Day: December 3, 2004

  • U.S. Tells Summit Landmine Cut Planned

    The U.S. released a surprise statement to the international landmine summit in Nairobi, promising to ban its usage of anti-personnel mines by 2010 … almost.

    The world will have to wait until 2010 before the United States of America bans the use of anti-personnel landmines.

    This is the message the military superpower sent to the delegates attending the first review conference of the anti-personnel Mine Ban Treaty held in Nairobi.

    In an unsigned press release distributed to the delegates, the US statement said between now and 2010, the possible use of persistent anti-personnel landmines will be restricted only to “our security treaty obligations in South Korea and any possible use outside that country will require presidential authorisation”.

    The US announced it had increased its mine action budget by 50 percent over the 2003 levels for a new total of $70 million per year.

    This is a wise maneuver, showing a willingness to cooperate against an international menace, yet still both retaining an out in case of need and maintaining a realistic view of the weapon’s current role as a deterrence on the Korean peninsula.

  • China launches ICBM-capable submarine

    According to officials at the U.S. Department of Defense, China has launched its first submarine designed to carry an intercontinental nuclear payload.

    The submarine is, at a minimum, months away from having missiles installed and going on a cruise, one official said, discussing foreign weapons developments only on condition of anonymity. Still, it is further evidence of China’s intentions to expand both its nuclear weapons and submarine forces, officials say.

    It was widely known China was building the new class of nuclear-missile submarine, called the Type 094 but the launch is far ahead of what U.S. intelligence expected, one official said.

    The launch was first reported in the Washington Times newspaper. The newspaper reported U.S. intelligence spotted the sub at a shipyard 400 kilometres from Beijing.

    It would be China’s first submarine capable of launching nuclear weapons that could reach the United States from the country’s home waters, officials said.

    The Chinese military has also been developing a new class of submarine-launched ballistic missile, called the JL-2, that is expected to have a range in excess of 7,400 kilometres. The Type 094 submarine would carry these missiles but it is not clear whether the missiles are ready for deployment.

    Previously, China has had only one submarine capable of launching nuclear missiles, called the Type 092, or Xia, class. In 2001, a Pentagon report said the Xia was not operational. Its missiles were of an older class that could fly only 1,000 kilometres.

    Successful cruises by the Type 094 would give China a new strategic deterrent against the United States, no longer limited to land-based ICBMs and weapons carried on aircraft. But U.S. defence officials said China lags behind the United States in its ability to hide submarines from sophisticated sonars and other sensors.

    By all accounts, China severely lags behind the U.S. in practically every aspect of naval technology, and this class should be easily trackable by American attack submarines.

    The Chinese will have a potential impact in three important areas with this launch. First, they are placing an added burden for the American navy to monitor and possibly counter. Second, they will add to the importance of a viable missile defense for the U.S. and an additional stressor on matters concerning Tiawan. Third, they just gave Tom Clancy another storyline.

  • Ten Candidates to Run in Palestinian Election

    And all the circus clowns pile out of the car.

    Ten candidates will run in the Palestinian Authority’s presidential election to replace Yasser Arafat, officials said on Thursday after finalizing the list of contenders for the Jan. 9 race.

    Heading the list was Mahmoud Abbas, Arafat’s successor as the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, as well as Marwan Barghouthi, a leader of the Palestinian uprising, who is serving five life sentences in an Israeli jail.

    Abbas, a moderate who will be representing the mainstream Fatah faction, had been seen as the frontrunner in the election until Barghouthi’s candidacy was submitted shortly before a deadline on Wednesday night. Barghouthi, the most popular choice among Palestinians to succeed Arafat, told his wife during a prison visit that he wanted to run in the election as an independent candidate.

    His candidacy has upset Abbas’s chances and thrown the Palestinian political arena into turmoil. Palestinian officials have called on Barghouthi to withdraw his candidacy to maintain unity among Palestinian ranks. “Candidates have until midnight on Dec. 15 to withdraw their candidacy,” Rami Hamdullah, Secretary-General of the Central Elections Committee (CEC), told a news conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

    ….

    The snap election was called to replace Arafat as head of the Palestinian Authority after he died of an undisclosed illness at a French hospital.

    Hopefully I’m wrong in my characterization of these clowns. The AP gives a brief bio here of all ten. Please note the following phrases:

    • “his views on … peace deal with Israel are identical to … Arafat”
    • “serving five life terms in an Israeli jail”
    • “justifies attacks on Israeli settlers … as legitimate resistance”
    • “a hard-liner toward Israel”
    • “leader of … a small faction with communist roots”
    • “arrested several times by Israel”
    • “arrested by Israel in April 2002”
    • “identifies with Islamic causes” (rather bland, no chance)
    • “deported … because of links to Islamic Jihad”
    • “arrested twice by U.S. authorities”
    • “has criticized the Palestinian Authority for corruption” (again, no chance)

    Still leaning towards the clowns statement.