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Obama's State Department Backpedals on Landmine Treaty Stance
WASHINGTON - One day after the State Department announced that the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama will not sign the 10-year-old treaty banning anti- personnel landmines, it insisted that Washington's policy on the issue was still being reviewed.
Human rights and disarmament activists had reacted with outrage Wednesday to Tuesday's announcement by State Department spokesman Ian Kelly that the review had concluded and that Washington "would not be able to meet our national defense needs, nor our security commitments to our friends and allies if we sign the [landmine] convention".
"The administration is committed to a comprehensive review of its landmine policy," Kelly said in a written statement issued by the State Department press office Wednesday afternoon. "That review is still ongoing."
The statement did not make clear whether Tuesday's announcement had been made in error or whether the anger provoked by it had persuaded the administration to reconsider. The fact that Kelly was reading from guidance prepared in advance and presumably cleared at higher levels, however, suggested that the latter explanation was more likely.
The U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines (USCBL), a coalition of scores of activist groups, had called the Tuesday's announcement "shocking", while Human Rights Watch (HRW) described it as "reprehensible".
"President Obama's decision to cling to anti-personnel mines keeps the U.S. on the wrong side of history and the wrong side of humanity," said Steve Goose, the director of HRW's Arms Division, who also noted that Washington stood alone among its NATO allies in refusing to sign the treaty.
"This decision lacks vision, compassion, and basic common sense, and contradicts the Obama administration's professed emphasis on multilateralism, disarmament, and humanitarian affairs," he added.
A leading Democratic lawmaker, who spearheaded the drive in the early 1990s to ban Washington's export of the weapon to other countries, also decried Tuesday's announcement.
Sen. Patrick Leahy said the decision constituted a "default of U.S. leadership" and charged that it appeared to be based on a review that "can only be described as cursory and half-hearted".
Tuesday's announcement, which came on the eve of the Second Five-Year Review Conference of the Mine Ban Treaty to begin Sunday in Cartagena, Colombia, was seen as a victory for the Pentagon, which has long opposed the treaty, and Republicans wary of all international treaties that may limit Washington's freedom to act in the world as it wishes.
"I think what you see is an administration that is genuinely committed to multilateralism and renewing international cooperation coming up against the hard limits of domestic politics and realities," said Heather Hurlburt, director of the Washington-based National Security Network, before the State Department denied that the review had been completed.
The storm touched off by Tuesday's announcement reflected in part the growing frustration among Obama's more-liberal political base over his reluctance to break more definitively with the unilateralist and militarist policies of his predecessor, George W. Bush.
That frustration has been fueled, among other things, by his retention of many of the legally questionable tactics, such as indefinite detentions of terror suspects and their rendition to third countries, in what Bush called the "global war on terror"; by his failure to engage diplomatically more quickly with Bush nemeses, such as Cuba, Syria, and Iran; and his escalation of U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan.
Obama's defenders insist that his administration has been steadily moving the ship of state in a more multilateralist and diplomatic direction.
They cite, for example, his decision to send for the first time a U.S. observer delegation to take part in the Cartagena talks next week, just as he sent a similar delegation this week to attend a meeting at The Hague of the state parties to the Rome Statute, the treaty that established the International Criminal Court (ICC) and that was explicitly rejected by Bush.
They also note his decision, announced earlier Wednesday, to lead the U.S. delegation at the U.N. Climate Summit in Copenhagen next month.
"I think they are moving away from the Bush administration, and the fact they're showing up at these [states] parties conventions is very significant," said Don Kraus, CEO of Citizens for Global Solutions here.
He noted that the administration has sent the Senate a list of priority treaties for ratification, including the Law of the Sea Treaty, the Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and is currently trying to negotiate a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with Russia as part of a strategy to strengthen the nuclear non-proliferation regime.
"It's more a question of timing than commitment," said Kraus. "There's limited bandwidth in terms of what the administration and the Senate can do at any one time."
