The emerging campaign against cluster bombs and explosive remnants of war.The Ottawa Treaty For the 1932 tariff treaty of British colonies and dominions, see . The Ottawa Treaty or the Mine Ban Treaty, formally the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction has an influence beyond antipersonnel an·ti·per·son·nel adj. Abbr. AP Designed to inflict death or bodily injury rather than material destruction: antipersonnel grenades. mines. Failed cluster bombs and a whole range of other battlefield detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue. de·tri·tus n. pl. are newly unacceptable. Peter Herby, a legal specialist with the International Committee of the Red Cross
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is a private humanitarian institution based in Geneva, Switzerland. (ICRC ICRC abbr. International Committee of the Red Cross ICRC n abbr (= International Committee of the Red Cross) → CICR m ICRC n abbr ), was arguing at a workshop in Ottawa that it might be more useful to prohibit a weapon's "effects" than a narrowly defined weapon itself. This was in 1996, a year before the signing of the historic ban on antipersonnel landmines (APM (Advanced Power Management) A programming interface (API) from Intel and Microsoft for battery-powered computers that lets programs communicate power requirements to slow down and speed up components. See ACPI. APM - Advanced Power Management ). Herby was concerned that a single-weapon campaign might mean that every time a "new" weapon was introduced a new campaign would need to be launched. When the Ottawa APM Treaty was signed and delivered, there was some debate about whether an "effects-based" definition had been successfully achieved. There is still contention over this, but for the most part a class of weapon, defined both by its design and by how it is detonated, has been outlawed by a majority of countries. But what about those other weapons that explode unintentionally--but just like landmines--in a farmer's field, near a schoolyard, or beside the path to the village water supply? There was apparent consensus among both the governments that signed onto the Ottawa Treaty and the Nobel Prize-winning International Campaign to Ban Landmines The International Campaign to Ban Landmines is a coalition of non-governmental organizations whose goal is to abolish the production and use of anti-personnel mines. (ICBL ICBL International Campaign to Ban Landmines ICBL Irish Credit Bureau LTD ) that faulty cluster bombs were "not covered not covered Health care adjective Referring to a procedure, test or other health service to which a policy holder or insurance beneficiary is not entitled under the terms of the policy or payment system–eg, Medicare. Cf Covered. by Ottawa." However, an interesting process that harkens back to some of those concerns expressed by Peter Herby and others has begun to take shape over the last couple of years. Cluster bombs Cluster bombs (CB) have been heavily used in war since the 1960s, particularly by the US military. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Mennonite Central Committee The Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is a relief, service, and peace agency representing 15 Mennonite, Brethren in Christ and Amish bodies in North America. The U.S. headquarters are in Akron, Pennsylvania, the Canadian in Winnipeg, Manitoba. (MCC (The Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation, Austin, TX) The first high-tech research and development consortium in the U.S., created in 1982 by leading companies within the electronics industry. ) "the U.S. flew more than 580,000 bombing missions over Laos [during the conflict in Indochina]. This is equal to one bombing mission every 8 minutes around the clock for 9 full years." Three hundred million cluster "bombies"--the bomblets contained in a cluster bomb--were released from their bomb casings when dropped over Indochina--90 million over Laos alone. The number of victims of CBs started to mount at that point and can equal or outnumber the count for landmine victims in parts of that region. Mine clearance agencies A mine-clearance agency, or demining agency, is an organization involved in removal of land mines for military, humanitarian, or commercial reasons. Demining includes mine clearance (actual removal of land mines from the ground), as well as surveying, mapping and such as Mines Advisory Group and humanitarian organizations such as MCC have always made it known that unexploded ordnance "UXO" redirects here. For the cancelled video game, see . Unexploded ordnance (or UXOs/UXBs, sometimes acronymized as UO) are explosive weapons (bombs, bullets, shells, grenades, land mines, naval mines, etc. disposal is not only about landmines. but also a range of other weapons left dangerously explosive long after war's end War's End is a journalistic comic about the Bosnian War written by Joe Sacco. It contains two stories; the first, Christmas with Karadzic, about tracking down and meeting the Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadžić, and the second, Soba . The international campaign that was formed to ban AP mines focussed on one class of weapons, primarily because these were among the most onerous and, overall, claimed the most victims. The victims were usually civilians and often children who unintentionally triggered the explosion themselves. Cluster bomblets tended to kill rather than maim maim v. to inflict a serious bodily injury, including mutilation