Posted on 05/13/2007 9:59:47 AM PDT by upchuck
The Law of the Sea Treaty will impede the U.S.'s ability to defend its interests in time of war. |
LOST has long been the crown-jewel of a community known as the transnational progressives ("transies") found in various quarters of this and foreign governments, international bureaucrats and non-governmental organizations. The transies seek to have supranational institutions govern world affairs, circumscribing the freedom of action and undermining the sovereignty of the American people and those of other freedom-loving nations.
The Bush Administration's strong enthusiasm for subjecting this country to such an accord compounds concerns about its penchant for other Transie initiatives, including the North American Union/Security and Prosperity Partnership (NAU/SPP) now being stealthily negotiated between U.S., Canadian and Mexican officials and interest groups.
A Bill of Particulars
Among the problems inherent with the Law of the Sea Treaty are the following:
The Bottom Line
One would think that the last thing President Bush needs at the moment is to alienate those who have stood beside him through thick and thin as he has striven to do the hard things needed to protect the security and (to a lesser extent) the sovereignty of the United States. He is unlikely to get much credit from the transnational progressives, who detest him, for this concession to their agenda. His embrace of that agenda, however, puts at grave risk the support the Administration could otherwise expect, and will certainly need, from those who have admired him and oppose what the transies have in mind for America.
Bush is just following orders.
I gave up on the sob a long time ago. This is the 2nd time he’s tried to push the LOST treaty by us.
Depressing, eh?
In spite of Frist being weak on several things...at least he knocked this one down last time it came around...
out of the archives:
[NRO Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.] Dont Get LOST: The White House Toys with Signing a Very Kerry Treaty
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1106080/posts
March 18, 2004, 11:56 a.m.
Dont Get LOST
The White House toys with signing a very Kerry treaty.
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.
In the wake of international terrorism’s most-successful strategic attack since September 11, 2001, the differences between Sen. John Kerry and President Bush about how the war on terror should be waged have become as clear as, well, the differences between the outgoing Spanish premier and his successor.
To be sure, even before last Thursday’s murderous explosions in Madrid, Senator Kerry and his surrogates were denouncing the war in Iraq on the grounds that President Bush failed to get the U.N.’s permission for it and then was unable to turn the governance of the country post-Saddam over to the so-called “international community.” This theme has, however, received mantra-like repetition by the Democratic candidate and his echo chamber ever since the terrorists took down Spain’s government.
The good news is that the Bush administration has finally launched a powerful counterattack. Just about every senior national-security official from President Bush on down has suddenly been made available to explain the logic of removing Saddam Hussein from power as an indispensable part of the war on terror. They and key legislators (like Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona, chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee) have at last gone on offense in response to the ceaseless, direct, and indirect attacks on the Bush team’s integrity as it made the case for draining the “swamp” that was Saddam’s terrorist-sponsoring, WMD-wielding Iraq.
Perhaps most importantly, President Bush and his advocates have directly challenged Senator Kerry, et.al., with respect to what may prove to be the most important foreign-policy issue of the 2004 campaign: John Kerry’s worldview that U.S. freedom of action around the world can safely and, indeed, as a practical matter must be subordinated to the U.N.’s superior judgment. In a powerful example of the assault now being inflicted on the Kerry record and candidacy, Vice President Cheney declared yesterday at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library: “The United States will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our country.”
The bad news is that the Bush administration risks grievously blurring where it stands on the appropriate, limited role of the United Nations in determining our security and other interests with its advocacy of a treaty that President Reagan properly rejected 22 years ago. As was noted in this space on February 26, the administration’s declared support for the Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) caused it to be approved unanimously by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee even though this accord would constitute the most egregious transfer of American sovereignty, wealth, and power to the U.N. since the founding of that “world body.” In fact, never before in the history of the world has any nation voluntarily engaged in such a sweeping transfer to anyone.
