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.
Now that Bush is a lameduck President and at the lowest polling rating
of his Presidency (28% favorably), Bush at last has come out in favor of
the Treaty. We have an uphill fight to defeat the Treaty. The Democrats
are in control of the Senate and almost all of them favor the Treaty.
Many of the six GOP Senators who were defeated in 2006 were opponents of
the Treaty. So if Senator Inhofe is to drum up opposition he would need
35 Senators. That would be next to impossible. Whereas Majority Leader
Frist kept his commitment to be against the Treaty, his successor,
Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has not yet taken a position of which we
are aware.
Again, when conservatives are defeated they regard their defeat as
final. When liberals are defeated they wait around until the next
opportunity presents itself. Meanwhile, the extraordinary researcher
Cliff Kincaid has produced a monograph linking global warming with the
Treaty and demonstrates that if the Treaty were ratified it would be far
easier to bring cases against the United States. In another paper, "The
Secret Agenda behind the Law of the Sea Treaty," he says the Treaty is
so extreme that former UN Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick stated that "it
was viewed as the cornerstone of Marxist-oriented New International
Economic Order." According to Kincaid, "This was conceived as a scheme
to transfer money and technology from the United States and other
developed countries to the Third World." He points out that Kirkpatrick
strongly opposed the Law of the Sea Treaty.
According to Kincaid, the Treaty would open the U.S. up to international
lawsuits and climate-change legislation, providing a back door for
implementation of the ungratified and costly global warming treaty. This
is because the Treaty would establish a new international legal regime,
including a new international court, to govern activities on, over and
under the oceans, seven-tenths of the world's surface. The provisions of
the Treaty would also permit international rules and regulations
governing economic and industrial activity on the remaining land area of
the world in order to combat global warming and other perceived
pollution dangers.
There you have it. Another bad idea, long defeated, about to be ratified
unless there is a real revolt against it.