or any harm which limits the victim's ability to function physically. Originally, in English Common Law it meant to cut off or permanently cripple a bodily member like an arm, leg, hand, or foot. their victims, but they were used in fewer conflicts. Typically dropped from the air, they were dependent on elite militaries which were equipped with an air force. In 2000, a new approach to the problem of persistent weapons was proposed when the Red Cross suggested that any weapon left unexploded and threatening in post-conflict environments could be captured by the phrase "explosive remnants of war Explosive remnants of war is a term used in the humanitarian aid industry to describe the explosive threats remaining in post-war society. This includes landmines, cluster bombs, IEDs and other unexploded ordnance. " (ERW ERW Explosive Remnants of War ERW Erwachsen (German: adults) ERW Equal Rights Washington (LGBT advocacy organization in Washington State, USA) ERW Electric Resistance Weld ). They would comprise a broad category of weapons, including artillery shells, mortars, hand grenades, landmines, submunitions, and other ordnance. Might it be possible to build into the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons The United Nations Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW), concluded at Geneva on October 10, 1980 and entered into force in December 1983, seeks to prohibit or restrict the use of certain conventional weapons which are considered excessively injurious or that have (CCW (Continuous Composite Write) A magneto-optic disk technology that emulates a WORM (Write Once Read Many) disk. It uses firmware in the drive to ensure that data cannot be erased and rewritten. ) a new protocol restricting or banning--and clearing--anything whose lingering "effects" put civilians and communities at risk? Several nongovernmental organizations Transnational organizations of private citizens that maintain a consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. Nongovernmental organizations may be professional associations, foundations, multinational businesses, or simply groups with a common interest in , including Mines Action Canada The Action Canada movement was an attempt to establish a new political party in Canada in 1971. Paul Hellyer, who had been a senior cabinet minister in the Liberal governments of prime ministers Lester B. (MAC), found this approach attractive and are supporting those governments pressing for this additional protocol to the CCW. Many of the activist governments, including the Netherlands and Canada, were leaders in the campaign to ban antipersonnel mines. Late in 2001, and at the request of a vocal group of member campaigns, again including MAC, the ICBL itself declared official support for a cluster bomb moratorium and a new protocol on explosive remnants of war. The Parliament of the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the European Community also supported these efforts. At the CCW conference in December last year, a nongovernmental statement (authored by Celina Tuttle of MAC) laid out some of the ground rules, while back here at home, MAC's member organizations (including Project Ploughshares
This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. ) pressed the Canadian government to declare a national moratorium on the use of any cluster bombs still held in Canadian inventories. The Canadian government did not respond, although there was fresh debate among parliamentarians. More than 50 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) (including 15 from Canada) have now signed a statement read to the CCW in Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. this past July, calling for an urgent resolution of the outstanding issues, and for "unilateral moratoria on the use, production and transfer of cluster submunitions until the humanitarian concerns that arise from their use are addressed. (1) The success of this effort, while showing momentum, is far from certain. However it plays out, most interesting is why the landmine ban campaign unexpectedly "spilled over" and triggered a broader humanitarian debate and an obligation to address other explosive remnants of war. Suddenly cluster bombs are a problem Until very recently cluster bombs have been relatively uncontroversial, avoided even by the ICBL and many of its member groups. During the Indochina conflict (and in the decades since the victim count started to accumulate), they were simply one weapon among many with known but hushedup post-conflict consequences. Thirty million cluster bomblets were dropped on Kuwait and Iraq during the Gulf War, resulting in thousands of untargeted casualties, but there was no significant public outcry. Suddenly they became humanitarian abominations Abominations is a 3 issues Marvel Comics limited series created by Ivan Velez Jr (writer), Angel Medina (penciller) and Brad Vancata (inker). ran from Dec 1996 to Feb 1997
