Speedy Ratification of the Treaty
Banning Cluster Weapons
by Rene Wadlow*
In a remarkable combination of civil society
pressure and leadership from a small number of progressive States,
a strong ban on the use, manufacture, and stocking of cluster
bombs was signed in Oslo, Norway on 3 December 2008. However,
all bright sunlight casts a dark shadow, and in this case the
shadow is the fact that the major makers and users of cluster
munitions were deliberately not there: Brazil, China, India,
Israel, Pakistan, Russia, USA.
Yet as arms negotiations go, the cluster
bomb ban has been swift. They began in Oslo, Norway in February
2007 and were thus often called the Oslo Process.
The negotiations were a justified reaction to their wide use
by Israel in Lebanon during the July-August 2006 conflict. The
UN Mine Action Coordination Centre (UNMACC) working in southern
Lebanon reported that their density there is higher than in Kosovo
and Iraq, especially in built up areas, posing a constant threat
to hundreds of thousands of people, as well as to UN peacemakers.
It is estimated that one million cluster bombs were fired on
south Lebanon during the 34 days of war, many during the last
two days of war when a ceasefire was a real possibility. The
Hezbollah militia also shot off rockets with cluster bombs into
northern Israel.
Cluster munitions are warheads that scatter
scores of smaller bombs. Many of these sub-munitions fail to
detonate on impact, leaving them scattered on the ground, ready
to kill and maim when disturbed or handled. Reports from humanitarian
organizations and mine-clearing groups have shown that civilians
make up the vast majority of the victims of cluster bombs, especially
children attracted by their small size and often bright colors.
The failure rate of cluster munitions is
high, ranging from 30 to 80 per cent. But failure
may be the wrong word. They may, in fact, be designed to kill
later. The large number of unexploded cluster bombs means that
farm lands and forests cannot be used or used with great danger.
Most people killed and wounded by cluster bombs in the 21 conflicts
where they have been used are civilians, often young. Such persons
often suffer severe injuries such as loss of limbs and loss of
sight. It is difficult to resume work or schooling.
Discussions of a ban on cluster weapons
had begun in 1979 during the negotiations in Geneva leading to
the Convention on Prohibition on the Use of Certain Conventional
Weapons which may be Deemed to be Excessively Injurious or to
have Indiscriminate Effects the 1980 Inhumane Weapons
Convention to its friends.
The indiscriminate impact of cluster bombs
was raised with the support of the Swedish government by the
representative of the Quaker United Nations Office in Geneva
and myself. My NGO text of August 1979 for the citizens of the
world on Anti-Personnel Fragmentation Weapons called
for a ban based on the 1868 St Petersburg Declaration and recommended
that permanent verification and dispute-settlement procedures
be established which may investigate all charges of the use of
prohibited weapons whether in inter-State or internal conflicts,
and that such a permanent body include a consultative committee
of experts who could begin their work without a prior resolution
of the UN Security Council.
I was thanked for my efforts but left to
understand that world citizens are not in the field of real politics
and that I would do better to stick to pushing for a ban on napalm
photos of its use in Vietnam being still in the memory
of many delegates. Governments always have difficulty focusing
on more than one weapon at a time. Likewise for public pressure
to build, there needs to be some stark visual reminders to draw
attention and to evoke compassion.
Although cluster munitions were widely
used in the Vietnam-Indochina war, they never received the media
and thus the public attention of napalm. (1) The United Nations
Institute for Disarmament Research recently published a study
on the continued destructive impact of cluster bombs in Laos
noting that The Lao Peoples Democratic Republic has
the dubious distinction of being the most heavily bombed country
in the world (2). Cluster-bomb land clearance is still
going on while the 1963-1973 war in Laos has largely faded from
broader public memory.
The wide use by NATO forces in the Kosovo
conflict again drew attention to the use of cluster bombs and
unexploded ordnance. The ironic gap between the humanitarian
aims given for the war and the continued killing by cluster bombs
after the war was too wide not to be noticed. However, the difficulties
of UN administration of Kosovo and of negotiating a final
status soon overshadowed all other concerns. Likewise the
use of cluster bombs in Iraq is overshadowed by the continuing
conflict, sectarian violence, the role of the USA and Iran, and
what shape Iraq will take after the withdrawal of US troops.
Thus, it was the indiscriminate use of
cluster bombs against Lebanon in a particularly senseless and
inconclusive war that has finally led to sustained efforts for
a ban. Cluster weapons were again used by both Georgia and Russia
in the 5 days of the August 2008 conflict a use which was
totally unnecessary from a strategic point of view. This use
in the Georgia-Russia- South Ossetia conflict proves that as
long as such weapons are available to the military, they will
be used with little thought of their consequence.
The ban on cluster bombs follows closely
the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production
and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction
which came into force in March 1999 and has been now ratified
by 152 States. Many of the same NGOs active on anti-personnel
mines were also the motors of the efforts on cluster bombs
a combination of disarmament, humanitarian, and human rights
groups.
States signed the treaty on 3 December
in Oslo where the negotiations began. If the momentum can be
kept up, parliaments should ratify the treaty quickly, and it
could come into force by mid-2009. It is important for supporters
to contact members of parliament indicating approval of the ban
and asking for swift ratification. A more difficult task will
be to convince those States addicted to cluster bombs the
Outlaw Seven: Brazil, China, India, Israel, Pakistan, Russia,
USA. The ban may discourage their use by these States and the
USA has a recent export ban on the sale of most cluster weapons,
but a signature by them would be an important sign of respect
for international agreements and world law. Pressure must be
kept up for speedy ratification and for signature on those States
outside the law.
(1) See Eric Prokosch, who called attention
to the range of weapons used in the Vietnam war in his Technology
of Killing: A Military and Political History of Anti-personnel
Weapons ( London: Zed Books, 1995)
(2) R. Cave, A. Lawson and A. Sherriff.
Cluster Munitions in Albania and Lao PDR (Geneva: UN Institute
for Disarmament Research, 2006)
*Rene Wadlow, Representative to the
United Nations, Geneva, Association of World Citzens
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