Monday, July 10, 2023

Biden's Cluster Bombs Divide NATO; Big Rift Over Aid To Ukraine | Spain Joins UNITED KINGDOM To Oppose U.S.

UPDATED ON JULY 14TH, 2023 - Cluster bombs were a heavy MK Ultra subject to negotiation between Russia and West with Putin who claimed Biden for Russia to have 100x times more cluster bombs that West   https://ausertimes.blogspot.com/2023/07/cluster-bombs-were-heavy-mnk-ultra.html


ITS OVER 500 DAY OF WAR ON PEOPLE OF UKRAINE, AND THE SO CALLED HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH(MAJOR HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANISATION PROTESTER OF MILITARY ASSISTANCE TO UKRAINE) NEVER EVER PROTESTED RUSSIANS USE OF THERMOBARIC WEAPONS - NOT ONE SINGLE TIME AS IF IT WAS UKRAINE WHICH ASSOULTED RUSSIA BEGINNING 2014 AND NOT RUSSIAN ASSOULT ON UKRAINE
 LONDON CABAL WAS A PERSONAL MOSCOWIAN BELGRADE LJUBLJANA'S "DISCRIMINATION" COMPLAIN DEPARTMENT WHICH REPRESENTED WESTERN COUNTRIES IN GENOCIDE AGIANST ME SO PRINCE CHARLES, PRINCE ANDREW, HARRY AND WILLIAM PRODLY ACCENTED ME - LONDON CABAL HYSTORICALLY HAVE UPON FALL OF THE USSR https://ausertimes.blogspot.com/2023/07/the-first-international-project.html TOOK INITIATIVE IN RUSSIAN RETALIATION FROM DIRECTION OF THE WEST AGAINST ME EVERYONE INVOLVED IN MK ULTRA KNEW. THERE WAS TIME, HOWEVER, BRITISH ROYALS WERE NO SELECTIVE ABOUT MY "DISCRIMINATING" RUSSIAN AND SERBIAN SIDE SO MUCH.

HERE IS HOW I DISCRIMINATED RUSSIAN AND SERBIAN SIDE = FORCEFULLY UNEMPLOYED WITH WHENEVER EMPLOYMENT WAS GRANTED, ABNORMAL WORK HOURS WERE ENFORCED DURING WHICH ABUSE AND RACISM REGULARY TOOK PLACE. THESE NOT ONLY ABNORMAL, BUT ALSO AS THEY REFERRED TO AS "OVERTIME" HOURS WHENEVER ALLOWED TO EARN CLOSE TO MINIMUM WAGE WERE USED FOR MORE TORTURE/HARROWING UNDER MK ULTRA. WHEN THROWN BEHIND DOORS OF PSYCHITRIC INSTITUTION IN 2013 IN WHICH BRITISH ROYALS RAPED FOR SINCE MY AGE 4(SINCE 1975), A MATTER OF THE RIGHT TO EMPLOYMENT BECAME A THEORY AND GENOCIDE NO LONGER WAS IMPLEMENETED ONLY BY HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION BUTRCHERIES WHICH INVOLVED VIA KIDNEYS/LIVER A CANCER ISSUES, BUT ALSO NEW PSYCHIATRIC PILLS(WHATEVER EXTRA WAS IN THERE) WHICH WERE TEARING MY INTERNAL ORGANS APPART FROM PAIN ALONE. AND AS FOR WHATEVER I WROTE ON MY BLOGS OR MENTIONED ON VIDEO CHANNELS(BOTH EXISTED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 2010 - 2010 AND SINCE IS IMPORTANT TO MENTIONED BECAUSE BRITONS AND AMERICANS AS WELL AS OTHER ALLIES ACTIVELY BEGUN TO TORTURE SINCE A YEAR PRIOR TO OFFICIAL FALL OF THE SOVIET UNION IN 1991 - SINCE 1990 OR AS SOON AS COUNTRIES SUCH AS POLAND LIBERATED THEMSELVES OF OCCUPATION) THAT DEPICTED OPENLY ENEMY SIDE AGAINST ME DESPITE PRESENCE OF ACTIVE TORTURE SINCE MY AGE 4 IN AN INFERIOR LIGHT WHEN COMPARED TO MY "WESTERN ALLIES", IT WAS JUDGED BY BRITISH ROYALS AS A FORM OF ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION BASED ON WHICH EXTRA PUNISHEMENT WAS NECCESARY TO IMPLMENET AGAINST ME. EXTRA PUNISHEMENT THROUGH WESTERN SOCIETY INVOLVED IN MK ULTRA - JUSTIFIED IN MY FACE BY BRITISH ROYALS(SPECIALLY PRINCE ANDREW, PRINCE WILLIAM AS I CITE, "YOU DID IT AGAIN AND YOU MUST PAY FOR IT") AS WE TOLD YOU AND AS EVEN NO LONGER KNOW HOW TO PROTECT YOU WHILE DESPERATELY CONTINUING ATTEMPT TO KILL GOD IN ME.