apportioned, dealt out, doled out, parceled out distributed - spread out or scattered about or divided up by mines and failed cluster bomblets. To that extent both the Ottawa Treaty and any new CCW treaty protocols only reiterate what international standards have always required of a country's armed forces. Why, then, such a dramatic shift in attitude? The world has changed and, in this respect, for the better. It is now much harder to portray civilian casualties as collateral damage collateral damage Surgery A popular term for any undesired but unavoidable co-morbidity associated with a therapy–eg, chemotherapy-induced CD to the BM and GI tract as a side effect of destroying tumor cells , without a public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most penalty. (The phrase "collateral damage" only entered the popular lexicon a dozen years ago.) Heightened humanitarian expectations have been added to the crucible of civil society and civil governments which emerged from the ban on antipersonnel landmines. The Ottawa Treaty is showing evidence of its influence beyond antipersonnel mines. Consequently, failed cluster bombs and a whole range of other battlefield detritus are newly unacceptable. In the shadow of a ban on one outdated weapon, said by some to have dubious military utility at best, scrutiny is being brought to bear more generally on how war is being prosecuted. Technical fixes Several approaches exist that address the problem of weapons with a high rate of ERW such as (and in particular) failing cluster submunitions (bomblets). One option has been to consider "technical fixes" to the problem -- either by retrofitting a new component to an existing weapon, or through a complete redesign and remanufacture of the munition. Replenishing stocks with new munitions mu·ni·tion n. War materiel, especially weapons and ammunition. Often used in the plural. tr.v. mu·ni·tioned, mu·ni·tion·ing, mu·ni·tions To supply with munitions. that self-destruct (SD) or self-deactivate (SDA SDA abbr. specific dynamic action Serotonin dopamine antagonist (SDA) The newer second-generation antipsychotic drugs, also called atypical antipsychotics. ) if their primary fuses fail significantly reduces the risk of any individual munition becoming. an explosive remnant of war. (2) However, improved primary fusing and added SD/SDA capability are still controversial and both "fix" options have supporters and detracrors. (3) Reliability estimates, for instance, are often disputed, and therefore all claims for and against SD and SDA need to be scrutinized and verified. For instance, the overall failure-todetonate rate of submunitions used in Laos 30 years ago, 25 per cent, is similar to the cluster bomb failure rates in such recent conflicts as those in the Gulf and Kosovo, "in spite of the fact that in these more recent conflicts many of the submunitions used represented an entirely new generation [of weapons]" (King 2000, p. 30). (4) While some governments support the SD/SDA approach, many NGOs have opposed the design and development of "more reliable" weapons, believing that such advocacy condones risking innocent lives, or compromises the principle of seeking a peaceful solution to conflict. The ICBL position on SD/SDA for antipersonnel mines is that while so-called "smart" mines are designed to self-destruct or self-deactivate after a designated period of time, they are still not completely reliable. Some mines that fail to arm as intended will not self-destruct or self-neutralize as they normally would during the arming cycle (McGrath 1999). Even smart mines will require survey and clearance after they are placed, and cannot discriminate between a soldier and a civilian during the period in which they are active. Many of these caveats would continue to apply to redesigned "smart" cluster submunitions and other weapons that could become ERW. Cease use A parallel track to this campaign is to cease use and production of at least those weapons with a known high failure-to-detonate rate that cannot or will not be "fixed." Colin King, editor of the Jane's publication Mines and Mines Clearance, prepared a key but not widely circulated report for the Red Cross in 2000 on ERW and submunitions. He found that problem weapons included several submunitions of US and UK manufacture, including the BLU-97, Rockeyes, BLU-61, and Blue-63 (the latter two vintage weapons designed in the 1960s, but still used in the Gulf War). He also found that while 40 per cent of unexploded US submunitions were shown to be hazardous overall--13 per cent of which may function "on contact"--it is "neither fair nor accurate to equate all unexploded submunitions with mines." Just as some fusing designs are inherently unsafe, King argued, others, like the AO-1SCh fuse are "inherently safe." NGOs uncomfortable with the development and replacement of current stocks with newer, "more reliable" weapons must not be silent during the debate that rages at the CCW over the question of how best to prevent explosive remnants of war. Some weapons are so dangerous and so faulty that they must be withdrawn and destroyed, whether or not governments replace them with something new. A list of problem weapons must be quickly agreed to, publicized, and stigmatized. At a minimum, there is a strong case being made both for destruction of all submunitions without reliable secondary self-destruct fusing, and for a continuing moratorium on the use of all munitions with multi-directional fuses until studies resolve the question of their reliability. The humanitarian message cannot be lost in the political debate: these weapons cannot be allowed to be used (or used up) in the next conflict. Canadians should press their government to comply with these minimum standards. The similarity of the current ERW problem to the humanitarian obligations that caused Canada to lead in the campaign to ban antipersonnel landmines is compelling. More information on the cluster bomb moratorium and ERW campaign in Canada can be found by contacting Celina Tuttle at MAC, macelina@web.ca. The