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US apologizes to Laos over cluster bombs, then sells them to pound Yemen

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BY CHRISTINA LIN on SEPTEMBER 8, 2016 in ASIA TIMES NEWS & FEATURES, SOUTHEAST ASIA

CIA’s nine-year secret war had made Laos the most heavily bombed country in human history. During his visit to that country on Sept 6, US President Barack Obama talked to local students, people and officials about America’s moral obligation to help Laos heal. Just three days later, the White House approved another $1.15 billion arms package to Saudi Arabia to bomb Yemenis who will have to suffer similar consequences for decades.

On September 6, President Obama visited Laos and offered Vientiane $90 million for the next three years to help clean up more than 80 million unexploded cluster bombs spread throughout the country.

Obama said even now, most Americans are unaware of their country’s deadly legacy there.

For nine years, between 1964 to 1973, US dropped more than 270 million cluster bombs on the impoverished country — more than it dropped on Germany and Japan during World War II — as part of an expanded war against the North Vietnamese. That conflict, known as CIA’s “secret war”, made Laos, per capita, the most heavily bombed country in human history.


Areas bombed by the US in Laos (Watch the video clip).

Cluster bombs scatter multiple sub-munitions, or bomblets, over a wide area, which often fail to detonate and become de facto landmines. These unexploded munitions thus continue to cause casualties and devastation for decades even after the conflict ends.


Cluster bombs scatter multiple sub-munitions or bomblets over a wide area

Children are especially vulnerable because they are attracted to the bomblets due to their resemblance to small balls or toys. As such, cluster bombs have been banned by an international treaty signed by 119 countries.

Not only do they exact great human cost physically via deaths and maiming, they also keep the country in an impoverished state for decades following the war. In Laos, despite having fertile arable land, farmers are not able to use the land for agriculture due to the presence of undiscovered and unexploded bombs, nor are they able to develop the land for infrastructure, industry, or residential needs.

Thus the population targeted by mass cluster bombing campaigns are trapped in a vicious state of continuing war casualties, injuries, and poverty long after the conflict ends.

To date, less than 1% of the bombs have been removed, according to US-based NGO Legacies of War. Clearing mines is a careful and painstaking task, sweeping a few square yards at a time and then carefully detonating the discovered ordnance.

With current resources, Neil Arnold from the UK-based Mines Advisory Group assessed clearing the more than 80 million mines strewn throughout almost the entire country would take decades. The population of Laos are thus trapped in a country laden with mines and focused on survival, with little prospect for economic development or improving living standards for the country.

Addressing an audience of more than 1,000 students, business people and officials, Obama said “Given our history here, I believe that the United States has a moral obligation to help Laos heal.”

This gesture of trying to make amends for the damage US caused in the past is laudable, especially since Obama is the first U.S. president to visit Laos. However, one wonders how sincere is this gesture, when US turns around and sells the same cluster munitions to Saudi Arabia for a similar bombing campaign of another poor country—Yemen—that is maiming children and will likewise keep the population trapped in dire poverty and devastation for the next several decades.[1]

This self-contradictory US policy is especially highlighted in that while Obama sees US offering partial payment for damages in Laos is a “moral obligation”, Congressman Ted Lieu (D-CA) sees continued US support for the Saudi war in Yemen as a “moral abomination.” Likewise, Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) sees “an American imprint on every life lost in Yemen.”

Indeed, if Obama sees a moral obligation to help Laos heal due the continual damages caused by US cluster bombs more than 40 years ago, shouldn’t the same moral obligation apply to Yemen to stop US from selling cluster bombs used to further harm the population for decades to come?

It does not appear that way. On August 9, the White House approved another $1.15 billion arms package to Saudi Arabia, and gave Congress 30 days to review the deal and voice any concerns. However, Congress was frustrated that the notification was deliberately given in the midst of the seven-week Congressional summer recess that just ended on September 6, with only a couple days to review the deal within the 30-day window.

Now with the resupply of the US-Saudi bombardment campaign, the Yemeni population is further condemned to a prolonged state of war, killing and maiming, and dire poverty for the next several decades. As a token gesture, Secretary Kerry announced a $189 million humanitarian aid for Yemen, a Band-Aid compared to the multi-billion dollar arms packages used to inflict harm on the very same people.

