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Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Frank Gaffney :: Townhall.com Columnist
Happy U.N. Day!
by Frank Gaffney
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Proponents of the United Nation’s Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) came up with a brilliant idea. Led by the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, they hoped to celebrate the 24th of October – also known as UN Day – by having that panel rubber-stamp LOST.

Fortunately, one of the Senate’s most knowledgeable and determined opponents of the Treaty, Republican Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana, exercised his right to defer its consideration, from the committee business meeting scheduled for Wednesday to at least the next one. Whether this will amount to more than a fleeting stay-of-execution depends on how many other Senators – and their constituents – become aware of the implications of making the day in this manner of the United Nations and affiliated organizations.

Sen. Vitter is certainly doing his part. He has asked for additional hearings before the Foreign Relations Committee, offering an opportunity for more witnesses to explain LOST’s myriad shortcomings. He has also provided a powerful briefing to many of his colleagues, prompting others to take up the cause.

Another leading critic of the Treaty, Sen. Jim Inhofe, Republican of Oklahoma, has asked for hearings before two committees on which he serves. Both the Armed Services and Environment and Public Works Committees would have their respective jurisdictions dramatically affected by LOST and the implementing legislation sure to follow from its ratification.

The same should certainly be occurring in at least six other committees. For example, the Finance Committee surely has an interest in the repercussions of LOST- established precedents for international taxation. The Judiciary Committee should consider how this accord will further the practice of subordinating domestic law to international jurisprudence.

The Intelligence Committee – whose Democratic chairman Jay Rockefeller generally treats with extreme skepticism what Bush Administration officials tell him – should obtain a “second opinion” on the latters’ assurances that U.S. intelligence will not be impaired by LOST.

Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs would have a two-fer, due 1) to the fact that LOST may require, among other things, the compromise of sensitive information about domestic industries in the name of environmental regulation, and 2) the growing allegations of corruption and incompetence in LOST’s utterly unaccountable International Seabed Authority.

The Energy and Natural Resources Committee should want to ascertain whether any American company is going to be willing to explore the ocean floors’ resources if, as the price of doing so, they have to give sensitive data and technology to international competitors. The Commerce Committee should have its own concerns about the prospective compromise of U.S. technologies and the Treaty’s other detrimental effects on our competitiveness (such as its socialist, redistributionist agenda, its imposition of the Luddite “precautionary principle” – which precludes innovation unless it can be proven harmless – and its adoption of European, rather than U.S., industrial standards). Continued...

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About The Author

Frank Gaffney Jr. is the founder and president of the Center for Security Policy and author of War Footing: 10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World .
 
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Remember The Space Treaty?
LOST is just another attempted socialist shakedown of America's pioneering investment in the exploration of the seas and the skies. What a nation has accessed by risk and expenditure is rightfully their's to develop and profit by.

Zimbabwe, for example, gave nothing to either deep sea technology or the conquest of space. Yet, by "virtue" of both these treaties, they would profit by the sweat of OUR brows. The resources of the Continental Shelf (especially that off our own shores!) or the potential riches of the solar system are the property of the risk-takers.

It's enough that these countries will benefit from the technology that results from our endeavors. The idea that they are entitled to a direct share due to their membership in the UN (which thereby gains power over us in the process) is both ridiculous and dangerous in its concept. It's up to these poorer nations to reform themselves in becoming a contributing factor in international affairs, not to continue in their corrupt and authoritarian ways with the prospect of American-derived money to keep their dictators solvent.

Lost lessons and what to watch.
The Nafta court threw out the Canadian lawsuit against California. The one where the gas additive manufacturer wanted to force California to allow its additive, which was outlawed as part of an enivronmental response to the smog problem. I was wondering how it failed, as it probably could have prevailed under the NAFTA agreement. I suspect now, that it was in deferrence to not tipping the hand until the entire net is cast, and a direct dodge of negative reactions,. . keeping under the radar, so to speak. That is probably the most insightful aspect of this article, the aknowledgement that the proponents are practicing stealth tactics. We should all watch very closely. Its like the total abscence is the indicator of hidden presence. There should be some level of controversy over these judicial activities, but the lack of reportage and discussion in the media when these things occur leaves the general public unaware of the peril.

Vigilance, friends!
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