This is the case because LOST creates a new supranational agency, the International Seabed Authority (ISA), which will have control of seven-tenths of the world surface area, i.e., the planet’s international waters. That control will enable the ISA and a court created to adjudicate and enforce its edicts the right to determine who does what, where, when, and how in the oceans under its purview. This applies first and foremost to exploration and exploitation of the mineral and oil and gas deposits on or under the seabeds an authority that will enable the U.N. for the first time to impose what amount to taxes on commercial activities.
LOST, however, will also interfere with America’s sovereign exercise of freedom of the seas in ways that will have an adverse effect on national security, especially in the post-9/11 world. Incredibly, it will preclude, for example, the president’s important new Proliferation Security Initiative. PSI is a multinational arrangement whereby ships on the high seas that are suspected of engaging in the transfer of WMD-related equipment can be intercepted, searched, and, where appropriate, seized. Its value was demonstrated in the recent interception of nuclear equipment headed to Libya.
Similarly, LOST will define intelligence collection in and submerged transit of territorial waters to be incompatible with the treaty’s requirements that foreign powers conduct themselves in such seas only with “peaceful intent.” The last thing we need is for some U.N. court or U.S. lawyers in its thrall to make it more difficult for us to conduct sensitive counterterrorism operations in the world’s littorals.
Since my last column on this subject, there have been several notable developments with respect to the Law of the Sea Treaty:
It has become clear that one of the prime movers behind the Bush administration’s support for this U.N.-on-steroids treaty is none other than John Turner, a man property-rights activists kept from assuming a senior position in the Interior Department. Correctly seen by that community as a wild-eyed proponent of conservation at the expense of landowners’ equities, he was given a consolation prize: a seemingly innocuous post as the State Department’s assistant secretary for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs. It turns out that in that position and thanks to his longtime friendship with Vice President Cheney Turner has greatly advanced what is arguably the most egregious assault on property rights in history.
The United States Navy has trotted out arguments for this treaty that reflect what might be called the River Kwai Syndrome. Like the British senior POW in World War II who couldn’t bring himself to blow up a bridge his captors would use to their military advantage, Navy lawyers seem convinced that a bad deal is better than none.
Even though this accord will manifestly interfere with important peacetime naval operations, JAG types tell us they think it will be good for their business if freedom of the seas is guaranteed by a new, U.N.-administered international legal system rather than by U.S. naval power. They speciously assert that a 1994 agreement negotiated by President Clinton fixes the problems that caused President Reagan to reject LOST never mind that the Clinton accord does not amend or otherwise formally modify one jot of the treaty.
Fortunately, this nonsense will be exposed to critical examination in coming weeks as two Senate committees, Environment and Public Works and Armed Services, hold hearings on LOST. Their chairmen, Sen. Jim Inhofe (R., Okla.) and John Warner (R., Va.), respectively, deserve credit for inviting critics of the treaty (including this author) to provide testimony Indiana Republican senator Richard Lugar refused to permit the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to hear before it approved the resolution of ratification. (Other committees that have equities in this fight like Governmental Affairs, Commerce, Energy, Intelligence and Finance have yet to be heard from.)
The prospect these hearings and the attendant public scrutiny of the Law of the Sea Treaty will precipitate a time-consuming and politically costly debate has prompted Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R., Tenn.) to say that he sees no opportunity for the foreseeable future to bring this accord to the floor. Assuming he is good to his word, still more time will be available to awaken the American people to what is afoot.
Most importantly, one of those people, President George W. Bush, may recently have been awakened to the dangers political, as well as strategic and economic inherent in this treaty. In response to a question recently put to him by Paul Weyrich, the legendary conservative activist and president of the Free Congress Foundation, President Bush indicated that he was unaware of the Law of the Sea Treaty and his administration’s support for it. It can only be hoped that, as he conducts the promised review of LOST, he will make clear he does not want it ratified, now or ever.
