WesleyWes
09-30-2005, 11:08 AM
"Sink the Law of the Sea Treaty!
by William Norman Grigg
March 7, 2005
Source: The New American
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Conservative Americans who consider George W. Bush a champion of national sovereignty have been shocked to learn that the president seeks Senate ratification of the UN's Convention on the Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST). Despite the Senate's refusal thus far to ratify the treaty, it went into effect in 1995, and elements of the vast regulatory apparatus it outlines are already in operation.
When fully implemented, LOST would consummate the largest act of territorial conquest in history, turning seven-tenths of the Earth's surface over to the jurisdiction of the United Nations. It would create a mammoth bureaucracy to regulate exploration of the ocean depths and commercial development of the seabed's riches. The UN would also be empowered to collect royalties on seabed mining, thereby providing the world body with a potentially enormous independent source of revenue to fund its agenda for "global governance."
None of this seems compatible with the Bush administration's reputation for flinty-eyed defense of our national independence. Yet during her Senate confirmation hearings in January, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stated that the Bush administration "would certainly like to see [LOST] pass as soon as possible.... And we very much want to see it go into force."
"Joining the convention will advance the interests of the United States military," Rice claimed on January 18. "The United States, as the country with the largest coastline and the largest exclusive economic zone, will gain economic and resource benefits from the convention.... And the United Nations has no decision-making role under the convention in regulating uses of the oceans by any state party to the convention."
Rice's unqualified endorsement of LOST lets several important questions go begging. For instance: why is it necessary to sign a UN treaty in order to enjoy "economic and resource benefits" from ocean territory we already own and control? If the UN would have no role in regulating the use of oceans within our sphere of influence, how would it be in a position to grant us the "economic and resource benefits" referred to by Rice?
But nobody present at Secretary Rice's confirmation hearings was inclined to ask such pointed questions. Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), a noted Republican internationalist who supports ratifying LOST, was delighted by Rice's rapturous endorsement of the pact.
"I particularly appreciate your response on the Law of the Sea Convention," commented Lugar, making specific reference to Rice's assertion that the treaty was compatible with U.S. national security interests. "That's clearing up an issue sometimes raised by opponents of the convention," continued the senator, referring to widespread criticism of the pact as an infringement on U.S. sovereignty. He also cited Rice's statement that LOST "does not provide for or authorize taxation of individuals or corporations" and concluded: "I cannot think of a stronger administration statement in support of the Law of the Sea Convention."
Detailing the Deception
So great is the administration's desire to implement LOST that its supporters are blatantly misrepresenting the treaty's provisions.
Contrary to Rice's claim that "the United Nations has no decision-making role under the convention in regulating uses of the oceans by any state party to the convention," Article 2, paragraph 3 of the treaty explicitly states: "The sovereignty over the territorial sea is exercised subject to the Convention and to other rules of international law." As applied to our country, the phrase "territorial sea" refers to territory presently belonging to the United States. Under LOST, U.S. sovereignty over that territory would, in principle, be ceded to the UN.
Rice's claim that LOST "does not provide for or authorize taxation of individuals or corporations" is similarly dishonest. However, getting to the truth of the matter requires wading through page after page of murkily written bureaucratic language.
Article 170 of LOST describes the "Enterprise," a UN organ that would supervise all scientific, commercial, and military use of "the Area" all regions of the world's oceans, including the seabed and superadjacent atmosphere, beyond the territorial limits of coastal nations.
The "Enterprise" has yet to be created. The International Seabed Authority (ISA) and its ruling "Council," however, are up and running in Kingston, Jamaica. The ISA claims the power to enact rules and regulations governing the use of the seas. Article 171, dealing with "Funds of the Authority," lists "assessed contributions" and "funds received by the Authority in connection with activities in the Area...."
Annex 3, Article 13 of the treaty sets out the "Financial terms of contracts" between the UN's Enterprise and private interests seeking to develop seabed resources. Any private firm seeking to conduct mining operations must pay an administrative fee of $500,000, in addition to an annual royalty to $1 million with those figures subject to revision by the Council. Within a year of commercial production, the treaty continues, "a contractor shall choose to make his financial contribution to the Authority by either a) paying a production charge only; or b) paying a combination of a production charge and a share of net proceeds." Contractors who choose the first approach, predictably, will have to pay a much higher fee than those who choose the latter. But in either case, they will be paying excise taxes to the UN-created "Enterprise."
Beyond the Dreams of Avarice
The UN and its controlling elite have long sought to establish a revenue stream circumventing national legislative bodies, particularly the U.S. Congress. Collecting royalties on the commercial use of the seabed an incomparable treasure trove would leave the UN awash in literally trillions of dollars. The riches of the ocean depths were inaccessible until after World War II, when Western commercial interests particularly U.S. energy companies began to develop the technological means to explore and mine the seabed.
