. . Friday November 28, 2003 8:31 PM
By JONATHAN FOWLER
Associated Press Writer
GENEVA (AP) - World governments approved a treaty Friday that would require countries to clean up unexploded mines and other munitions in territories they control after a war.
Ambassadors from 92 nations, including the United States, Russia and China, agreed to the language in the accord. It is the first disarmament treaty accepted by the Bush administration.
/snip/
(It is the first disarmament treaty accepted by the Bush administration. why do I suspect a trick ?)
"Governments also have agreed ``without delay after the cessation of hostilities'' to give the United Nations and aid groups information to help locate and clear explosives. "
/snip/
(after the cessation of hostilities - aha - there it is - the USA is NEVER done with hostilities !!)
"There are no precise figures about the amount of unexploded weapons around the world, but in Iraq alone U.S. officials have said there are up to 1 million tons of that will take years to remove. The new treaty was negotiated in less than a year and is the first agreement produced under the conventional weapons accord since 1996."