Better yet, President Bush should assign his trusted undersecretary of Arms Control and International Security, John Bolton, the job of arranging for LOST to be “unsigned” just as he did with respect to the fatally flawed treaty that created the International Criminal Court. Secretary Bolton would be particularly appropriate for this job, since he was also the prime architect of the Proliferation Security Initiative that the Law of the Sea Treaty would eviscerate.
While such developments are generally welcome, one thing curiously has not happened. The alarm about the defective Law of the Sea Treaty has still not been sounded by the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Fox News. It can only be hoped that, as the Senate hearings on LOST start next week, this oversight will be corrected, ensuring that the treaty is deep-sixed, once and for all.
Frank J. Gaffney Jr. is president of the Center for Security Policy and a contributing editor to NRO.
http://www.nationalreview.com/gaffney/gaffney200403181156.asp
See #25.
I only voted for GWB as the lesser of two evils in 2000, and again, even more unwillingly, in 2004. Bush, like Fred Thompson, is a globalist, one world government, New World Order - whatever you want to call it, just like GHWB is. I didn’t vote for “dad” the second time around, but worked for Pat Buchanan’s nomination. SO NO MORE VOTING FOR THE LESSER OF TWO EVILS. I’d rather die a quick death than a slow one.
Since she wrote this a little over two years ago, it seems almost prophetic when she wrote:
Conservatives are currently searching for a man of pro-American principles whom they can support for President in 2008. The Republican Senator or Governor who steps up to the plate can hit a home run if he leads the battle against LOSTs enormous wealth transfer to the unpopular United Nations.Hmmm... I wonder where Fred Thompson is on this? I suspect against. Anybody have more info?
Lost? I guess the big question now is “what’s the deal with Jacob?” Locke wont die from Ben shooting him, the island will heal Locke, as it also allowed him to walk. Meanwhile, which side will Juliet ultimately work for? My guess is the Lostaways, she really does hate Ben after all.
It does seem that this president is staying up nights trying to figure out more ways to dissolve our national sovereignty.
888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888
following in daddys footsteps.....remember that it was daddy who (AFTER losing the 92 election) committed the US to “fast-track” legislative action on the NAFTA matter, forcing the issue during the klinton debacle.....THAT BUSH had only 2 months as a lame-duck......THIS BUSH has 2 YEARS as a lame-duck!
elitist, globalist tool.
There is something wrong with G W Bush.
When was Mr. Bush ever able to make such a claim? When he teamed up with Sen. Kennedy on the education bill, or when he bloated government spending in the agriculture bill?
Sorry, I didn’t mean you. I was referring to gw
The link is at the bottom of my post #13.
Thought this might interest you. I haven’t read it or the whole thread yet, will get to it later. Looks like the kind of think you (and I) hate.
LOST WILL GUARANTEE THAT THE UN NEVER HAS TO BOW AND SCRAPE FOR MONEY!!
“None of these concerns about sovereignty matter in a post-9/11 world. The only thing that matters is the WOT “
IMO its probably the work of a very few large corporations trying to cut out the small business.
I’ve been checking for Hunter on this. Have not found anything, I’ll look for Fred.
Reagan didn’t like it.
Law of the Sea Treaty threatens sovereignty
Paul Weyrich
November 23, 2004
In 1982, President Reagan decided LOST was a Treaty that would not be in our country’s best interest to ratify, primarily because of his concern regarding the provisions governing deep seabed mining. However, our concern should extend well beyond that. LOST would have our country surrender its sovereignty on the seas to a body called the International Seabed Authority (ISA), whose membership is stacked in favor of Third World nations. If the Senate ratifies LOST, we will have given the ISA the authority to determine what rights our country will have to mine minerals located on the ocean floor and the right to tax their extraction. More than that, we also will have granted the ISA the right to regulate our transfers of military technology, even the right to determine in what situations our Navy can stop a vessel.
Conflicts involving LOST will not be settled by our country’s courts but by an international tribunal.[snip]
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/weyrich/041123
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