following URLs are also useful sources: MAC'S call to action, www.minesactioncanada.com/documents/261101_CB_bgrnd.htm; MCC's cluster bomb website, www.mcc.org/clusterbomb/; ICBL statement on cluster munitions and ERW, http://www.icbl.org/news/2001/137.php; images of cluster bombs and damage, http://www.itvs.org/bombies/bombs.html http://www.mcc.org/clusterbomb/. (1.) This statement can be found in the Summer 2002 issue of The Ploughshares Monitor, p. 12. (2.) The failure rate goes from 10 per cent with existing munitions to 0.1 per cent with "fixed" munitions. (3.) Support for the "fix" options can be found, for instance, in the EU working paper, 21 May 2002 at the CCW, CCW/GGE/I/WP.7; Swiss working paper, 8 May 2002 (CCW/GGE/I/WP.4 found at http://www.minesactioncanada.com/documents/2002_tech.htm); and the positions of the UK and France. If available, working papers can be found at http://www.mineaction.org/. For the position of the US see http://www.ccwtreaty.com/1212cummings.html. For discussions within NGO NGO abbr. nongovernmental organization Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government nongovernmental organization circles, see Vietnam Veterans of America This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Alone, primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of this article are not sufficient for an accurate encyclopedia article. Foundation's Global Security Program: www.vvaf.org/security/backgrounder.html and presentation to the CCW (2001): http://www.icbl.org/index/text/Detailed/1497.html. See also Dale Copper: http://www.acronym.org.uk/dd/dd47/47regime.htm. Opposition to the "fix" option can be found in the 2002 CCW positions of China (CCW/GGE/II/WP.17 on anti-vehicle mines), Pakistan, Russia (CCW/GGE/II/WP.15; CCW/GGE/I/WP.11), and Cuba relating to cost and prohibitive aspects of technical complexity. A joint china-Russian statement (CCW/GGE/II/WP.20) concludes: "[F]or a number of countries, it makes little sense to equip munitions with the SD and SDA devices, including munitions in stockpile." See the ICBL web site: http://www.icbl.org/resources/problem.html; Antipersonnel Mines: Friend or Foe? ICRC 1996; and the Human Rights Watch web site: http://www.hrw.org/reports/1997/gen1/General-04.htm. (4.) King (p. 38) also notes, "The Gulf War clearly demonstrated a major discrepancy between performance during military 'acceptance tests' and operational use. ... [N]early 2000 electronic mines remained unexploded in the US clearance sector alone, despite achieving near-perfect results during testing." References King, Colin 2000, Explosive Remnants of War: Submunitions and Other Unexploded Ordnance: A Study, ICRC, Geneva, August. McGrath, Rae 1999, Landmines and Unexploded Ordnance: A Resource Book, Pluto Press. SD/SDA/SN Self-destruct mechanisms (SD) are components that cause failed or live explosive weapons to be automatically triggered to explode, usually byway of some timing mechanism which can be mechanical or electronic. Mechanical mechanisms are generally less reliable. SD mechanism failure is an easily measured specification, as successful self-destruction is clearly visible! According to some experts, it is also possible to make a simple pyrotechnic self-destruct fusing mechanism very cheaply -- in the US$8-9 range per explosive device. Self-deactivation (SDA) and self-neutralisation (SN) capability refers to a designed-in means to make an explosive device incapable of firing by disabling its triggering mechanism (as in the case where a trigger cannot fire because its battery completely loses its charge). However, it has been suggested that batteries can possess a residual charge that may pose a risk. And in a reference to electronic fuses, which are described as belonging to "a family of booby traps," Jane's Mines and Mine Clearance (1998-99) notes that in some cases, "because the detonator detonator (dĕ`tənā'tər), type of explosive that reacts with great rapidity and is used to set off other, more inert explosives. Fulminate of mercury mixed with potassium chlorate is a commonly used detonator. is fired by capacitor discharge, [electronic fuses] may be capable of functioning for some time after the battery has been removed." Even when SDA is reliable, deactivated high explosive devices can still pose a risk This risk can possibly be minimized by the use of short-life explosives. Because deactivated devices cannot be distinguished from active devices, awareness of the physical presence of ERW will continue to deny local residents access to land. Some known problem submunitions * BL-755 (MK1), made in the UK, failure rate in the order of 20 per cent, used by 8 NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion. countries * M118 "Rockeye," made in US; used in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Kosovo; up to 100 per cent failure rate in the Gulf War * BLU-97; made in US; used in Gulf War, Kosovo, Afghanistan * Spin-armed BLU-61 and BLU-62, made in US, high failure rates when used in Laos * Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (e.g., US DPICMs and Serbian Orkan submunitions) Robin Collins is a Board Member and Chair of MAC, and a volunteer with the United Nations Association in Canada The United Nations Association in Canada engages the Canadian public in the work of the United Nations and the critical international issues which face us all. See also Pearson Medal of Peace. External link
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