BRITONS FOR WHAT THEIR ASSISTANCE TO UKRAINE WAS/IS SHOULDN'T

HAVE THE RIGHT TO SAY EITHER WAY BASED ON MY OBSERVATION. THEIR ASSISTANCE ALLWAYS CAME WITH ASTRONOMICAL PRICE TO THOSE WHOM THEY ASSISTED(IN MY CASE WITH SLAVERY WORSE THAN WHAT IMMEDIATE OUTCOME OF DEATH WOULD HAVE WHILE ACTIVELY ATTEMPTING THEIR BEST TO GET ME INDIRECTLY MURDERED SINCE 1995) FOR ONE THING AND DEPENDING ON INTERESTS WHICH BRITISH SET ASIDE FOR RUSSIA(EITHER PERSONAL AGENDA CONCERNING FUTURE RELATIONS OR TOTAL COLONISATION OF RUSSIA WHATEVER OUTCOME OF GENOCIDE IN UKRAINE MAY BE) , IT COULD LED ENTIRE WORLD THROUGH WAR IN UKRAINE ON THE WORST OF THE WORST TRACKS EITHER WAY - NOT COULD, BUT 100% WILL.










Spain, UK against provision of cluster bombs to Ukraine


U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Spanish Defense Minister Margarita Robles on July 8 came out against the provision of cluster munitions to Ukraine by the U.S.    

A White House press release from July 7 stated that the new $800 million defense aid package to Ukraine contains cluster munitions.

Robles said that Spain has an obligation to ensure that certain weapons cannot be delivered, saying "no to cluster munitions and yes to aid for the lawful defense of Ukraine."

Sunak said that he doesn't approve of the use of cluster weapons since the U.K. has signed a convention banning them.

According to Foreign Policy magazine, cluster munitions can be fired by the 155mm artillery systems that the U.S. has already provided to Ukraine and could be very effective at clearing Russian defense lines.

The step proved controversial due to humanitarian concerns over the use of cluster munitions. The unexploded bomblets may pose a danger to the civilian population in the area long after the hostilities end.

More than 100 countries have joined the Convention on Cluster Munitions, banning their use, production, and stockpiling. The U.S., Russia, and Ukraine are not among the signatories.

The proportion of bomblets that do not explode upon impact is called the "dud rate." According to U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, the munitions provided to Ukraine will not have a dud rate higher than 2.5%, compared to 30-40% of cluster munitions that Russia uses in Ukraine.

Sullivan emphasized that the U.S. will cooperate with Ukraine on demining efforts and that Kyiv intends to use cluster munitions to defend its sovereign territory and citizens.


Spain, UK against provision of cluster bombs to Ukraine



U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Spanish Defense Minister Margarita Robles on July 8 came out against the provision of cluster munitions to Ukraine by the U.S.

A White House press release from July 7 stated that the new $800 million defense aid package to Ukraine contains cluster munitions.

