|

U.S. Set to Use Mines in Iraq
Stockpiles Certain to Reopen Debate
December 11, 2002
By Tom Squitieri, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is preparing to use anti-personnel
land mines in a war with Iraq, despite U.S. policy that calls for
the military to stop using the mines everywhere in the world except
Korea by 2003.
To prepare for a possible
war with Baghdad, the Pentagon has stockpiled land mines at U.S.
bases in countries ringing Iraq, according to Pentagon records.
The decision to make the mines available comes despite a recent
report by the General Accounting Office, Congress' investigative
arm, concluding that their use in the 1991 Gulf War impeded U.S.
forces while doing nothing to impair Iraqi forces.
Using the mines would stoke
the international debate over the merits and morality of using land
mines, which can remain deadly long after fighting ends.
From 15,000 to 20,000 people
are killed or maimed worldwide each year by land mines, according
to the United Nations. Of those, 80% are civilians and one-third
are children.
Military experts say land mines
can save soldiers' lives. They play a "vital and essential
role" in battle by restricting where the enemy can move and
protecting U.S. troops, said a Pentagon spokesman.
Officially, the Pentagon will
say only that it "retains the right to use" land mines
wherever it chooses, and that commanders can get approval to use
them under rules designed to minimize risk to non-combatants.
But critics say the risks to
soldiers and civilians aren't worth it.
"It would be a terrible
mistake for us to use land mines in Iraq," said Sen. Patrick
Leahy, D-Vt., a prominent critic of land mines. "They are outmoded,
indiscriminate weapons that have been banned by every other NATO
member except Turkey, and they should be banned by the United States.
We have other far more effective and precise weapons to do the job."
In advance of a possible war,
Pentagon records show, the U.S. military has stored land mines in
Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and on Diego Garcia,
a British-owned island in the Indian Ocean where U.S. forces have
a base.
In 1997, international negotiations
produced a treaty to ban the use of land mines; 146 countries are
parties to it. The United States has not signed the treaty, but
in 1998 President Clinton directed U.S. armed forces to phase out
use of land mines by 2003, except in Korea.
The Bush administration has
been reviewing that policy. The Defense and the State departments
have clashed over it, but for now the Clinton directive remains
in effect.
|