FY’08 Omnibus Appropriations Bill
Includes Leahy-Feinstein Reforms
To Restrict The Sale Or Transfer Of Cluster Bombs
WASHINGTON (Tuesday, Dec. 18) -- U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) Tuesday announced that the
Fiscal Year 2008 Omnibus Appropriations Bill includes a
measure they sponsored to restrict the sale or transfer of cluster
bombs. The Senate is expected to pass the appropriations bill
Tuesday night.
The measure requires that no military funds will be used for the
sale or transfer or cluster bombs, unless:
Currently, the arsenal of the U.S. military contains 5.5 million
cluster bombs, or 728 million bomblets – many of which have a
failure rate of 1 percent or higher.
The Leahy-Feinstein cluster munitions provisions are included in the
State and Foreign Operations section of the Omnibus Appropriations
Bill. Senator Leahy chairs the Appropriations subcommittee that
handled the Senate’s work in writing the bill.
“We can do something about the civilian deaths
and injuries from these weapons,” said Leahy. “These are sensible
steps that will make a difference in protecting innocent people from
the indiscriminate carnage caused by cluster munitions. These are
reasonable limits that the Pentagon should embrace. My hope is that
this will serve as an example for other governments that share our
concern.”
“The United States should not be in the business of selling and
transferring weapons that pose such a significant risk to innocent
civilians,” Feinstein said. “The sensible restrictions contained in
this measure will help save lives and improve the image of the
United States around the world. I am hopeful that the
Administration will join us in supporting this language and working
together to protect innocent men, women and children from what are
essentially de facto landmines. It’s time to put an end to this
needless death and suffering.”
Background
Cluster bombs are designed to come apart in the air before making
contact, dispersing between 200 and 400 small bomblets that can
saturate a wide radius of 250 yards. They are intended for military
use when attacking large-scale enemy troop formations. However, in
practice, cluster bombs have increasingly been used in or near
populated areas.
Handicap International studied the effects of cluster bombs in 24
countries and regions, including Afghanistan, Chechnya, Laos, and
Lebanon. Its report found that civilians make up 98 percent of
those killed or injured by cluster bombs and that children account
for 27 percent of the casualties.
The senators said the civilian toll has been staggering:
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Combining the first and second Gulf Wars, the total number of
unexploded bomblets in the region is approximately 1.2 million.
An estimated 1,220 Kuwaitis and 400 Iraqi civilians have been
killed since 1991.
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In Afghanistan in 2001, 1,228 cluster bombs with 248,056
bomblets were used. Between October 2001 and November 2002, 127
civilians were killed, 70 percent of them under the age of 18.
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Between nine and 27 million unexploded cluster bombs remain in
Laos from U.S. bombing campaigns in the 1960s and 1970s.
Approximately 11,000 people, 30 percent of them children, have
been killed or injured since the war ended.
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Most recently, it is estimated that Israel dropped 4 million
bomblets in southern Lebanon, and 1 million of these bomblets
failed to explode. And reports indicate that Hezbollah
retaliated with cluster bomb strikes of their own.
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