US to Skip Cluster Bomb Meeting to Ban Weapons

In 2006 Hillary Clinton Voted Against Banning Cluster Bombs [HERE]
AP The United States will skip a meeting in Dublin next month that aims to ban cluster bombs, officials said Friday.
Instead, Washington will focus on separate United Nations talks in Geneva that will restrict — but not ban — the use of the weapon, the head of the U.S. delegation said. The U.N. talks will aim to draft a legally binding protocol to address the humanitarian impact of cluster bombs, said Stephen Mathias, a State Department lawyer. The protocol may also include nonbinding best practice guidelines for militaries, he said. More than 100 countries are expected to meet May 19-30 in Dublin, where they will try to forge a final agreement on banning a weapon they consider a serious threat to civilians.

Cluster bombs are built to explode above the ground and release thousands of small bomblets primed to detonate on impact. The cluster bomb is one of the most hated and heinous weapons in modern war, and its primary victims are children. Children are particularly vulnerable as they are attracted to the bright flashlight-battery sized bomblets.

Combat results show that 10 to 40 percent of the bomblets fail to go off on impact but can explode later, killing and maiming civilians. The United States, Russia, China, India, Pakistan and Israel oppose a ban on cluster bombs, arguing that there are legitimate military uses for the weapon.[MORE]