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USCBL Briefing on U.S. Landmine Policy
Delivered by Steve Goose, Director of
Human Rights Watch Arms
Division and Head of ICBL Delegation at Nairobi Summit on a Mine-Free
World: First Five-Year Review Conference for the Mine Ban Treaty
This briefing was sponsored by the US Campaign
to Ban Landmines and moderated by its coordinator, Scott Stedjan
of the Friends Committee on National Legislation. It was held from
1:30-3:00 during a mid-day break of the Nairobi Summit, and was
attended by diplomats, NGOs and numerous members of the media.
Tuesday, 30 November 2004
On 27 February 2004 the Bush administration completed a two and
one-half year review of US landmine policy. The ICBL, US Campaign
to Ban Landmines and Human Rights Watch all sharply criticized the
new policy as a major step backward for the US.
Under the new policy, the US abandons its stated
objective of the past 10 years of eventually eliminating all antipersonnel
mines. It abandons the objective of joining the Mine Ban Treaty
by 2006 if alternatives to antipersonnel mines are identified and
fielded. The US now intends to retain certain types of antipersonnel
mines indefinitely. The US has thus become the first country to
state that it will never join the Mine Ban Treaty.
The US State Department gives this reason for
the policy reversal: "The United States will not join the [Mine
Ban Treaty] because its terms would have required the US to give
up a needed military capability... Landmines still have a valid
and essential role protecting United States forces in military operations....
No other weapon currently exists that provides all the capabilities
provided by landmines." We are told the most powerful and sophisticated
military in the world must have antipersonnel mines, even though
nearly every one of its major military allies has given them up
as an outmoded and inhumane weapon of the past.
The new policy characterizes landmines according
to their active lifespan (or "persistence" to use the
government's term), and re-frames the focus from antipersonnel mines,
which are comprehensively prohibited by the Mine Ban Treaty, to
all types of landmines, both antipersonnel and antivehicle.
Under the new policy, US forces will be able to
use self-destructing and self-deactivating antipersonnel and antivehicle
mines indefinitely, without any geographic restrictions. These are
the types of mines designed to blow themselves up after a set period
of time; they are often called "smart" mines, and the
US now calls them "non-persistent" mines.
US forces will also be able to use "persistent"
antipersonnel mines (those without self-destruct mechanisms, often
called "dumb" mines, which can lie in wait for victims
for decades) in Korea until 2010. This moves back four years the
Clinton administration's target date for halting dumb mine use in
Korea. In a new development, the US has said it will also stop using
"persistent" antivehicle mines after 2010.
In addition to abandoning the objective of joining
the Mine Ban Treaty by 2006, the Bush administration has abandoned
the formal policy commitment announced in 1997 to stop using all
antipersonnel mines by 2003 - except those in "mixed systems"
(combining antipersonnel and antivehicle mines) and except for use
in Korea. The main aspect of that policy was that after 2003, the
US would no longer use any of its 8.4 million ADAM artillery-delivered
antipersonnel mines, which are self-destructing mines. Now, the
US will keep its ADAM mines, which constitute about 80 percent of
the overall US stockpile of 10.4 million antipersonnel mines.
At its heart, the new policy is just dusting off
the US "smart" mine policy from the mid-1990s, with its
emphasis on promotion of self-destructing and self-deactivating
mechanisms. The US tried to convince the treaty negotiators in Oslo
in 1997 to make an exception for these types of mines, claiming
they did not pose dangers to civilians. The US sent a team of generals
to convince the US's closest military allies, and they failed. They
failed for a number of reasons that are still valid today. Smart
mines are not safe mines; they have failure-to-destruct rates and
failure-to-arm rates; they are usually used in great numbers and
spread over huge areas, impossible to map or mark; while active,
they are indiscriminate just like dumb mines; they will deny land
and endanger civilians and require clearance operations. The 144
States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty understand all this. The United
States stands alone in seeking a technological solution to the antipersonnel
mine problem. Many nations have also argued that it would be unacceptable
to permit wealthy nations to use sophisticated and expensive mines,
but expect poorer nations to give up the cheap dumb mines available
to them.
There are several other notable elements of the
policy review that I have not yet mentioned, including a commitment
to negotiate an international ban on the export of persistent landmines;
a renewed research and development program for future self-destructing
mines; and a pledge to increase US mine action funding.
The funding pledge is welcome, and further cements
the US's position as the largest single country donor to mine action
(in terms of overall expenditures, though not in terms of spending
per capita or as percentage of GNP). It reverses two straight years
of decreased mine action funding by the US (in fiscal years 2001
and 2002).
The pledge to stop the use of long-lasting antivehicle
mines is also welcome (even if it is six years distant), and puts
the US out front in the efforts to deal with the negative consequences
of antivehicle mines. The dangers of antivehicle mines to civilians
have been amply discussed in recent years in the deliberations of
the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW). It should be noted
though, that the US-backed proposal on antivehicle mines in the
CCW is rather modest, and falls far short of a ban on use of persistent
mines.