The U.S. is currently one of only 39 countries that have not signed the treaty, which was opened for signing in 1997 and took effect in 1999 after a campaign led by Canada and Western Europe, as well as hundreds of independent human rights and disarmament organisations that make up the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL). The ICBL won the Nobel Prize for its efforts in 1997 in recognition of its leadership role in the effort.
In its most recent accounting, the ICBL, which has since undertaken an initiative for an international ban on cluster munitions, reported that mines remain planted in more than 70 countries where they killed or wounded more than 5,000 people - the vast majority of whom were civilians - last year.
Ironically, the U.S. has been in substantial compliance with most of the treaty's provisions. It has not deployed anti-personnel mines since 1991, banned their export in 1992, and stopped manufacturing them in 1997. Washington has also spent some 1.5 billion dollars in de-mining and related activities since 1993, Kelly noted Tuesday.
Like Leahy, the USCBL, which is part of the ICBL, questioned the thoroughness and integrity of the review on which the State Department based its announcement Tuesday.
"While we were told to expect a landmine policy review..., we were taken by surprise that it had already been concluded behind closed doors without the consultation of non-governmental aid workers, legislators, and important U.S. NATO allies who are all States Parties to the treaty," Zach Hudson, the group's coordinator, said Wednesday morning before the State Department changed its position.
"We also have been offered no official reasons as to why the U.S. would continue on this present course - other than that nothing has changed since Bush reviewed the policy in 2004," he added. "President Obama should explain these actions to the international community, which held such high hopes for a different kind of U.S. engagement."
HRW's Goose also called the timing of Tuesday's announcement - two weeks before Obama is to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo - "painful."
Rep. Jim McGovern, another leader of Congressional demilitarision efforts, called Tuesday's announcement and the review on which it was based "a major insult to the international community that unfortunately far overshadows our contributions in the areas of de-mining and support for landmine survivors".



34 Comments so far
Show AllIn a moral , non-war-addicted country, this would be a no-brainer. Unfortunately, our government is financed by the war machine so they pretend to "review" it while arms and legs fly, bloody and broken, into the air.
0 to declare: "The decision is mine."
Lobe sez: "They also note (Obama's) decision, announced earlier Wednesday, to lead the U.S. delegation at the U.N. Climate Summit in Copenhagen next month.
***
He probably thought his travel secretary said he was going to "Hopenchangin".
LOL
"One day after the State Department announced that the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama will not sign the 10-year-old treaty banning anti- personnel landmines, it insisted that Washington's policy on the issue was still being reviewed."
I suspect if he is a one term president, the "review" will take just over 3 more years. If he turns out to be a 2 term president then the "review" will last just over 7 years. I suspect there will be lots of "reviews" that will take that long.
I might me wrong about that or then again maybe it's just me being cynical... again...
We have plenty of reasons to be cynical.
I'm going to delegate a delegate to go to Cartagena,Colombia to delegate our position on this matter and then delegate another delegate to the prez so he can delegate a delegate to review the issue.See?Tony
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Team O has too many Establishment advisors and none of them seem capable of summarizing.
This is really through the looking glass. Game on top of game, multilayered manipulation.
They didn't know anyone would be angry? "Gosh, who would have known? We'd better do some damage control."
Please. This is SOP for the pathetic Obama administration. Trying to spread out the political damage so that it is manageable while groveling to the MIC.
The Obamabots are taking this story to mean that Obama has kicked the lobbyists to the curbside. How is it that so many people can be this stupid? Are they that selective in what they read and see?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/27/obama-pushes-lobbyists-of_n_372070.html
Lobbyists wrote the credit card reform bill, they're writing cap and trade, they wrote the health insurance bill, Obama made deals with Pharma's lobbyists. Smoke and mirrors, up is down and down is up. Manipulation is right. Check this comment out:
"In a little noticed blog ..." The opening phrase in this post points out a piece of reality that all who read here and elsewhere need to pay attention to. So many of the extraordinary actions and courageous changes that President Barack Obama is responsible for go unnoticed, especially by the blogosphere both right and left, which is all to quick to pounce on him for their own selfish and immature reasons. President Obama's move against lobbying is a fulfillment of one of many promises he has fulfilled, Yes FULFILLED. You wouldn't know that by reading the constant barrage of cynical criticisms coming from intellectualized liberal perfectionists, impatient vindictive Democrats, bitter primary losers, and even some of those who supposedly supported him at one time. From LGBT rights, to women's rights, to economic security and equality, to Iraq, to healthcare, and yes even to his promise to protect our nation and world from fanatic zealots in Afghanistan, he has kept his word and lead us wisely. Maybe it's time that we had the patience and took the time to "notice."