"Oceans cover 71 percent of the earth's surface and are storage tanks for minerals washed from the land by streams, floods, and tides," observed the late Dan Smoot, a former FBI agent and widely admired constitutional scholar. "Each cubic mile of seawater contains 165 million tons of solid material, including all precious and industrial metals. Enormous deposits of critically important materials oil, gas, sulphur, salt, diamonds lie beneath the water of the oceans. The oceans are also rich in foodstuffs that man already uses, and in organic substances which man will learn to convert into food." Seawater itself abounds in vitally important minerals such as bromine and magnesium.
An estimated 10 trillion tons of manganese vital for producing steel, and not found in the continental United States is found in potato-shaped nodules scattered across the ocean floor. Harvesting those nodules became possible in the late 1960s when a U.S.-based firm called Deepsea Ventures invested $200 million to develop the means of excavating the sea floor at depths of one to three miles.
Even without U.S. participation, the UN-created International Seabed Authority is supervising the process of mapping out new underwater territories. "A group of ocean mappers at the University of New Brunswick [UNB] is redrawing the world's oceans under new rules set by the United Nations, divvying up trillions of dollars worth of natural resources in huge chunks of the sea floor," reported CBC News on January 29, 2003. "Countries have six years to make the case for where their boundaries should be, creating what UNB mapper David Monahan calls the largest land grab in human history."
"I think of it as the world's ocean being divided up by this treaty, that's two thirds of the world's surface," commented Monahan. "It's almost mind boggling to think of how big it is." The vast ocean floor contains an estimated 20 percent of the world's oil and gas deposits, as well as other potential energy sources, such as frozen methane. "The amounts of methane we know about [are] probably enough to run the world for 80 to 100 years," Monahan pointed out.
The seas would yield resources adequate to meet the energy and food needs of the growing human population if the private sector were permitted to develop them. Under customary law dating back to the time of Justinian, the seas were free to be used by anyone with adequate means to do so. On that principle, development of deep-sea resources beyond national borders, including the seabed, should be open to entrepreneurs willing to take the necessary risks and make the necessary investments.
But the UN, true to its Marxist pedigree, is seeking to lock down control over the seas and exploit them for its own ends in the name of "mankind."
by William Norman Grigg
March 7, 2005
Source: The New American
Email this article
Printer friendly page
Conservative Americans who consider George W. Bush a champion of national sovereignty have been shocked to learn that the president seeks Senate ratification of the UN's Convention on the Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST). Despite the Senate's refusal thus far to ratify the treaty, it went into effect in 1995, and elements of the vast regulatory apparatus it outlines are already in operation.
When fully implemented, LOST would consummate the largest act of territorial conquest in history, turning seven-tenths of the Earth's surface over to the jurisdiction of the United Nations. It would create a mammoth bureaucracy to regulate exploration of the ocean depths and commercial development of the seabed's riches. The UN would also be empowered to collect royalties on seabed mining, thereby providing the world body with a potentially enormous independent source of revenue to fund its agenda for "global governance."
None of this seems compatible with the Bush administration's reputation for flinty-eyed defense of our national independence. Yet during her Senate confirmation hearings in January, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stated that the Bush administration "would certainly like to see [LOST] pass as soon as possible.... And we very much want to see it go into force."
"Joining the convention will advance the interests of the United States military," Rice claimed on January 18. "The United States, as the country with the largest coastline and the largest exclusive economic zone, will gain economic and resource benefits from the convention.... And the United Nations has no decision-making role under the convention in regulating uses of the oceans by any state party to the convention."
Rice's unqualified endorsement of LOST lets several important questions go begging. For instance: why is it necessary to sign a UN treaty in order to enjoy "economic and resource benefits" from ocean territory we already own and control? If the UN would have no role in regulating the use of oceans within our sphere of influence, how would it be in a position to grant us the "economic and resource benefits" referred to by Rice?
But nobody present at Secretary Rice's confirmation hearings was inclined to ask such pointed questions. Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), a noted Republican internationalist who supports ratifying LOST, was delighted by Rice's rapturous endorsement of the pact.
"I particularly appreciate your response on the Law of the Sea Convention," commented Lugar, making specific reference to Rice's assertion that the treaty was compatible with U.S. national security interests. "That's clearing up an issue sometimes raised by opponents of the convention," continued the senator, referring to widespread criticism of the pact as an infringement on U.S. sovereignty. He also cited Rice's statement that LOST "does not provide for or authorize taxation of individuals or corporations" and concluded: "I cannot think of a stronger administration statement in support of the Law of the Sea Convention."
