Cluster Bomb Treaty and the World's Unfinished Business
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, December 21, 2008
The United States, Russia and China are sending a terrible
message to the rest of the world by refusing to take part in the
historic signing of a treaty that bans the production and use of cluster
bombs. In a world that is plagued by war, military occupation and
terrorism, the involvement of the great military powers in signing and
ratifying the agreement would have signaled – if even symbolically - the
willingness of these countries to spare civilians’ unjustifiable deaths
and the lasting scars of war.
Nonetheless, the incessant
activism of many conscientious individuals and organizations came to
fruition on December 3-4 when ninety-three countries signed a treaty in
Oslo, Norway that bans the weapon, which has killed and maimed many
thousands of civilians.
The accord was
negotiated in May, and should go into effect in six months, once it is
ratified by 30 countries. There is little doubt that the treaty will be
ratified; in fact, many are eager to be a member of the elite group of
30. Unfortunately, albeit unsurprisingly, the US, Russia, China, Israel,
India and Pakistan – a group that includes the biggest makers and users
of the weapon - neither attended the Ireland negotiations, nor did they
show any interest in signing the agreement.
The US argues that
cluster bombs are a legitimate weapon, essential to repel the advancing
columns of enemy troops. If such a claim carried an iota of legitimacy,
then the weapon’s use should have ended with the end of conventional
wars in the mid twentieth century. However, cluster bombs are still
heavily utilized in wars fought in or around civilian areas.
Most countries that have signed the accords are not involved in any
active military conflict and are not in any way benefiting from the
lucrative cluster munition industry. The hope, however is that once a
majority of countries, including the Holy See, sign the agreement, the
use of the lethal weapon will be greatly stigmatized.
The treaty was the outcome of intensive campaigning by the Cluster
Munition Coalition (CMC), a group of non-governmental organizations. CMC
is determined to carry on with its campaigning to bring more signatories
to the fold.
But without the involvement of the major producers
and active users of the weapon, the Oslo ceremony will remain largely
symbolic. However, there is nothing symbolic about the pain and bitter
losses experienced by the cluster bombs’ many victims. According to the
group Handicap International, one-third of cluster-bomb victims are
children. Equally alarming, 98 percent of the weapon’s overall victims
are civilians. The group estimates that about 100,000 people have been
maimed or killed by cluster bombs around the world since 1965.
It certainly is unconscionable that countries who have the chutzpa to
impose themselves as the guardians of human rights are the same who
rebuff such initiatives and insist on their right to utilize such a
killing tool. Unlike conventional weapons, cluster bomblets survive for
many years, luring little children with their attractive looks. Children
have often mistaken them for candy or toys.
Steve Goose, the
arms director of Human Rights Watch described the countries that refused
to sign as standing "on the wrong side of history. Some of them are
clinging to what is now a widely discredited weapon."
But there
is more to that refusal than clinging onto an outdated military
philosophy. The cluster munition industry is thriving. The weapon was
used in massive quantities by the US army in Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel
in Lebanon and both parties in the S. Ossetia conflict. The British also
used it in Iraq, making handsome deals with the weapons’ Israeli
manufacturer.
13 year-old Ayat Suliman now lives in Sweden. In
an AFP report, she complained, referring to her peers: "Nobody
understands me. They all think I'm ugly." It was on May 5, 2003 that
Ayat’s brother came running with what he thought was a dazzling toy. "I
remember that it was very colorful and very nice," said Ayat. The
explosion that rocked the little girl’s house in Iraq claimed the lives
of her four brothers and cousin, aged 3 to 15. Most of Ayat’s body was
burned as a result, and she is still unable to walk independently.
Ahmad Mokaled of the Lebanese town of Nabatieh at the border with Israel
was about to celebrate his fifth birthday when he too found a shiny
object. Ahmad’s last words, according to his father, who was busily
setting up his son’s birthday picnic in a park, were: ‘Dad, Help me.’ He
died, but after “four long hours of suffering.”
The tragic
stories of Ahmad and Ayat are repeated throughout the world, almost
everyday, with some countries paying a much more disproportionate price
than others, notably, again, Iraq, Afghanistan and Lebanon.
But neither terrible statistics nor the heart- wrenching personal
stories of the many victims seem enough to compel manufactures and
active users of the weapon to quit. Countries with sizable military
power tend to avoid any entanglement in international law or treaties
that limit their flexing or application of their military muscle. The US
and Israeli attitudes towards international law carry similar traits,
both act as entities above the law, tirelessly infusing ‘national
security’ as an excuse for their rebuffing of such international
initiatives. It’s also no surprise that the US, Israel, but also Russia
refuse to ratify the 1997 Ottawa Treaty, signed by 158 countries – as of
2007 – which prohibits the production, transfer or use of landmines.
Of course, neither the Ottawa nor the Oslo treaties are the
exception to the rule as far as Washington’s attitude towards positive
international initiatives are concerned. The US under the Bush
administration developed a mind-set of animosity towards the rest of the
international community, reaching the point of dubbing the UN
irrelevant.
Needless to say, CMC, world governments and
citizens throughout the world are hoping that the new American
administration of Barack Obama will truly bring an end and reverse
Bush’s ruinous legacy. Realists say it will take years for an effective
change of policy to take place. In the meantime, the millions of
unexploded cluster bomblets and landmines scattered the world over, wait
for no one. They will continue to claim lives and maim thousands, just
like Ahmad of Lebanon, and Ayat of Iraq.
-Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world.
His latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a
People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
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