Promises, Export Treaty Promises

Promises, Export Treaty Promises

When the new British prime minister visited the White House, one of the meetings he had was with Sen. John Kerry, the man leading the effort to ratify the arms export treaties with Britain and Australia.

We hear that Kerry pledged David Cameron in late July that he would do his very best to shepherd the treaty through the Senate before it left for the August recess. Of course, that didn’t happen, but we hear that other activities are under way. For one, so-called enabling legislation has been drafted and is being shepherded through the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs Committee staff. Demanded by some lawmakers such as Sen. Jon Kyl, who worry that they wouldn’t have enough influence on the treaty once it’s ratified. Sen. Richard Lugar, ranking member of the foreign relations panel, has reluctantly taken on the job of placating Kyl and his fellow conservatives who fear loss of control over the arms export process. The core of the new legislation was, we hear, drafted by the State Department who worry that Congress may offend the allies and possibly emperil the treaties, which took years to bring this far.

Britain has grown increasingly restive over the lack of progress in treaty ratification and Kerry and the Obama administration should expect to hear more about that if the threaty does not move as far to the front of the queue as possible when the Senate reconvenes next Tuesday.


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Good Evening Colin,

You may have over looked the fact that Senator Kerry did do his best to shepherd in this treaty. In the United States we do have two political parties and making nice and agreeing is not in their natures they are not a Parliamentary Government.

There are many famous international treaties the United States Senate has NEVER ratified.

ALLONS,

Byron Skinner

This is a beatup by the US defense industry — problems with the trade law are made irrelevant by the abysmal value of the weapons on offer.

Lets see now. The U.S. trade deficit is running at negative $49 billion per month and is on track to lose half a trillion dollars this year. Official unemployment is at around 10% or 15 million Americans, (unoffically it’s at 17% or 26 million Americans). I think that the military industrial complex and it’s related R&D is the last of the crown jewels in the American economy and should be guarded. I say no more to liberal trade treaties.

USA all the way, JMN

Mr. Kerry of river boat fame does tell stories when he wants to. So sit back and don’t hold your breath when he tells what he will do. He uses to much of his wifes catshup.

I agree Ed, trade liberalization through NAFTA and the WTO have been very destructive to the U.S. economy.

The demo’s and the GOP are both quilty of allowing this to happen to America. Even if the demo’s get wiped out in November I see little evidence that the GOP will become pragmatic and do something positive about the current trade imbalance.

In the meantime I don’t want any more liberal export agreements that will harm America’s military industrial and R&D complex.

I do not trust America’s elites in big business and big government these days because it’s become so obvious that they have been very corrupted by liberal free trade ideology, hubris, and greed.

U.S.A. all the way. JMN

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