treaty with the Arapaho and the Dakota,
Lakota, and Nakota Sioux. The treaty established the Great Sioux Reservation
and designated the Black Hills as "unceded Indian territory" to be
"set apart for the absolute and undisturbed use and occupation" of
Indigenous peoples.
However,
the tribes claim U.S. officials subsequently—and surreptitiously—added language
to the treaty stating that the Indians "relinquish all claims or
rights" to lands outside the designated reservation. The U.S. then
blatantly abrogated the treaty following the discovery of gold in the Black
Hills of South Dakota and, when Indians fought back, unleashed a fresh wave of
genocidal violence against them.
"U.S.
treaty negotiators snuck the relinquishment language into Article II of the
treaty after it was signed by the Sioux chiefs to end the Powder River
War," said Oglala Sioux Tribe President Frank Star Comes Out. "We'd
like the current government to take an honest look at what happened."
The
Indian Claims Commission, a judicial relations arbiter between the U.S.
government and Indigenous tribes, concluded in 1976 that the treaty
"effectuated a vast cession of land contrary to the understanding and
intent of the Sioux."
In
1980, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the United States had illegally taken
the Black Hills and awarded over $100 million in reparations to the Sioux
Nation, which refused the money—now worth over $1 billion—on the grounds that
the tribe never wanted to part with its lands in the first place.
"The
Black Hills are not for sale," Alkire said Wednesday, "and they never
were."
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