Unfortunately, US disregard for the human cost in Yemen is likely to create new enemies. With no hope for a future, a new generation of Yemeni children are being recruited as soldiers by Islamic State and Al Qaeda that have taken hold of the war-torn country. And their eventual target is the US.

[1] Yemen: Children among civilians killed and maimed in bomb ‘minefields’”, Amnesty International, May 23, 2016.

Dr. Christina Lin is a Fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations at SAIS-Johns Hopkins University where she specializes in China-Middle East/Mediterranean relations, and a research consultant for Jane’s Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Intelligence Centre at IHS Jane’s.

(Copyright 2016 Asia Times Holdings Limited, a duly registered Hong Kong company. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishin
 
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Well the present push from US side is only in order to build bases in Asia

  • Laos (Need a base there)
  • Vietnam (Need base/ man power / free soldiers there)
  • Cuba (Need to make sure no one sets up missile there, not itself in Asia)
  • Taiwan (Tiny areas again there is a base there)
  • South America as whole sees US with suspicion

So the real issue is really "Building bases" , there is no moral awakening in USA that happened all of sudden.

The most casualties if WW3 breaks out would be in these areas

GENERALS , want the war / bombs to fall in Asia USA is seeking sacrificial goats as they say

Ideally these countries should just not get involved


Asian countries enjoyed a long period of Peace why ? They were not fighting each other until you know who showed up to start apologizing
 
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Watch the US Drop 2.5 Million Tons of Bombs on Laos
Picturing the deadly legacy of America's secret war in the world's most bombed-out country.


Between 1964 and 1973, the United States dropped around 2.5 million tons of bombs on Laos. While the American public was focused on the war in neighboring Vietnam, the US military was waging a devastating covert campaign to cut off North Vietnamese supply lines through the small Southeast Asian country.

The nearly 600,000 bombing runs delivered a staggering amount of explosives: The equivalent of a planeload of bombs every eight minutes for nine years, or a ton of bombs for every person in the country—more than what American planes unloaded on Germany and Japan combined during World War II. Laos remains, per capita, the most heavily bombed country on earth.

The map above, created by photographer Jerry Redfern, provides another view of the massive scale of the bombing. Each point on the map corresponds to one US bombing mission starting in October 1965; multiple planes often flew on missions.

The unfinished aftermath of the air campaign is the subject of Redfern and Karen Coates' new book, Eternal Harvest: The Legacy of American Bombs in Laos. This stunning book, seven years in the making, documents how the secret air war is still claiming lives more than four decades after it ended.

More than 100 Laotians fall victim to unexploded cluster bombs annually, delayed casualties of Operation Barrel Roll and Operation Steel Tiger, which dropped 270 million cluster bomblets. Packed by the dozens or hundreds in canisters, cluster bombs are designed to open in midair, scattering small explosives across a wide radius. Yet not all of them detonated, and today, 80 million live bomblets lurk under Laos' soil.

Cleaning up the unexploded ordnance (UXO) has been agonizingly slow. In January, Congress approved $12 million for UXO clearance and related aid in Laos. In comparison, the bombing cost the United States $17 million a day in inflation-adjusted dollars.

Below, a selection of Redfern's photographs from Eternal Harvest. Learn more about his and Coates' work at their website.

13_laos.jpg

An aerial view of the countryside around Phonsavanh, Laos, shows craters from the US bombing campaign.
14_laos_0.jpg

Workers found this unexploded bomb shell in a quarry. It awaits a clearance team, which will attempt to defuse it safely.
15_laos.jpg

Left: Bo Ya, 35, lost his hands and most of his vision 10 years ago when he picked up some unexploded ordnance (UXO). Right: A pile of bomb scrap, shrapnel, and cluster bombs lies next to a new home along the old Ho Chi Minh Trail.



A Vietnamese trader and his family eat dinner by a heap of shrapnel and cluster bombs and an artillery shell. Scrap-metal traders buy bomb debris from Laotians who collect it in the fields and forests.

