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Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Paul  Weyrich :: Townhall.com Columnist
"UNCLOS" or "LOST" - A Bad Idea Resurfaces
by Paul Weyrich
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No bad idea is ever completely defeated in this country, perhaps in other nations as well. I have seen bad ideas surface again and again in this country. When the right is defeated the right tends to stay defeated. I recall advocating a national right-to-work law when I worked in the Senate in the late 1970s. The member of the leadership to whom I pitched the idea exclaimed, "Oh, no. We can't do that. It was defeated in 1958." I merely was suggesting that we try to get a vote on the issue. I knew we couldn't win at that time. I went on and said "So? There is hardly anyone here who was in the Senate then." I didn't work for this Senator so I felt that I could not go further but the point remains valid. No doubt if I tried to push the idea among conservatives in the Senate to this day someone would object because his father told him that the idea had been defeated in 1958 and therefore it could not be done.

Not so with the liberals. My first encounter with the demand for gun control came in 1968. It was shortly after Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated. It seemed that every man and his brother was demanding gun control. Senator Gordon L. Allott, for whom I worked, told me "Just wait around. A few months from now almost no one will be talking about gun control. I've seen it all before [when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated]. This idea comes up here again and again although if you would ask the average man on the street, he almost would never demand gun control." The good Senator was correct. He has been gone for more than 25 years, yet the issue has surfaced again and again. Most recently it has occurred following the tragic killings at the Virginia Polytechnical Institute and State University, known as "Virginia Tech." With conservatives when an idea is defeated it by and large remains defeated. Does any current Senator push the Bricker Amendment?

On the other hand liberals have no hesitancy in repeatedly pushing a bad idea after it has been defeated. We have a perfect illustration of this in the current Senate. When Ronald W. Reagan took office as President, more than 25 years ago, an issue surfaced known as the Law of the Sea Treaty. I had never heard of it and must admit when it was first mentioned I didn't pay much attention. But thanks to Howard Phillips, Phyllis Schlafly and others I began to realize that this Treaty, sometimes disparagingly called "LOST," approvingly called "UNCLOS," would give our sovereignty away. That alarmed me.

Through our Coalitions efforts we began to fight this Treaty. The battle seemed helpless until some of us discussed the matter with Edwin (Ed) Meese, III, then a key member of President Reagan's White House Staff. Meese agreed that the Treaty was fatally flawed and invited the President's attention to it. President Reagan opposed it. Yet, would you believe that we still had to carry on the fight against the Treaty beyond his coming out against it. The Navy, it seems, despite Reagan's opposition, still carried on until ordered to stop. Why, you ask, would the Navy be in favor of a treaty which would have given away our sovereignty? The reason, we were told, was that the Navy believed the Treaty if ratified would make it safer for our ships to operate. Who knows, but that was the argument advanced at the time.

Once the Law of the Sea Treaty was put on ice by Reagan in the second year of his eight years in the Presidency it did not surface again. Nor did it surface during the Administration of President George H. W. Bush. After Bill Clinton was in office for two years and faced a Republican Senate he never pushed the Treaty at all.

Then came the Administration of President George W. Bush. During his first term the Treaty never was pushed. We assumed that it was dead. But during the first Congress of his second term it surfaced again. In fact, Chairman Richard G. Lugar (R-IN) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was so determined to push this Treaty that he permitted no opposition during the hearings. It was voted out unanimously.

Thanks to extraordinary work by Senator Jim Inhofe (R-OK), and then a commitment made by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) at our Coalitions lunch, the Law of the Sea Treaty again was put on ice. While supposedly Vice President Dick Cheney was for the Treaty, President Bush never supported it. Continued...

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About The Author

Paul M. Weyrich is the late Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation.
 
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Hal Donahue
My only problem with your citing winning the Cold War was that it was not fought in the press, only in peoples minds. There were no body counts, no nightly views of the dead or tortured, no Abr Grahib (sp) scandals. Only freewheeling spending on weapon systems. One of the biggest squawks was when Jane Fonda went to Moscow and shot off her mouth.

I am not keen on the civil war problem in Iraq either. In unseating Saddam, we did unleash a whirlwind. I hope we can help them settle it before the Libs pull the plug. In my mind though, one goal was accomplished: A man who said he was 1) foursquare for destroying us with terrorism or WMDs is gone, and 2) his support mechanism for said goals is gone.

My only problem with FDR in that context was that he relied on the League too much, especially early on. That too compromises our sovereignty. He was too tentative at the outset, and he did not really accept the Soviet threat. Of course he passed away before that really became apparent.

FrmrSSGT
Not even going to look. What you call charity I call investment. As a military man you have to know unit cohesion is paramount. Lose that and you are back at hang separately. The group decides the rules....
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