Apart from the funding increase and the antivehicle
mine announcement, the rest of the new policy is bad news. It is
bad news for the US and for the broader movement to eliminate antipersonnel
mines. The reversal is especially regrettable because the US has
been in many respects in de facto compliance with the Mine Ban Treaty
for many years. The US has not, to our knowledge, used antipersonnel
mines since the Gulf War in 1991. It has prohibited export of all
antipersonnel mines since 1992. It has not produced antipersonnel
mines since 1997. It has destroyed some 3.3 million stockpiled "dumb"
antipersonnel mines. The US military does not maintain minefields
anywhere in the world, having cleared its minefields in Cuba in
1999. And, of course, it is a world leader in providing funds for
the mine clearance and survivor assistance. However, both the Clinton
and Bush administrations have lacked the political will to join
the Mine Ban Treaty.
While regrettable, the new US policy is hardly
a "death blow" to the global ban effort or to the Mine
Ban Treaty. The treaty has been functioning extremely well without
the support of the United States for many years and will no doubt
continue to do so in the future. The commitment of other governments
to the total eradication of antipersonnel mines is being well-demonstrated
here in Nairobi.
But, the new US position does give cover to others
who stay outside of the treaty, including those who continue to
use mines, to use the persistent mines of concern to the US. Those
using large numbers of persistent mines in recent years include
Russia, Burma, Nepal, Georgia, India and Pakistan. These nations
and others have cited the US absence from the Mine Ban Treaty as
justification for not banning the weapon. We have been told that
Finland's September 2004 decision to delay its target date for accession
to the treaty from 2006 to 2012 was facilitated by the US policy
announcement in February.
There are a number of other serious concerns associated
with the new US policy, including that it may be setting the stage
for resumed use, production and trade of antipersonnel mines by
the United States.
To our knowledge, the US has not used antipersonnel
mines since 1991. Not in Bosnia, not in Kosovo, not in Afghanistan
and not in Iraq. This tells us something both about the power of
the international norm against antipersonnel mines and about the
limited military utility of the weapon. Yet, in explaining the new
Bush policy, US officials are relentlessly insisting that self-destructing
mines are vital to US military operations and that they pose no
risks for civilians. This promotion of US mines could be viewed
as laying the groundwork for justification of renewed use in the
near future.
Though the US has not produced any type of antipersonnel
mine since 1997, the new policy explicitly states that the US "will
continue to develop non-persistent antipersonnel and antitank landmines."
There are at least two research and development programs already
underway that could by March 2007 result in the resumption of production
of antipersonnel mines.
One is the SPIDER system, which began as a program
to develop an alternative to dumb (non-self-destructing) antipersonnel
mines. R&D on SPIDER is to be completed in US fiscal year 2005.
At one point, this new munition had an option called "Battlefield
Override" which would have changed it from a command-detonated
weapon (where a soldier decides when to explode it) to a standard
antipersonnel mine where the target (or victim) activates it through
contact. We do not know if the Battlefield Override feature is still
part of SPIDER.
The second R&D program is called the Intelligent
Munition System (IMS), which appears to be a consolidation of other
previous landmine alternatives efforts. Not much is known about
this program yet, but one key document said it will have an option
for "unattended employment for...engagement of selected targets."
The phrase "unattended employment" is worrisome, as it
implies a victim-activated device, that is, an antipersonnel mine
as defined by the Mine Ban Treaty.
There is also concern that the US proposal to
negotiate a ban on the transfer of persistent landmines in the Conference
on Disarmament (CD) could signal that the US is now prepared to
engage in the trade of non-persistent antipersonnel mines. The US
has had a law banning the transfer of all antipersonnel mines since
1992, but it will expire in October 2008, unless it is extended.
The Clinton administration, as a matter of policy, announced that
the US was permanently banning all trade in antipersonnel mines,
but it is not clear if the Bush administration has overturned that
formal policy.
It is highly unlikely the international effort
in the CD will go anywhere; in a practical sense, there is little
need for it, as there has been virtually no trade in antipersonnel
mines since the mid-1990s - a de facto global ban on trade already
exists and is holding tight. Moreover, several Mine Ban Treaty States
Parties have pointed out they could not agree to a new international
instrument on mine transfer that has a lesser standard than the
ban treaty. But, the US could act domestically to reverse its long-standing
prohibition on all antipersonnel mine transfers, arguing that since
it has determined these mines pose no danger to civilians, there
is no need to restrict trade.
In closing, let me draw your attention to a Memorandum
that the US Campaign to Ban Landmines has prepared for government
representatives here at the Nairobi Summit, as well as for our NGO
colleagues. It contains a number of recommendations that we ask
be conveyed to the US government. Among them: express disagreement
with the new Bush policy and encourage reconsideration; convey that
any US use of any type of antipersonnel mine will be heavily criticized;
express concern over US promotion of self-destructing mines; encourage
continuation of the comprehensive US export ban; urge the US not
to resume production of mines that are banned by the treaty; convey
that any use of antipersonnel mines by the US in joint military
activities with Mine Ban Treaty States Parties would not be acceptable;
urge the US not to hamper universalization of the ban treaty globally,
including in Iraq; and, urge the US to participate in future meetings
of Mine Ban Treaty States Parties, so that it can become better
integrated into the community of nations committed to the eradication
of antipersonnel mines.
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