Even if Obama should sign the landmine treaty, his continued violation of the Geneva Conventions do not bode well for his honoring it.
and really, the LAST thing you want to do in a minefield is "backpedal"
President Banka Obombya any way he can. Nobel Peace prize winner my ass.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Team Obysmal back-pedals on everything. Things they'll be first, side-pedalling, and then back-pedaling on in a hurry next year:
(1) The "health care reform" legislation Obama will have freshly signed.
(2) Their suggestion of the need for minimal real economic stimulus while they continue unquestioning outlays to the big banks who have continued to decrease lending.
(3) Afghanistan
The details about what is emerging from the "health care reform" legislation are a cold stab in the back of average Americans--a sinister betrayal to corporations timed as stupidly as they could be to the current worsening economic crisis.
Team Obama's DLC/neo-lib screw-faced priority to bring down the deficit instead of implementing significant real stimulus at this point is neo-liberalism at its corporate worst. For a good hard look at Team Obama's perfidy here read:
Blame Larry Summers, by Mike Whitney
(source: http://www.counterpunch.org/whitney11272009.html)
"Summers’ assignment is to bring the broader economy to its knees; to crush big labor by keeping unemployment high, to force state and local and governments to privatize more public assets and services, and to generate as much human misery as possible. In short, Summers is laying the groundwork for structural adjustment [long-term structural decline as the new norm: Metal] within the US, a policy which reflects his ongoing commitment to multinational corporations and neoliberalism. It's the shock doctrine redux. These people are monsters."
Their proposed policies to "address" Afghanistan are screwed by any analysis I've heard or read. Even Larry Gelb thinks Obama is a fool for escalating more than a temporary 10,000 to give one last try at training the Afghanis before getting the hell out next year. The multiplicity of corruption problems alone doom Obama's Afghanistan dabbling. The terrain and moronic lack of sufficient troop strength or coherent occupation/rebuilding plan or endgame just hammer titanium nails into this coffin.
Team Obama are too stupid to give themselves any good PR with the American public by ANY policies that seem to benefit the average American. Obama's rhetorical flatulence has already worn thin and those who haven't already seen through it don't trust it in their guts anymore but are clinging to him as a symbol out of quiet desperation.
IF ONLY AUTHENTIC PROGRESSIVES WERE SUFFICIENTLY UNITED UNDER A NEW UMBRELLA PROGRESSIVE PARTY TO LEAP ON THE ELECTORAL OPPORTUNITIES NATIONWIDE THAT HAVE ALREADY BEEN OPENED UP BY LOSER OBAMA AND THE DLC CORPORATIST LOSERS WHO PULL HIS STRINGS. BECAUSE PROGRESSIVES ARE LEAVING AN INEXCUSABLE VOID, ONLY THE FAR-RIGHT WILL SEIZE THIS OPPORTUNITY.
Good analysis, top to bottom.
Thanks for the Counterpunch citation, understanding the Obama / Summers economic policy as a mere continuation and culmination of the neoliberal assault against the people on behalf of the corporations and MIC.
Just another example of Obama "dithering" again...
-30-
"Ironically, the U.S. has been in substantial compliance with most of the treaty's provisions. It has not deployed anti-personnel mines since 1991"
Sounds close to flim-flam to me. The US has certainly not stopped making cluster bombs or cluster munitions, the unexploded bomblets of which become de facto landmines waiting for the next child to pick up or farmer to step on.
