FACT SHEET
New United States Policy on Landmines:
Reducing Humanitarian Risk and Saving Lives of United
States Soldiers.
PRESIDENTIAL ACTION:
The United States is committed to eliminating the humanitarian
risks posed by landmines.
The indiscriminate use of persistent landmines is a serious humanitarian
problem around the world. Persistent landmines are those munitions
that remain lethal indefinitely, affecting civilians long after
military action is over.
At the same time, the military capabilities provided by landmines
remain necessary for the United States military to protect our
forces and save lives.
To address the humanitarian problem caused by the indiscriminate
use of persistent landmines, the President has announced a bold,
comprehensive policy on the use of landmines that, unlike any
previous landmine policy, covers all persistent landmines, both
anti-personnel AND anti-vehicle.
No country does more than the United States to support humanitarian
mine action, including landmine clearance, mine risk education,
and victim assistance.
The United States has provided nearly $800 million to 46 countries
since 1993 to clear landmines and help civilians.
Funding for the State Department's portion of the United States
Humanitarian Mine Action Program will be increased by an additional
50 percent over FY03 baseline levels to $70 million a year, significantly
more than any other single country.
THE NEW POLICY:
The United States has committed to eliminate persistent landmines
of all types from its arsenal.
The United States will continue to develop non-persistent anti-personnel
and anti-tank landmines. As with the current United States inventory
of non-persistent landmines, these mines will continue to meet
or exceed international standards for self-destruction and self-
deactivation. This ensures that, after they are no longer needed
for the battlefield, these landmines will detonate or turn themselves
off, eliminating the threat to civilians.
The United States will continue to research and develop enhancements
to the current technology of self- destructing/self deactivating
landmines to develop and preserve military capabilities that address
our transformational goals.
The United States will seek a worldwide ban on the sale or export
of all persistent landmines to prevent the spread of technology
that kills and maims civilians.
Within one year, the United States will no longer have any non-detectable
mine of any type in its arsenal.
Today, persistent anti-personnel landmines are ONLY stockpiled
for use by the United States in fulfillment of our treaty obligations
to the Republic of Korea. Between now and the end of 2010, persistent
anti-vehicle mines can only be employed outside the Republic of
Korea when authorized by the President. After 2010, the United
States will not employ either of these types of landmines.
Within two years, the United States will begin the destruction
of those persistent landmines that are not needed for the protection
of Korea.
Funding for the State Department's portion of the United States
Humanitarian Mine Action Program will be increased by an additional
50 percent over FY 03 baseline levels to $70 million a year, significantly
more than any other single country.
BACKGROUND:
The Ottawa Convention entered into force in 1999. Parties to
the Treaty commit not to use, produce, or transfer anti-personnel
landmines. They further commit to destroy all of their stockpiled
anti-personnel landmines, except those for demining training,
within four years of joining the Treaty.
The Ottawa Convention does not restrict the entire class of more
powerful anti-vehicle landmines and commits its adherents to the
costly and unnecessary act of clearing every last mine in order
to achieve a "mine-free" status.
The humanitarian harm caused by anti-vehicle landmines is significant.
Anti-vehicle mines prevent refugees from traveling home, food
aid from reaching the needy, and the free exchange of goods vital
for economic prosperity, as well as causing injury or death to
the occupants of vehicles. (A recent report from Angola suggests
that up to 70 percent of that country's roads are blocked by persistent
anti-vehicle mines.)
The United States will not join the Ottawa Convention because
its terms would have required us to give up a needed military
capability. However, this new policy dramatically reduces the
danger posed to civilians from unexploded landmines - both anti-personnel
and anti- vehicle - left behind after military conflicts.
President Bush has charted a new course by addressing the entire
threat to innocent civilians from the lingering nature of persistent
landmines -- both anti-personnel AND anti-vehicle.
Self-destructing/self-deactivating landmines have been rigorously
tested and have never failed to destroy themselves or become inert
within a set time. Furthermore, all are battery operated. In the
event that a self-destructing/self-deactivating mine malfunctions,
the battery will die at a set period of time (90 days for example)
and render the mine inert.
Landmines still have a valid and essential role protecting United
States forces in military operations. Landmines enable a commander
to shape the battlefield to his advantage. They deny the enemy
freedom to maneuver; enhance effectiveness of other weapons (such
as small arms, artillery or combat aircraft); allow us to fight
with fewer forces against a larger enemy force; and protect our
forces, saving the lives of our men and women in uniform and of
those civilians they defend. No other weapon currently exists
that provides all the capabilities provided by landmines.
The United States was one of the first countries to support humanitarian
demining efforts back in 1988 when it funded the first such programs
in Afghanistan.
Since that time, the United States has consistently been one
of the world's strongest supporters of humanitarian mine action,
providing nearly $800 million to 46 countries since 1993 when
the United States Humanitarian Mine Action Program was formally
established.
United States efforts include support for mine clearance operations,
mine risk education, survivors assistance, research and development,
training and a public-private partnership program.
The United States Department of Defense trains countries in the
procedures of landmine clearance, mine risk education, and victim
assistance, as well as in the development of leadership and organizational
skills necessary to sustain these programs after the departure
of United States military trainers. In addition, a DOD research
and development program creates new technologies to facilitate
landmine clearance.
END OF FACT SHEET.