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US Also Bears responsibility for
Landmine Crisis
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Human Rights Watch
March 4, 2001
At the outset of "Ban Landmines Week" in Washington, D.C., Human
Rights Watch said that nearly eighty percent of the Pentagon's $25
million budget for humanitarian demining is used for travel costs
and other logistical aspects of moving personnel and equipment
around the world.
The United States spends more money on humanitarian mine
programs than any other country, and Pentagon officials often
insist that U.S. mines cause relatively little damage. But Human
Rights Watch released fresh research showing that
U.S.-manufactured antipersonnel mines have been used by government
or rebel forces in at least twenty-eight countries or regions,
causing numerous civilian casualties.
"The U.S. bears a special responsibility for the landmines
crisis," said Stephen Goose, program director of the Arms Division
of Human Rights Watch. "Washington is one of the largest producers
and exporters of mines in the past, and one of the largest
stockpilers today. President Bush should make joining the Mine Ban
Treaty a high priority so that the U.S. can fully wield its
influence and power to achieve a truly global ban on antipersonnel
mines."
The week of March 5, 2001 has been declared "Ban Landmines
Week" by the mayor of Washington, D.C. Nearly 200 members of the
Nobel Peace Prize-winning International Campaign to Ban Landmines
(ICBL), from about ninety countries, and another 250 campaigners
from forty-five U.S. states will participate in a series of
meetings and events in Washington throughout the week. Human
Rights Watch is a co-founder of the ICBL.
Human Rights Watch issued a Fact Sheet containing new
information about use of U.S.-made antipersonnel mines around the
world, U.S. mine exports, and U.S. spending on mine clearance and
mine victim assistance programs.
The United States is not among the 139 countries that have
signed the Mine Ban Treaty, which prohibits all use, production,
trade, and stockpiling of antipersonnel mines. Current policy
calls for the U.S. to join the treaty in 2006 if the Pentagon has
found alternatives to antipersonnel mines. The Bush Administration
has yet to make any statement on antipersonnel mines.
Human Rights Watch research shows that in the next fiscal year
(FY 2002), funding for the Pentagon's search for alternatives to
landmines will surpass funding for humanitarian mine programs.
The U.S. exported over 5.6 million antipersonnel mines to at
least thirty-eight countries between 1969 and 1992. The U.S. still
has the third largest stockpile of antipersonnel mines in the
world, more than 11 million, including stocks in twelve foreign
countries, five of which have signed the Mine Ban Treaty.
The U.S. ranks eleventh among major donor countries when mine
action funding is considered on a per capita basis and thirteenth
when that funding is taken as a percentage of GDP.
Human Rights Watch urges that the role of mines should be part
of the review of the U.S. military structure and weapons ordered
in February 2001 by the Bush Administration. Many military experts
have argued that antipersonnel mines have little to no utility in
the war fighting principles currently being developed and adopted
by the U.S. military for the twenty-first century.
Human Rights Watch calls on President Bush to submit the Mine
Ban Treaty to the Senate for its advice and consent for accession,
and through executive actions begin immediate implementation of
the treaty's provisions. Short of joining the treaty, there are
other important steps in the right direction that President Bush
could take:
· Declare a ban on the production of antipersonnel mines.
· Immediately commit the United States to a policy of no use of
antipersonnel mines in joint operations (NATO and otherwise) with
states that have signed the Mine Ban Treaty. Similarly, commit the
United States to a policy of no transiting of antipersonnel mines
across the territory, air space, or waters of Mine Ban Treaty
signatory states.
· Instruct the Department of Defense to immediately withdraw all
stockpiles of antipersonnel mines from countries that have signed
the Mine Ban Treaty.
· Take steps necessary to insure that any systems resulting from
the Pentagon's landmine alternative programs are compliant with
the Mine Ban Treaty.
· Remove from consideration the battlefield override feature of
the dumb mine replacement program.
· Eliminate the RADAM program.
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