SORT BY 
ISSUES
WRITERS
DATE
3 posts in the last 24 hours
Suggest a post:
undispatch@gmail.com
Get help:
Report a problem
Gaffney Lost on Law of the Sea

Ban: Millennium Development Goals must be met: http://bit.ly/aq48OX #UN #SecGen
from UN
"Haven't we said so already?" - Blog post on Beijing+15 and meeting the MDGs, by UNIFEM Regional Director for the... http://bit.ly/9kQsDp
from UNIFEM
RT @corporateknight: Aboriginals in Canada face ‘Third World'-level risk of tuberculosis (via @globeandmail) http://3bl.me/ztcah2
from Diplotweet


|
|
|
Visitor:
18 Mar 5:18am
hdhbvfgvb
read more
Visitor:
18 Mar 5:18am
VERRY NISE
read more
Devid:
17 Mar 7:02am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
read more
Visitor:
14 Mar 1:22pm
The Women's day is a very honerable day of the World. In India our ladies are
very much proud of th
read more
Visitor:
13 Mar 6:25pm
"The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein A wake up call-to-arms to resist the
male-chauvinist model of cr
read more
Visitor:
13 Mar 1:09pm
I am a driver with all categories,I would like to know how I can find a Work
in Haiti UN or in ONG
read more
|
|
|
Devid:
17 Mar 7:33am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
read more
Visitor:
7 Mar 11:37am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
7 Mar 11:36am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
7 Mar 11:35am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
3 Mar 8:36pm
It can't be done. It's not about facts; it's about political opportunism.
read more
Chris de Ocejo:
26 Feb 12:29pm
Yes, but the IPCC report is one of many, hundreds of reports which show the
warming trend. It's a bi
read more
|
|
|
Devid:
17 Mar 8:14am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
read more
Chris de Ocejo:
23 Feb 10:32am
Stoning to death (rajm) is not a punishment prescribed by the Qur'an. Several
ahadith exist which su
read more
Visitor:
18 Feb 8:00pm
You know, I agree with your sense of absolute outrage. But the real reason
that women have these thi
read more
Visitor:
18 Feb 7:48pm
I am shocked. Not that Muslim women were caned. That was a LIGHT punishment
under Shari-a. The real
read more
Visitor:
18 Feb 7:37pm
No. We piloted the Nuremburg Courts, and we proved than that this concept can
work. We don't have to
read more
Visitor:
18 Feb 6:35pm
I wonder why the President of Chad wants the MINURCAT to leave when they are
protecting people???
read more

Male Monsters -- Girl Buried Alive for Being a Girl and the World Shrugs (Trigger Warning)
Peter Daou - February 5, 2010 - 2:12 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 9:06 am
Haiti Earthquake
Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 6:52 pm
Final Durban Thoughts
John Boonstra - April 24, 2009 - 3:06 pm








DISPATCH TWEETS






Matthew Cordell - October 3, 2007 - 6:08 pm
by Martine Apodaca
The UN Convention on Law of the Sea, which came into force in 1994 and has been ratified by 154 countries and the European Community, has been gathering steam in the U.S. Senate, is widely supported by both government and business leaders, and appears to be on track for ratification by the U.S.
This seems to be frightening a fringe group led by Frank Gaffney, a neocon columnist for the Washington Times and the National Review online, who has launched a nonsensical attack on the effort for U.S. ratification, claiming that the bid is a "UN power grab" and that US accession would transform the UN into a "world government" and force the United States to surrender sovereignty and immense resources in the sea and on the sea bed. Those unfounded views are reflected in Gaffney's column yesterday in the Washington Times.Gaffney apparently thinks he knows how to protect U.S. national and security interests better than the President, the Secretary of the Navy, and the combined leaders of the U.S. petroleum, fishing, mining, and shipping industries. That's not a bet that the U.S. Senate should take.
Rather than acknowledge and debate the vast military, economic, and environmental benefits of UNCLOS, Mr. Gaffney chooses to scare-monger about "international taxes" and "world government." UNCLOS establishes neither. Mr. Gaffney also doesn't acknowledge that an international race for oil, fish, diamonds and shipping routes has begun and is being accelerated by global warming as the arctic ice cap recedes. At stake are a possible 460,000 square miles of Arctic seabed that could hold as much as 25 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas, valuable commodities like gold, diamonds, fishing stocks, and lucrative freight routes.
The race is on.
Other nations are moving to take advantage of this situation. In August 2007, Russia planted its national flag on the seabed beneath the North Pole, calling international attention to a dubious claim to ownership of the North Pole and the Lomonosov Ridge -- with substantial potential oil, gas, and mineral deposits. The Canadians are staking claims in the arctic as well. In August 2007, Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper set off on a three-day tour of the region and announced plans to build two new military bases to reinforce Canada's territorial claims, and the Canadians are spending $7 billion on new arctic patrol vessels.
The U.S., however, has taken itself out of the race; only nations who are party to the Convention can make such claims -- or challenge the claims of others. Thus, while nations struggle for control of the arctic, the U.S. is sitting on the sidelines.
In truth, Mr. Gaffney is nearly alone on the far fringes in opposition to the Convention. Perhaps that is why he is making such desperate and outlandish arguments.
I've left Gaffney's sovereignty claims until last because they are perhaps the most ridiculous.
The Convention has, in fact, been called, correctly, a U.S. land grab because it expands U.S. sovereignty and sovereign rights over extensive maritime territory and natural resources off its coast. It provides a 12-mile territorial sea subject to U.S. sovereignty, U.S. sovereign rights over resources within a 200-mile exclusive economic zone, and U.S. sovereign rights over offshore resources (including minerals) to the outer edge of the continental margin, which extends well beyond 200 miles in several areas, including up to 600 miles off Alaska. This Convention clearly expands our sovereignty.
The Convention has a built-in, dispute-resolution forum where nations can come together to peacefully and efficiently settle disagreements. The deep seabed mining provisions would not apply to any areas in which the U.S. has sovereignty or sovereign rights. Further, these rules will facilitate mining activities by U.S. companies. Investors would have the legal certainty of the convention to protect their claims and investments. And the navigational provisions ensure that U.S. military and commercial vessels have worldwide maritime mobility with the backing of international law and not subject to the whims of any nation.
Senate ratification of the convention is inarguably in America's best interest. Scaremongering to the contrary is simply irresponsible.