Robles said that Spain has an obligation to ensure that certain weapons cannot be delivered, saying "no to cluster munitions and yes to aid for the lawful defense of Ukraine."

Sunak said that he doesn't approve of the use of cluster weapons since the U.K. has signed a convention banning them.

According to Foreign Policy magazine, cluster munitions can be fired by the 155mm artillery systems that the U.S. has already provided to Ukraine and could be very effective at clearing Russian defense lines.

The step proved controversial due to humanitarian concerns over the use of cluster munitions. The unexploded bomblets may pose a danger to the civilian population in the area long after the hostilities end.

More than 100 countries have joined the Convention on Cluster Munitions, banning their use, production, and stockpiling. The U.S., Russia, and Ukraine are not among the signatories.

The proportion of bomblets that do not explode upon impact is called the "dud rate." According to U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, the munitions provided to Ukraine will not have a dud rate higher than 2.5%, compared to 30-40% of cluster munitions that Russia uses in Ukraine.

Sullivan emphasized that the U.S. will cooperate with Ukraine on demining efforts and that Kyiv intends to use cluster munitions to defend its sovereign territory and citizens.





are using weapons widely banned across the world, says Harvard Law expert

Bonnie Docherty, who directs the Armed Conflict and Civilian Protection Initiative, says cluster munitions and other explosive weapons are particularly threatening Ukrainian civilians


As the Russian invasion of Ukraine continues to unfold, international law experts and human rights advocates have trained a close eye on the kinds of weapons being deployed in the country — and their potential to hurt or even kill civilians. Of particular concern, says Bonnie Docherty ’01, an arms expert at Harvard Law School, is the reported use of cluster munitions and other explosive weapons in highly populated areas — weapons that can be difficult to control, and which have already claimed lives.

Docherty, a lecturer on law at the International Human Rights Clinic, associate director of armed conflict and civilian protection at the Clinic, and a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch in its arms division, spoke with Harvard Law Today about two deeply troubling categories of weapons, their status under international law, and what the U.S. — and the world — should do about it.


Harvard Law Today: What do we know about the types of weapons being used in Ukraine and their legality?

Bonnie Docherty: There are two categories I want to mention: cluster munitions and explosive weapons. Just to be clear, explosive weapons as a broad category includes cluster munitions, but I want to highlight cluster munitions in particular as well.

Cluster munitions have been banned by the majority of the world under a treaty called the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which was adopted in 2008. In fact, the International Human Rights Clinic and I were part of the negotiations on that treaty [which was not signed by Russia or Ukraine]. Cluster munitions are large weapons, launched from the air or ground, which include dozens or hundreds of smaller weapons called “submunitions.” They are dangerous for two reasons. One is they spread the submunitions over a broad area, and so are indiscriminate about what they hit. And the second is that a large number of the submunitions do not explode and lay around like landmines for months, years, or even decades to come. So far, Human Rights Watch has documented the use of these weapons by Russia in multiple places, including against a hospital in the Donetska region. The Washington Post also documented, and Human Rights Watch confirmed, their use in the eastern city of Kharkiv.



The second, broader category is explosive weapons, many of which are being widely used in populated areas. These weapons include rockets, missiles, artillery shells, aircraft bombs — things like that. Explosive weapons are not banned as a category, but they are very problematic when used in populated areas, which is happening widely in this conflict. They’re even more problematic when they have what we call “wide area effects,” which means they cover a broad footprint. This is for three reasons. One is they have a large blast or fragmentation radius. Two is that they’re very inaccurate. And the third is they deliver multiple munitions at once; that could be a cluster munition, as I previously mentioned, or it could be a like a Grad multiple rocket launcher that launches many rockets at the same time.

Under existing international humanitarian law, using explosive weapons, particularly when they have these wider effects, in populated areas is often considered indiscriminate and thus unlawful because they cannot distinguish between soldiers and civilians.