Detailing the Deception
So great is the administration's desire to implement LOST that its supporters are blatantly misrepresenting the treaty's provisions.
Contrary to Rice's claim that "the United Nations has no decision-making role under the convention in regulating uses of the oceans by any state party to the convention," Article 2, paragraph 3 of the treaty explicitly states: "The sovereignty over the territorial sea is exercised subject to the Convention and to other rules of international law." As applied to our country, the phrase "territorial sea" refers to territory presently belonging to the United States. Under LOST, U.S. sovereignty over that territory would, in principle, be ceded to the UN.
Rice's claim that LOST "does not provide for or authorize taxation of individuals or corporations" is similarly dishonest. However, getting to the truth of the matter requires wading through page after page of murkily written bureaucratic language.
Article 170 of LOST describes the "Enterprise," a UN organ that would supervise all scientific, commercial, and military use of "the Area" all regions of the world's oceans, including the seabed and superadjacent atmosphere, beyond the territorial limits of coastal nations.
The "Enterprise" has yet to be created. The International Seabed Authority (ISA) and its ruling "Council," however, are up and running in Kingston, Jamaica. The ISA claims the power to enact rules and regulations governing the use of the seas. Article 171, dealing with "Funds of the Authority," lists "assessed contributions" and "funds received by the Authority in connection with activities in the Area...."
Annex 3, Article 13 of the treaty sets out the "Financial terms of contracts" between the UN's Enterprise and private interests seeking to develop seabed resources. Any private firm seeking to conduct mining operations must pay an administrative fee of $500,000, in addition to an annual royalty to $1 million with those figures subject to revision by the Council. Within a year of commercial production, the treaty continues, "a contractor shall choose to make his financial contribution to the Authority by either a) paying a production charge only; or b) paying a combination of a production charge and a share of net proceeds." Contractors who choose the first approach, predictably, will have to pay a much higher fee than those who choose the latter. But in either case, they will be paying excise taxes to the UN-created "Enterprise."
Beyond the Dreams of Avarice
The UN and its controlling elite have long sought to establish a revenue stream circumventing national legislative bodies, particularly the U.S. Congress. Collecting royalties on the commercial use of the seabed an incomparable treasure trove would leave the UN awash in literally trillions of dollars. The riches of the ocean depths were inaccessible until after World War II, when Western commercial interests particularly U.S. energy companies began to develop the technological means to explore and mine the seabed.
"Oceans cover 71 percent of the earth's surface and are storage tanks for minerals washed from the land by streams, floods, and tides," observed the late Dan Smoot, a former FBI agent and widely admired constitutional scholar. "Each cubic mile of seawater contains 165 million tons of solid material, including all precious and industrial metals. Enormous deposits of critically important materials oil, gas, sulphur, salt, diamonds lie beneath the water of the oceans. The oceans are also rich in foodstuffs that man already uses, and in organic substances which man will learn to convert into food." Seawater itself abounds in vitally important minerals such as bromine and magnesium.
An estimated 10 trillion tons of manganese vital for producing steel, and not found in the continental United States is found in potato-shaped nodules scattered across the ocean floor. Harvesting those nodules became possible in the late 1960s when a U.S.-based firm called Deepsea Ventures invested $200 million to develop the means of excavating the sea floor at depths of one to three miles.
Even without U.S. participation, the UN-created International Seabed Authority is supervising the process of mapping out new underwater territories. "A group of ocean mappers at the University of New Brunswick [UNB] is redrawing the world's oceans under new rules set by the United Nations, divvying up trillions of dollars worth of natural resources in huge chunks of the sea floor," reported CBC News on January 29, 2003. "Countries have six years to make the case for where their boundaries should be, creating what UNB mapper David Monahan calls the largest land grab in human history."
"I think of it as the world's ocean being divided up by this treaty, that's two thirds of the world's surface," commented Monahan. "It's almost mind boggling to think of how big it is." The vast ocean floor contains an estimated 20 percent of the world's oil and gas deposits, as well as other potential energy sources, such as frozen methane. "The amounts of methane we know about [are] probably enough to run the world for 80 to 100 years," Monahan pointed out.
The seas would yield resources adequate to meet the energy and food needs of the growing human population if the private sector were permitted to develop them. Under customary law dating back to the time of Justinian, the seas were free to be used by anyone with adequate means to do so. On that principle, development of deep-sea resources beyond national borders, including the seabed, should be open to entrepreneurs willing to take the necessary risks and make the necessary investments.
But the UN, true to its Marxist pedigree, is seeking to lock down control over the seas and exploit them for its own ends in the name of "mankind."