Does anybody know where the half million to a million bomblets dropped by Israel on Southern Lebanon in 2006 came from?
the sky?
It seems I left myself open for that one, and yes, that is technically correct although most were delivered from the ground by artillery.
They were very old from what I am hearing which increased the failure rate and thus improved their future effectiveness as land mines. I assume they came from the USA but have not had confirmation of that.
I enjoy humour but I generally draw the line at laughing about civilians and children getting blown up.
apologies - it was a cheap shot.
I concur that clusters are among the most despicable of weapons.
So what more does the Administration need to dither about before deciding that it just can't do the right thing and sign on to the anti-landmine treaty? Obama, his State Department, and the U.S. government in general seem to have lost the gift of common sense they should have been born with.
The sheer idiocy of the initial decision shows just how far into the deep moral vacuum this country has fallen. The dithering reflects its incompetence at making correct decisions the first time around rather than closing the barn door after the cattle have fled.
We're goners.
So Obama is "reviewing" U.S. policy on landmines and cluster bombs?
This is just more empty rhetoric to cover Obama while he continues the same old morally- bankrupt policies.
The "change we can believe in" is shown, once again, to be the same old crap.
Land mines should be band everywhere except for Wall Street, K Street, all corporate executive offices, Congress, the White House, the Federal Reserve and the Supreme Court. Other than that they should never be used.
Oh I forgot. The Pentagon. Other than that they should never be used.
This is rich! yesterday the US land mine policy is concluded(after having been, presumably conducted in secret, by someone, presumably) ...
Today, the policy is "under review"!
tomorrow, perhaps the review will begin,...
Time it seems, has no meaning or direction in American government.
This "timeless" nature of US government could explain many things. This explains the US detainee process. It explains how thousands of people can have been kidnapped in Europe or arrested by hooded agents in JFK, held for seven or eight years in secret CIA prisons, and all this can be made "legal" because the victims supposedly committed crimes that didn't exist until this year when they were created by ex post facto "time machine" military commission legislation passed by congress. fascinating isn't it?
Who knows, maybe anyone posting on CommonDreams today will be guilty of a, as of yet nonexistent, capital offence, newly dreamed up by whoever has/is/will be reviewing the land mine treaty, next year?
I would like to see Obama wearing a baseball cap at his next speech with the following saying on it:
"If you can't dazzle 'em with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit"
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
I don't know why, but this post reminds me of the little baseball caps the CIA used to pass out during Iran-Contra that read,
"Admit nothing, deny everything, issue counter-charges." Plausible deniability was the theme song of Bush Sr. and tragi-comic non-deniability that of Bush Jr. Neo-cons and neo-libs both admit nothing or as little as possible; deny everything until clubbed over their heads with hard evidence to which they routinely remain mum for as long as they can, and issue counter-charges against straw enemies, the "liberal" corporate press, the Left, etc., combined with baffling bullshit.
Faith, Hope, Charity and the Nobel Peace Prize.
We all know where our AIPAC controlled State Department stands
on maiming children with land mines and cluster bombs.
It's Da Joooozeee.....
Gee. Maybe when Obama gets the Peace Prize the Afghans will provide some great fireworks for the celebration.
Cheney ran the Bush White House. Who is running this one?
Obama.
For years we've had strong leaders like Obama and bush. Leaders that aren't afraid to plant booby traps, rig land mines, drop cluster bombs, and use depleated uranium. Leaders that enjoy using weapons with "no name on it" so anyone, even friendly forces could potentially be injured or killed.
"We planted them, now it's just up to God who gets blown up."
Leaders that consider the use of "nukular" weapons - even against non-nuclear nations and in a pre-emptive role!
These strong leaders have buried hundreds of thousands of people and maimed countless others.
For years America has had strong leaders.
It's time for an intelligent one.
"It's time for an intelligent one."
We'll haver to wait for 2012.
or 2016...
or 2020...
or 2024...
or 2028...
or...