It’s also worth noting that there are negotiations underway of a new, non-binding — but important — political declaration that would commit states to protect civilians from the use of explosive weapons in populated areas. States were supposed to finalize negotiations in March 2020, but the pandemic prompted them to reschedule to February 2022, a date which has once again been pushed off until sometime this spring. So, the events in Ukraine are very applicable to the current international disarmament negotiations.

HLT: What threat do cluster munitions and other explosive weapons pose to Ukrainian civilians?

Docherty: We have already seen casualties from cluster munitions. With the attack that I mentioned at the hospital in Donetska, we know that there were four killed and 10 injured. And in the attack in Kharkiv, there were 11 killed. Those are just two attacks, and I’m sure there will be others


Cluster munitions also leave behind many unexploded submunitions. I’ve reported on cluster missions in many conflicts — Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Georgia — and every place I’ve been, there are always a large number of failed submunitions. This means there’s the potential not just for immediate harm, but for long-term harm and danger to civilians — particularly kids, who sometimes think these are toys and pick them up. Farmers may hit them with their plows. Or in cities, they can lead to displacement or danger for people returning to their homes.

Regarding explosive weapons more broadly, obviously there is a danger to civilians lives. I don’t think anyone can pin down a number right now, but you are starting to see civilian casualties from the blasts themselves, as well as from buildings being damaged. But there are also longer term reverberating effects down the road. For example, the Human Rights Clinic did research on this issue in 2016, looking at the downstream effects of explosive weapons on health care facilities during the earlier conflict in Ukraine. Say you damage a power plant, which shuts down electricity, which then means surgeons are operating in the dark or by candlelight, which means people aren’t getting the health care they need. It’s these trickle down effects that can take years to recover from.

In other words, explosive weapons will cause not only immediate loss of life, but also damage to infrastructure, health care, education, and more. And of course, displacement is huge, and hundreds of thousands of people have already fled the country. There are going to be major, major impacts on civilians from these weapons.

HLT: What else should the U.S. or others around the world be doing to discourage the use of these weapons?

Docherty: One of the most important things countries, including the U.S., can do is to condemn the use of both cluster munitions and explosive weapons in populated areas. It’s really important to make a political statement right now. With regard to cluster munitions, there are 110 countries that have joined the Convention on Cluster Munitions, including almost all of NATO, except for the United States. The U.S. should join the treaty.



Further, there was a policy adopted under President George W. Bush that in 2018, the U.S. would stop using cluster munitions that had a more than 1% failure rate — meaning the rate of unexploded submunitions left behind. President Donald Trump reversed that policy. I think it’s time for President Joseph Biden to go back to the original policy and agree not to use cluster munitions.

Additionally, a lot of international law, particularly in the area of disarmament, works by stigma. And stigmas prove effective; the U.S. hasn’t used cluster munitions — except for one isolated attack — since 2003.

Along those lines, there is an obligation under the Convention on Cluster Munitions to discourage these weapons’ use, so countries who have signed on arguably have a legal obligation to condemn their use publicly. Even states that aren’t party to the convention have a moral obligation to condemn their use.

HLT: How could we assist those who have been or will be hurt in the conflict?

Docherty: Assistance is really important. The parties should ensure they keep humanitarian access open throughout the conflict. There is an obligation to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross access to POWs and to provide humanitarian aid during the conflict, for example.

Further down the road, states, as well as other organizations, should provide victim assistance. It is a general principle in disarmament law to assist individuals, families, and communities that have been harmed by problematic weapons. For example, there are obligations under the Convention on Cluster Munitions to assist those who have been harmed by those weapons. There will likely be a similar duty under the declaration on explosive weapons that I mentioned is currently being negotiated. Victim assistance encompasses not only physical and psychological care, but also measures to ensure the socioeconomic inclusion of the victim.

In addition, there will be duds left behind from unexploded submunitions, and the international community should help Ukraine take care of those.

Above all, we have to remember that even after the fighting is over, the effects of the conflict are not. There is the whole post-conflict period afterward, during which there will be a long process of rebuilding.


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