Tuesday, April 2, 2013

What Will The New UN Treaty On Weapons Mean

It is sad when you need to go to Al Jazeera for the truth. We quote:

"The United States, the world's number one arms exporter, said last
 week it would vote in favour of the treaty despite opposition from the
 National Rifle Association, a powerful US pro-gun lobbying group.
The NRA opposes the treaty and has vowed to fight to prevent its
ratification by the US Senate when it reaches Washington - saying
 it would undermine domestic gun-ownership rights.
Every country would be free to sign and ratify the treaty. It will take
 effect after the 50th ratification, which could take up to two years.

The treaty will not control the domestic use of weapons in any country,
 but it will require all countries to establish national regulations to
 control the transfer of conventional arms, parts and components
and to regulate arms brokers."

In this quote we see three things that bother us. They are:
       -First, the treaty will take effect even if the Senate does 
not ratify
       -It regulates small arms (hand guns and AR-15 type weapons)
 as well as tanks, missiles
       - It requires countries to set up "national regulations to
control the transfer of conventional arms..."

In other words, should this treaty be approved by 50 of the 
154 nations, the US will have to regulate all small arms, meaning
 that an individual could not sell a weapon he owned without 
going through some government regulation. A father could not 
sell to his son or daughter either.

The NRA is right and all the nay sayers are wrong! Obama and
 his minions will use the treaty as a hammer against gun owners.
 Once the treaty is passed, we can expect the government will
 insist that all gun owners either register all of their guns or turn
 them in.  Later on we fear the government will outlaw any
 transfer as it would violate the treaty which is not true. But 
who said the government would be honest.

Oh yes, the pieces are quickly falling into place. Massive 
ammunition, armored vehicle, and AR-15 purchases by DHS.
 Opening of FEMA camps and gun control and confiscation 
legislation from many city and states which will culminate in Federal legislation based on this new treaty.
Don't forget the armed drones that will soon (if not already)
 flying.

Americans are going to be disarmed and then taken over. 
 It is coming folks, and we are just around the corner.  

Conservative Tom


UN adopts landmark arms treaty

General Assembly passes first-ever pact by 154 votes to three, with 23 abstentions, to regulate global arms trade.

Last Modified: 02 Apr 2013 16:24
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The UN adopted on Tuesday the first-ever treaty to regulate the $80bn-a-year conventional arms trade [AFP]
The 193-nation UN General Assembly has overwhelmingly approved
 the first-ever treaty on global arms trade that seeks to regulate the
 $70bn international trade in conventional arms.
The resolution adopting the landmark treaty was approved by a vote
 of 154 to three, with 23 abstentions.
Al Jazeera's Cath Turner, reporting from New York, commented that
 the yes votes was a "significantly high number" for this type of resolution.
As the numbers appeared on the electronic board, loud cheers filled
 the assembly chamber.
A group of treaty supporters sought a vote in the world body aft
r Iran, North Korea and Syria blocked its adoption by consensus
at a negotiating conference last Thursday.
The three countries voted "no" on Tuesday's resolution.
"Despite Iran, North Korea and Syria's deeply cynical attempt to
stymie it, the overwhelming majority of the world's nations have
shown resounding support for this lifesaving treaty with human rights
 protection at its core," said Brian Wood, Head of Arms Control and
 Human Rights at Amnesty International, at the UN conference in
New York.
World's Top Arms Exporters: Big 'Five'
United States
Russia
Germany
France
China
Source: Amnesty International
Major arms producers China and Russia joined Cuba, Venezuela,
 Bolivia, Nicaragua and other countries in abstaining.
"Those countries that voted no are no surprise really...
23 other countries abstained. Most abstained instead o
voting against it because they did not want to be lumped 
in with the other three countries," Al Jazeera's Cath Turner
 reported.
The United States, the world's number one arms exporter,
 said last week it would vote in favour of the treaty despite
opposition from the National Rifle Association, a powerful
 US pro-gun lobbying group.
The NRA opposes the treaty and has vowed to fight to
prevent its ratification by the US Senate when it reaches
 Washington - saying it would undermine domestic gun-
ownership rights.
Every country would be free to sign and ratify the treaty.
 It will take effect after the 50th ratification, which could take up to two years.

The treaty will not control the domestic use of weapons
 in any country, but it will require all countries to establish
 national regulations to control the transfer of conventional
arms, parts and components and to regulate arms brokers.

The first major arms accord since the 1996 Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty would cover tanks, armoured
 combat vehicles, large-calibre artillery systems, combat aircraft,
 attack helicopters, warships, missiles and missile
 launchers, as well as small arms and light arms.

States would also have to assess whether a weapon could
 be used for genocide, war crimes or by so-called "terrorists"
 or organised crime before it is sold.
For more than a decade, activists and some governments
 have been pushing for international rules to regulating the
 arms trade.
Intensive negotiations
Hopes of reaching agreement at a UN negotiating conference
 were dashed in July when the US said it needed more time to
consider the proposed accord - a move quickly backed by
Russia and China.
In December, the UN General Assembly decided to hold a
final negotiating conference to agree on a treaty and set last
Thursday as the deadline.
After two weeks of intensive negotiations, there was growing
optimism as the deadline approached that all the member
 states would approve the final draft treaty by consensus -
a requirement set by the United States.
This time, the US was prepared to support the final draft treaty
, but Iran, North Korea and Syria objected.
Iran said the treaty had many "loopholes", was "hugely
susceptible to politicisation and discrimination", and ignored
the "legitimate demand" to prohibit the transfer of arms to those
 who committed aggression.
Syria cited seven objections, including the treaty's failure to
include an embargo on delivering weapons "to terrorist armed
 groups and to non-state actors".
And North Korea said the treaty favoured arms exporters who
can restrict arms to importers that have a right to legitimate
self-defense and the arms trade.
Amnesty International said all three countries "have abysmal
 human rights records, having even used arms against their
 own citizens".

2 comments:

  1. "In other words, should this treaty be approved by 50 of the
    154 nations, the US will have to regulate all small arms, meaning
    that an individual could not sell a weapon he owned without
    going through some government regulation. A father could not
    sell to his son or daughter either."

    They sure are "other words" -- words not found it the treaty. It has nothing to do with people selling guns to each other in the U.S. It only deals with countries selling guns into other countries that violate human rights. Got it?

    The U.S. policy on weapons exports is already in compliance with this treaty. As usual, the NRA is out to lunch. The Senate will ratify this by a wide margin, but even if they don't, the other countries of the world will ratify (with few exceptions like Syria, Iran, Russia).

    --David

    ReplyDelete
  2. So you read the whole document and make this interpretation. It is doubtful!

    . If the Senate ratifies, they should be brought up on charges!

    ReplyDelete

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