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The Senate battle over ratification of Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) is heating up and may be brought to vote this month. If passed, it will destroy American sovereignty. Sen. Vitter is bravely standing against all globalist forces that want to de-nationalize the United States. Now is the time for you to make your opinions known to your Senators!
By Cliff Kincaid
 Sen. David Vitter
The media have been pummeling
conservative Republican Senator David Vitter of Louisiana for
apologizing for sexual indiscretions. But America should be grateful he
stayed in the Senate and did not resign in the wake of the media
assault. The senator demonstrated recently, during a hearing into the
U.N.’s Law of the Sea Treaty, that he is going to continue to do the
job he was elected to do. Vitter’s performance was so effective that he
left State and Defense Department officials either speechless or caught
up in embarrassing contradictions about the impact of this
international agreement on America’s security and sovereignty. It
should now be perfectly obvious that Bush Administration officials, in
collusion with liberal Senators, are trying to bamboozle the Senate
into quickly ratifying a very dangerous pact.
One area of concern
is how other nations and international lawyers could use the treaty
against the U.S. in a back-door effort to implement the (unratified)
global warming treaty, with the result being higher gas prices for the
American people and perhaps even energy rationing. The Law of the Sea
treaty creates a tribunal and various bodies, including dispute
resolution or arbitral panels, to resolve conflicts which may arise.
Major parts of the treaty mandate international regulation of U.S.
economic and industrial activities on land. Greenhouse gases, for
example, could be viewed under the terms of the treaty as contributing
to pollution of the oceans.
 John D. Negroponte Deputy Secretary of State John
Negroponte told the Senate committee that the U.N. body established by
the treaty has “no jurisdiction over marine pollution disputes
involving land-based sources.” He said, “that’s just not covered by the
treaty.” Negroponte’s sidekick, State Department Legal Adviser John B.
Bellinger III, said, “It clearly does not allow regulation over
land-based pollution sources. That would stop at the water’s edge.” But
Vitter shot back, “…why is there a section entitled pollution from
land-based sources?” Not only is there a section by that name, Vitter
pointed out, but there is a section on enforcement. The section is
Article 207, “Pollution from land-based sources.” Anybody can look it
up. But apparently our top officials and lawyers have not. Either that
or they are trying to mislead the people about the ramifications of
this treaty. In either case, we are sunk if this treaty goes through.
 John Bellinger It
was absolutely clear to anyone paying attention that Negroponte and
Bellinger either had no real understanding of what was in the treaty or
didn’t want to tell the American people what was really in it. In the
end, under withering fire from Vitter, Bellinger insisted that the
controversy was too “technical” to discuss at the hearing and that he
would submit something in writing. Senator Jim Webb, chairing the
hearing, suggested he do so, attempting to save Bellinger from further
embarrassment. Our liberal media favoring this treaty will, of course,
not bother to point out that one of the top brains in the State
Department had been caught in the act of trying to mislead the U.S.
Senate.
This wasn’t the only exchange in which Vitter caught
Bush Administration officials saying things that were untrue. He caught
them in evasions and obfuscations over the claim that U.S. military and
intelligence activities on the high seas cannot be restricted by the
treaty. U.S. officials are making that claim in a declaration in the
Senate resolution of ratification. It is one of 24 declarations or
understandings being made by the U.S. for a treaty that administration
witnesses repeatedly claimed would provide “legal certainty” about what
nations can and cannot do on the high seas.
If the treaty is so
definitive and clear, then why is there a need for 24 declarations and
understandings? To make matters worse, these declarations and
understandings have no legal validity under the treaty.
Exhibiting
an arrogant streak, Bellinger told Senator Bob Corker that the U.S. had
“effective lawyers” and were likely to win most of the disputes. He
said each side picked arbitrators in a dispute but neglected to mention
that the U.N. Secretary-General can pick some, too. Most of the members
of the U.N. Sea Treaty organization, like members of the U.N. itself,
come from the anti-American bloc. Despite Bellinger’s confidence in the
ability of the legal profession, it is political power and
anti-Americanism that will decide these outcomes. That is why, except
on the U.N. Security Council, where the U.S. has a veto, U.N. decisions
almost always go against America and our economic and security
interests.
 Sen. Richard Lugar Senator Richard Lugar, the top Republican on the
Senate committee and long-time advocate of the treaty, turned in an
embarrassing performance as well. Lugar, who has accepted campaign
contributions from the Citizens for Global Solutions, a pro-world
government lobby, attacked critics of the pact as conspiracy theorists
who were exaggerating the dangers of the pact. He attacked an ad
that my group, America’s Survival, had put in the Washington Times on
Wednesday, saying it was misleading. In fact, the claims were based on
the text of the treaty and official U.N .documents. I have been denied
the opportunity to testify to set the record straight, which is another
indication that the treaty is being rushed through before the American
people can understand its ominous implications.
Noting the
outrage over the attempt to pass the Senate illegal alien amnesty bill,
which also involved the issue of national sovereignty, Senator Jim
DeMint said this was the wrong time to be trying to push the U.N.’s Law
of the Sea Treaty through.
DeMint asked some tough questions of
administration witnesses, focusing on the fact that while the U.S.
would follow the treaty if ratified, other nations would not. On the
question of using the treaty to enforce international environmental
accords, DeMint noted that Britain had been taken to court under the
treaty for operating a nuclear plant on its own soil. The South
Carolina senator also rebutted the claim, mentioned often at the
hearing, that President Reagan had rejected the treaty only because of
its seabed mining provisions. He read from the new book on Reagan’s
diaries in which the former president says he would not have signed the
treaty even without those provisions.
Senator Joe Biden,
chairman of the committee, did not even show up, probably because he
was campaigning for the presidency somewhere. Indeed, only one
Democrat, Senator Jim Webb of Virginia, came to the hearing. He became
acting chairman in Biden’s absence. Senators were restricted to only
one round of questions, lasting about seven minutes each. Considering
the deficient answers to Vitter’s questions, one can now understand
why. They did not want the holes and traps in the treaty to be exposed
to public view.
It is apparent that this treaty is being rushed
through the Senate, despite the abundant evidence that it will backfire
against America and undermine our sovereignty and security. But Senator Vitter
has served notice that they are not going to run over him. Americans
concerned about their sovereignty and security should thank him
profusely.
Further Resources:
History of the Law of the Sea Treaty
Senate Being Deceived About LOST
Bald-Faced Lies About the U.N.
August Review Video Center
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