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The UN Arms Trade Treaty – Some Predictions

Monday, December 12th, 2011 at 2:56 PM

By Paul Gallant, Alan Chwick, & Joanne D. Eisen

Get ready to turn your Guns in or at least your sovereignty & privacy.

Get ready to turn your Guns in or at least your sovereignty & privacy.

Dillon Precision

Dillon Precision

Scottsdale, AZ – -(Ammoland.com)- We predict that a global Arms Trade Treaty will come into force late this year.

Diplomats are currently preparing for a final negotiating conference, to be held at the UN between July 2 and July 27, 2012.

So, what might an ATT look like?

The weapon-prohibitionists’ goal is a “robust” treaty, with States accepting outside control of their weapon transactions, or suffering international consequences if they don’t. And if one looks at the picture as a whole, all one sees and hears is an hysterical insistence on “robustness” from the Treaty’s proponents, parroted by the global press. They mistakenly expect that they will be able to prevent the flow of arms to human rights abusers, and thereby reduce global violence.

But if one scrutinizes the multitude of disagreements between the States, one can already see the fault lines in the Arms Trade Treaty forming. That’s because many States are reluctant to cede sovereignty to the UN. And from this, we can make some reasonable predictions.

  • We predict that small arms will be included, because that’s what this treaty is all about in the first place. But ammunition has, at best, a 50-percent chance of inclusion.

Although there already exists a UN register for 7 categories of conventional arms (UNROCA), the UN has suffered a decade of failure when it comes to control of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW). So, at the very least, the prohibitionists want small arms, light weapons, and ammunition added to those 7 categories of weapons, creating the “7+1+1” paradigm.

Amnesty International has stated that there would be “gaping holes” in such a treaty if small arms and ammunition were not included. And proponents will do whatever it takes in order to achieve the goal of global firearm control.

As of September 2011, many States, among which are Barbados, Ghana, Jamaica, Nicaragua, and Zambia, agree with including SALW and ammunition. They believe that this is necessary if the Treaty is to yield humanitarian and human rights benefits, regardless of the extreme difficulty of doing so.

Other States, including the States of the Non Aligned Movement (NAM), prefer that the Treaty remains limited to the original 7 categories. China also has taken a position against the 7+1+1.

We know that China is a massive arms exporter, even to human rights violators. It is a matter of record that China has, in the past, not abided by treaties which it had no intention of ever keeping. Examples of these include the Convention against Torture (CAT), and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). It would be easy for China to gain a veneer of cooperation if it appeared to compromise “under pressure.”

As for the US, it might seem confusing that the Obama government has taken a position against the inclusion of SALW and ammunition in the forthcoming Treaty. Yet, the US officially supports the inclusion of SALW into the UNROCA itself, as clearly stated in October 2011 by Laura E. Kennedy, one of the representatives to the UN.

Are we that naïve to believe that Obama will choose the side of the fence that is least firearm-restrictive?

So, with these factors in play, it would be logical to strike a compromise: SALW in, ammunition out.

  • We predict that a minimal Implementation Support Unit (ISU) will be approved, and will ultimately grow into a global BATFE on steroids.

ISUs collate, collect, and store the information they gather. They share the information with other States, and provide support and advice with this information, while additionally performing communication and liason roles. Countries are already comfortable with the ISU concept, which has been used in previous UN conventions, such as the Land Mine Ban and the Biologic Weapons Ban.

But there is a huge difference between the magnitude of the ATT and the Mine or Biologic Weapons Bans. Even the October 3, 2011 Arms Trade Treaty Monitor noted: “There is no obvious, existing mechanism that exists to coordinate such a logistical behemoth.” (It is a rare moment when a proponent of the “7+1+1” actually agrees with us.) Several nations, including the UK, prefer a minimally mandated ISU. Ted Bromund, Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, stated in a UN Web Memo dated July 21, 2011, that “Such a ‘limited’ role would not remain limited for long.”

And how could it? An ISU would be run by and for weapon-prohibitionists, who would be free to create regulations as needed. After the ATT is in force, the decisions of those bureaucrats will not be constrained by the need for a consensus.

  • We predict that victim reparations will not be included in the body of the Treaty.

The concepts of restitution and compensation are ostensibly intended to deal with “restoring justice,” and increasing “the focus on the criminal responsibility of perpetrators of gross human rights abuses and their accomplices.” Some States, like Uruguay, want a strong provision for victim assistance, while most States, including Italy and Chile, do not.

Syria suggests that funding for this provision should come from weapon-exporting States, such as the United States. It would be ludicrous for Uruguay, a country that perpetrated many human rights abuses itself, to come knocking at our front door for funding that would absolve them of their own deliberate acts against the human rights of their citizens.

And it would also be ludicrous that we should be expected to foot the bill.

Furthermore, one may wonder why the cause of “victim reparations” should be espoused by weapon-prohibitionists, and included in an Arms Trade Treaty. We believe that “victim reparations” is being added to the ATT to serve as a bargaining chip—easy to use as a pawn for the purpose of compromise.

All points not included in the body of the Treaty, but remaining on the weapon prohibitionists’ wish list, will simply be shoved into the Treaty’s preamble, lying there to await a more favorable climate for their enactment.

And that entire Treaty will create a new global weapon norm which will affect our own US firearm norm.

About:
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CCRKBA Hails 11 Co-Sponsors Of Bill To Halt U.N. Funding

Friday, December 9th, 2011 at 9:59 PM
CCRKBA.org

CCRKBA.org

BELLEVUE, WA – -(Ammoland.com)- The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms today offered thanks and congratulations to 11 members of Congress who have signed on as co-sponsors to legislation that would withhold funding from the United Nations and prevent the United States from adopting any treaty that threatens national sovereignty or abridges the Second Amendment firearms rights of American citizens.

“The Second Amendment secures and protects our individual right to keep and bear arms,” noted CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb. “Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh submitted his bill on Wednesday, and now he’s been joined by 11 of his colleagues who deserve recognition.”

Co-sponsors to HR 3594 are Texas Congressmen Joe Barton, K. Michael Conaway and Kenny Marchant; Georgia Reps. Lynn A. Westmoreland, Paul C. Broun and Phil Gingrey; North Carolina Rep. Howard Coble, Florida’s Bill Posey, Iowan Steve King, South Carlina’s Jeff Duncan and Kansas Rep. Tim Huelskamp. All are Republicans.

“CCRKBA staff has been directly involved in Walsh’s effort,” Gottlieb noted, “because the long-running campaign to adopt a global gun control scheme at the United Nations has gathered momentum under the Obama administration. We do not think it is any coincidence that global gun prohibitionists have ramped up their effort during the same period that the U.S. Supreme Court has issued two rulings affirming that the Second Amendment affirms an individual right to keep and bear arms.

“At a time when our constitutional freedoms are at stake,” Gottlieb concluded, “the only way to prevent their erosion by international treaty is to put in place the legislative mechanism to cut the U.N. off financially. We’re delighted that Walsh and nearly a dozen of his colleagues have the vision and intestinal fortitude to pursue that preventative measure. International gun grabbers need to keep their hands off of our Constitution, and out of our pockets.”

With more than 650,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms is one of the nation’s premier gun rights organizations. As a non-profit organization, the Citizens Committee is dedicated to preserving firearms freedoms through active lobbying of elected officials and facilitating grass-roots organization of gun rights activists in local communities throughout the United States. The Citizens Committee can be reached by phone at (425) 454-4911, on the Internet at www.ccrkba.org or by email to InformationRequest@ccrkba.org.

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