Mon Jul 31, 2006 3:08 pm by Tawakalna Qubt-ut Allah
a good point, colleague, that should one or either signatory of a bi-partisan treaty cease to exist as an effective government, said treaty is null and void. but I sort of covered that by saying that there are plenty of other treaties to which the late Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ("soyuz nerushimy respublik svobodnykh....." - there's the old music for Loc, unreformed old tovarisch that he still is!) was signatory, albeit not necessarily the only one, which are still in force and generally still adhered to, more or less, usually less now though.
if however we take your point as valid, that the eventual absence of a former signatory government invalidates the terms of a given treaty, then by that argument, the Nationalist Government of China ie Taiwan has no legitimate claim for any kind of support in it's protracted attempt to represent itself as the rightful government of China. The Vatican City could legitimately be reintegrated into the State of Italy as the Fascist Govt of Mussolini that sanctioned it no longer exists. Japan could retake the Kurile Islands because the Soviet Union no longer exists. Germany could recover it's lost eastern provinces of Pomerania, Silesia, and East Prussia. Greece could recover it's Anatolian territories as the Turkish Govt of Kemal Ataturk no longer exists and was invalidated by the Turkish military coup of 1973 anyway. I could go on ad infinitum, but you see what I'm getting at, of course. International treaties remain in force until revoked or replaced by other treaties in their stead, or declared moribund by relevant authorities in loco of the original signatories. It is an an accepted principle of international relations that successor governments to former states inherit the diplomatic and financial obligations of their predecessors, to whit, the current "government" of Iraq inherits the previous regimes' obligation not to forcibly integrate Kuwait into Iraq. Successive British governments adhere to the treaty obligations of their predecessors despite the principle of the "sovereignty of Parliament" which states that no British government is perpetually bound by the acts or agreements of any previous governement. The idea that ALL states remain bound in principle to the diplomatic agreements of previous governments is a basic one that provides the bedrock for international relations, for without it, there would be chaos, a "wild west" scenario where the strong prevail nd the weak, well the weak don't; and it was of course the principle upon which World War 2 began, the violation of Poland's sovereignty by Nazi Germany, a sovereignty guaranteed by Britain and France. If international law was right then, then it's right now. it cannot be ignored simply because it's convenient to do so. More on this in a moment.
ergo, I'm afraid, the law is quite clear both in principle and in precedent; the ABM Treaty of 1972 still stands, regardless of the current circumstances, until revoked by mutual consent between the United States and the current (or future) government of Russia, or by the mandate of the United Nations. And in conseqeunce, the United States government is in violation of said Treaty. (However it is a long standing maxim of US foreign policy, going back to the Spanish-American War iirc, that international treaties do not count if the circumstances deem that is it is in the interests of the United States to ignore said treaties. There is a term used by US diplomats for this but I can't remember what it is, i think it's part of the Monroe doctrine, but i'm not sure; anyway, basically it means that the sole responsibility of the United States is to it's own citizens and thus the dealings between the US and other countries should be just that. It was not a priciple that Woodrow Wilson, John F Kennedy, or Henry Kissinger - the very same who negotiated the ABM Treaty that we are discussing, ever endorsed.)
I trust that makes the matter clear? In fairness i should point out that the ABM Treaty has in effect been moribund since former President Ronald "the Gypper" Reagan stuck two fingers up at it in the '80s and announced his "Star Wars" programme, which was Edward Teller's really. Although technically said programme was for "research" purposes only, "peace shield" adverts on primetime network TV during the election campaign notwithstanding. By the way, that's "research" in a similar meaning to the way that Japanese whaling fleets "research" ie completely ignore international law and do whatever the hell they want. And i really must add that the Star Wars programmes only tangible result was the bankrupting of the Soviet Union and thus undermining it to the point of collapse, which for all the rejoicing at the time has resulted in the dangerously unstable multi-polar world of increasing chaos and anarchy that we live in today. So well done there, great result.
and (for about the tenth time now) Iran's nuclear programme is not about making nuclear weapons, regardless of what keeps being belted out by Western news media. Iran is a net importer of energy because despite its production of crude for export, it has virtually no refining capacity of its own. This makes it, ironically, dependent on US-owned companies for its imported petroleum. Bear in mind also that it's oil fields are getting old now, having been exploited for the best part of a century by Russia, Britain, and US/UK multinationals as well as obviously by the Iranians née Persians themselves, it's hardly surprising that they want to break this dependency. Unfortunately for the Iranian govt, the people are used to having very cheap energy and won't accept price hikes (sound familiar?) so the Iranian government basically bribes it's population with cheap oil by subsidisng it, spending the money they make from export of crude on subsidised
imports of refined petroleum products. I'm not making this up, any balance-of-trade report will show you the figures. Forget the propaganda, look at the facts. Besides, the US and Iran have had a very shady relationship for many years now nehind the scenes, remember Ollie North and the Iran-Contra affair? Tings ain't quite what they appear to be there, folks. And as for North Korea, well really; i think some people have been watching too may James Bond films (or maybe Team America) The so-called "Axis of Evil" is made up; it's a fantasy, it's not real. No country is going to launch nuclear missiles onto the United States, however many films and computer games and whacked-out religious survivalist nutcases and prophets of doom and manipulative politicians say they are. The only real danger from nukes are suitcase bombs and tactical nukes bought from greedy ex-Soviet military or scientists, and even that's grossly exaggerated. And no-one get me started so-called on "dirty" bombs because that one really is a joke; the truth behind the dirty bomb scares is so comic-opera funny, maybe it's worth relating after all. nah, too long and I'm tired. maybe some other time.
I shouldn't worry about it if I were you; even without silly laser weapons, no-one is going to be nuking the United States tonight, tomorrow, next week, next year, or at any time in the foreseeable future, despite the pulp novels such ideas sell at airports and computer games of varying quality on the same them. Makes good fiction but that's all it is, my friends; misplaced paranoia and a guilty attempt to justify morally questionable actions committed in haste.
Anyway, that's positively my last word on the subject, other than to say that laser weapons are a complete waste of time and money which could be better spent elsewhere, like all these hair-brained hi-tech sci-fi inspired projects that never amount to anything remotely useful, like silly Mars missions or Moonbases or any of the other rubbish that gets announced to make credulous people forget what's really going on in the world. Complete and utter bilge.
Edited by - Tawakalna Qubt-ut Allah on 7/31/2006 4:43:47 PM