Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




MILPLEX
New arms trade treaty: playing with fire
by Nikita Sorokin
Moscow (Voice of Russia) Nov 28, 2012


File image.

The conflict in Syria and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict have quite a few features in common. One of them, which is also typical for other similar conflicts, is that the opposition in Syria and Palestinian terrorists use arms which they illegally receive from abroad.

The situation may be changed if an international agreement is adopted, which would envision tough control over selling and purchasing weapons. A draft of such an agreement already exists, but some countries, including Russia, are against signing this document in its present form.

The conflict in Syria and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict have quite a few features in common. One of them, which is also typical for other similar conflicts, is that the opposition in Syria and Palestinian terrorists use arms which they illegally receive from abroad.

The situation may be changed if an international agreement is adopted, which would envision tough control over selling and purchasing weapons. A draft of such an agreement already exists, but some countries, including Russia, are against signing this document in its present form.

Other countries - mainly, Western ones - are accusing Russia of hampering the signing of an important treaty which, as they claim, would have helped to solve the problem of local conflicts. Now, what is behind Russia's refusal to sign the document in its present form?

The draft treaty was worked out by a commission that worked under the UN's auspices in New York in June. Besides Russia, it was not backed by the US and China.

To a certain extent, this may be explained by the fact that these three countries are the world's largest producers and exporters of weapons. But Russia has other reasons not to back this draft treaty as well, which we'll mention later.

On November 7, participants of a UN meeting voted in favor of holding another conference to discuss this draft treaty in March 2013. Russia and several other countries abstained from voting, which caused sharp criticism from a number of other countries.

Many European media sources are now calling Russia's position the main obstacle against signing the document that might have been a landmark in the world's struggle against the threat of terrorism.

By the way, the US voted for holding the new conference on this treaty, but the US is against the mechanism of adopting the treaty which the UN has suggested.

France and the UK are insisting that the treaty should be adopted by two thirds of the votes, but the US says that it will take part in the conference only if all participants consent.

The draft treaty envisions a ban on selling weapons to regimes that use force against their own citizens. However, Russia believes that if the treaty is adopted in its current formulation, it will not create any real mechanisms to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons.

Russia insists that the treaty should introduce very strict limits concerning who may sell and who may buy weapons.

In an interview with the Voice of Russia, Russian military observer Igor Korotchenko said:

"Russia primarily wants the Treaty to allow weapons supplies by authorized state agencies only. This condition is unacceptable for a number of Western companies."

The West eyes using the Arms Treaty to put pressure on unwanted regimes. Backing the Syrian rebels, the EU plans to leave Assad's regime with no options to buy weapons claiming that the government troops use it to kill civilians. Such limitations contradict international law and shatter the weapons trade basics which took years to be formed.

The EU already has the Code of Conduct on Arms Exports and it applied the document to ban weapon supplies to China, Iran, Syria, Myanmar, Sudan, Uzbekistan, Ukraine and Belarus - all of them are Russia's military and tech partners.

Russia, on its part, has a multi-phase arms export control, both when shipping weapons and after their delivery. It also sticks to international bans on weapon supplies. As Russia's weapon-making industry is state-run there are no loopholes for arms dealers.

Thus, all speculations about Russia posing a threat to a new Arms Trade Treaty are nothing but weapon barons attempting to manipulate public opinion.

Source: Voice of Russia

.


Related Links
Military Export News
The Military Industrial Complex at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








MILPLEX
US Navy moves to replace presidential helicopters
Washington (AFP) Nov 27, 2012
The Pentagon has launched a new project to replace the aging helicopters used by the US president, three years after a program was canceled due to surging costs. The next generation of Marine One choppers used by the White House incumbent would start flying in 2020, replacing the current fleet of 19 Vh-3D Sea Kings and VH-60N Night Hawks manufactured by Sikorsky. In a draft request for p ... read more


MILPLEX
20 workers injured as tornado hits Italy steel plant

Windows 8 sales hit 40 million: Microsoft

Japan firm offers 3D model of foetus

Modeling the breaking points of metallic glasses

MILPLEX
Lockheed Martin to Demonstrate Key Component of Tactical MilSat Communications System

The Skynet 5D secure telecom satellite is received in French Guiana for Arianespace's December Ariane 5 mission

Lockheed Martin Completes On Orbit Testing of Second AEHF Satellite

LynuxWorks LynxOS-SE Deployed by ITT Exelis in New Line of Software-Defined Radios

MILPLEX
EchoStar and Arianespace sign new satellite launch services contract

Soyuz ready for Friday launch of Pleiades 1B at Kourou

Sea Launch Postpones Satellite Launch Until Dec. 3

S.Korean Rocket Set to Lift Off Thursday

MILPLEX
East Riding Of Yorkshire Council Selects Ctrack For Specialist Vehicle Tracking Solution

Researchers Use GPS Tracking to Monitor Crab Behavior

US Navy, Raytheon receive Pentagon engineering award for GPS-guided precision landing program

Lockheed Martin Completes Critical Environmental Test on GPS III Pathfinder

MILPLEX
India to buy nearly 130 Su-30 fighter jets from Russia

French police fire tear gas anew on airport protest

Owls' ability to fly in acoustic stealth provides clues to mitigating conventional aircraft noise

China Eastern Airlines to buy 60 A320 aircraft

MILPLEX
Engineers pave the way towards 3D printing of personal electronics

Antenna-on-a-chip rips the light fantastic

Fabrication on patterned silicon carbide produces bandgap to advance graphene electronics

Important progress for spintronics

MILPLEX
Satellites used to track global smog level

Apple sacks exec in maps fiasco: report

China successfully launches remote sensing satellite

China successfully launches remote sensing satellite

MILPLEX
Italian steel plant suspends operations in pollution row

Scientists pioneer method to predict environmental collapse

Degraded military lands to get ecological boost from CU-led effort

India's capital widens ban on plastic bags




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement