President Joe Biden has reportedly given final
approval for the transfer of U.S. cluster munitions to Ukraine, ignoring
warnings from human rights groups and progressive lawmakers who underscored the
indiscriminate weapons' devastating impacts on civilians immediately upon use
and far into the future.
According
toThe
Washington Post, a drawdown of the globally
deplored weapons from Pentagon stocks is set to be formally
announced on Friday. The U.S., which has used the weapons around the world, is believed
to possess more than 3 million cluster munitions containing
over 400 million submunitions.
More than 120 countries have signed the
United Nations Convention on Cluster Munitions, which prohibits the use or
stockpiling of the weapons. But the U.S., Russia, and Ukraine have opposed
global efforts to ban the weapons, which are notorious for failing to explode
on impact and littering landscapes with what are effectively landmines.
Human Rights Watch (HRW), which urged the Biden administration
not to transfer the weapons to Ukraine, has documented the
use of cluster munitions by both Russian and Ukrainian forces since the start
of the war last year.
"We can support the people of Ukraine in their
freedom struggle, while also opposing violations of international law."
The Cluster Munition Coalition, a global civil society campaign
working to eradicate the weapons, said it
was "appalled" by the U.S. president's approval of the transfer to
Ukraine.
"The Biden administration's decision to transfer cluster
munitions will contribute to the terrible casualties being suffered by
Ukrainian civilians both immediately and for years to come," said Paul
Hannon, vice chair of the coalition's governance board. "Russia and
Ukraine's use of cluster munitions is adding to Ukraine's already massive
contamination from explosive remnants and landmines."
The Post reported Friday that "the principal
weapon under consideration, an M864 artillery shell first produced in 1987, is
fired from the 155mm howitzers the United States and other Western countries
have provided Ukraine."
"In its last publicly available estimate, more than 20
years ago, the Pentagon assessed that artillery shell to have a 'dud' rate of
6%, meaning that at least four of each of the 72 submunitions each shell
carries would remain unexploded across an area of approximately 22,500 square
meters—roughly the size of 4½ football fields," the Post added.
In order to deliver the weapons to Ukraine, the Post noted,
Biden is trampling on "U.S. law prohibiting the production, use, or
transfer of cluster munitions with a failure rate of more than 1%."
Mary Wareham, advocacy director of the arms division of HRW,
told the newspaper that "it's dismaying to see the long-established 1%
unexploded ordnance standard for cluster munitions rolled back as this will
result in more duds, which means an even greater threat to civilians, including
de-miners."
HRW released a report this
week detailing its research showing that "Ukrainian cluster munition
rocket attacks on Russian-controlled areas in and around the city of Izium in
eastern Ukraine during 2022 caused many casualties among Ukrainian
civilians."
"Transferring these weapons would inevitably cause
long-term suffering for civilians and undermine the international opprobrium of
their use," the group said. "The use of cluster munitions in areas
with civilians makes an attack indiscriminate in violation of international
humanitarian law, and possibly a war crime."
Reports that Biden has approved the munitions transfer to
Ukraine—which has repeatedly pressed the White House for the weapons—came after
Germany, a NATO member and U.S. ally, expressed
opposition to sending the bombs to Ukraine, citing its
commitments under the Convention on Cluster Munitions.
In the U.S., progressive Reps. Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) on Thursday proposed
an amendment to
the nation's annual military policy bill that would prohibit the transfer or
sale of cluster munitions.
"If the U.S. is going to be a leader on international human
rights, we must not participate in human rights abuses," Omar toldPolitico.
"We can support the people of Ukraine in their freedom struggle, while
also opposing violations of international law." -Jake Johnson, Common Dreams
Cain and Cain by Glen Brown
ReplyDelete“We are sitting in the silence, still.
Silence, like the bullet that’s missed us, spins” —Ilya Kaminsky
Missiles and madness fly together,
spinning ballistic arcs of light in the night.
Pilots wing their way with crazed eyes
and clenched fists.
Billows rise behind upturned thumbs.
We sit in silence,
horror-struck by raucous skies
suffused with bursts of terror
while the world tilts from an invasion
choking with fiery air and scorched earth.
We are shown the artillery
and the brutality
left behind in daily doses:
the blasted buildings, family photographs
and children’s toys blacken by fire;
mothers and their children
going to nowhere.
and dead bodies everywhere.
But we go on with our lives, still,
far away from Blitzkriegs,
shattered glass and concrete,
foreboding clouds of hydrogen sulfide,
cluster and vacuum bombs.
And we send our prayers and emoticons,
well-wishes and money, while Amerika
delivers death-dealing weaponry
and continues to bomb countries of color
not worthy of world news.