13_laos.jpg

An aerial view of the countryside around Phonsavanh, Laos, shows craters from the US bombing campaign.
14_laos_0.jpg

Workers found this unexploded bomb shell in a quarry. It awaits a clearance team, which will attempt to defuse it safely.
15_laos.jpg
Trail.
16_laos_0.jpg
 
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A Vietnamese trader and his family eat dinner by a heap of shrapnel and cluster bombs and an artillery shell. Scrap-metal traders buy bomb debris from Laotians who collect it in the fields and forests.
17_laos.jpg

A technician with an unexploded ordnance disposal team scans for bombs along the new road built atop the old Ho Chi Minh Trail. People began building new homes in this spot before the area had been cleared.
18_laos.jpg

Left: A 750-pound bomb is detonated by a clearance team. Right: A woman and her children paddle down the Banghiang River in a canoe fashioned from fuel tanks dropped by American bombers.
19_laos.jpg

A guesthouse with decorations fashioned from war detritus caters to foreigners in the town of Phonsavanh.
20_laos.jpg

Ethnic Lave kids count the money they earned from selling bomb scrap.
21_laos.jpg

The lobby of the Vinh Thong Guesthouse in Phonsavan displays an amazing array of defused UXO as well as a mural depicting the 1968 bombing of the Plain of Jars.
22_laos.jpg


http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/03/laos-vietnam-war-us-bombing-uxo
 
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It is certainly in best benefit of Asian countries to , come together and realize the importance of Peace they enjoyed for long periods

And approach UN , and openly say "NO" to foreign bases from any countries that suddenly now feel apologetic to stir more wars

Such measures would ensure no WW3 in absence of ground path / supply routes

And small Asian countries have to not gamble on their own future they owe 0% to any third party if you want to apologies do it in UN office , in public and then be about your business in your own country

Their own homeland (asian countries) is not playground for war , it has its own heritage and value in world heritage that should be preserved , and not a military play ground

Bombs , cluster bombs, conventional , you name it - you got it bomb all liter the supply routes first in any war (that is what happened when war happened in Vietnam)

*Thank you for share of images as , the issue of Laos is not commonly ever shared openly in Media , infact I just learned about it in last week or so, I was only aware in limited capacity about the Viet Nam war
 
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Well the present push from US side is only in order to build bases in Asia

  • Laos (Need a base there)
  • Vietnam (Need base/ man power / free soldiers there)
  • Cuba (Need to make sure no one sets up missile there, not itself in Asia)
  • Taiwan (Tiny areas again there is a base there)
  • South America as whole sees US with suspicion

So the real issue is really "Building bases" , there is no moral awakening in USA that happened all of sudden.

The most casualties if WW3 breaks out would be in these areas

GENERALS , want the war / bombs to fall in Asia USA is seeking sacrificial goats as they say

Ideally these countries should just not get involved


Asian countries enjoyed a long period of Peace why ? They were not fighting each other until you know who showed up to start apologizin

No need Bro , to guess ww3 is happening ... Why ... Against Who you thinking USA Generals will go RUSSIA+CHINA,, or any else ...... Taiwan ?? And who told you their is no war in Asia ..taiwan,vietnam,japan,sirilanka,thiscountry,afghanistan, china itself ...was threatened after afghanistan went down now DEVIL was in asia next to it plus Afghanistan gone looses a powerful country ..same threat was Pakistan under ........and it needed its bases here too.... was it allowed..?? me dont know ....leave the rest of the world out ...which it have tore apart ......including bangladesh and kashmir ......
 
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US has directly and indirectly killed more human than all other empires combined in the recorded world history. But American public still believes Muslims are terrorists, Chinese violate human rights, and Islam binds woman under burqa.
 
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Thanx Sir .... why you made weapons to sell them .... but US apology ??? ....its merely like Devils dodge .......uses to cross chinas border after even threat and then China destroyed its 1 setlite and destroyed its 2 or 1 plane the second 2nd 1 or 3rd one was asked to step down on land and just like americans do without power .....or even power he landed ......shiting in his pants .........and now it was threatening china dont hack tech and let the pilot go ..........is this called apology ..........???
 
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