THE U.N.'S BIG POWER GRAB
Decision  Brief,  1 October 2007, No. 07-D 37


If Americans have learned anything about the United Nations over the past
fifty years, it is that that "world body" is, at best, riddled with
corruption and incompetence.  At worst, its bureaucracy, agencies and
membership are overwhelmingly hostile to the United States and other
freedom-loving nations, most especially Israel.

So why on earth would the United States Senate possibly consider putting the
UN on steroids by assenting to its control of seven-tenths of the world's
surface?   

Such a step would seem especially improbable given such well-documented
fiascoes as: the UN-administered Iraq Oil-for-Food program; investigations
and cover-ups concerning corrupt practices at the organization's highest
levels; child sex-slave operations and rape squads run by UN peacekeepers;
and the absurd, yet relentless, assault on alleged Israeli abuses of human
rights by majorities led by despotic regimes in Iran, Cuba, Syria and Libya.


The UN: From Laughing-stock to World Government

Nonetheless, the predictable effect of U.S. accession to the UN Convention
on the Law of the Sea - better known as the Law of the Sea Treaty (or LOST)
- would be to transform the United Nations from a nuisance and
laughing-stock into a world government: The United States would confer upon
a UN agency called the International Seabed Authority (ISA) the right to
dictate what is done on, in and under the world's oceans.  By so doing,
America would become party to the surrender of the immense resources of the
seas and what lies beneath them to the dictates of unaccountable,
non-transparent multinational organizations, tribunals and bureaucrats.

LOST's most determined proponents have always been the one-worlders -
members of the World Federalists Association (now dubbed Citizens for Global
Solutions) and like-minded advocates of supranational government.  They have
made no secret of their ambition to use the Law of the Sea Treaty as a kind
of "constitution of the oceans" and prototype for what they want to do on
land, as well.  

Specifically, the transnationalists (or Transies) understand that LOST would
set a precedent for diminishing, and ultimately eliminating, sovereign
nations.  It would establish the superiority of international mechanisms for
managing not just "the common heritage of mankind," but everything that
could affect it.

Eroding Sovereignty through Global Environmental Regulations, Taxes

In the case of LOST, such a supranational arrangement is particularly
enabled by the Treaty's sweeping environmental obligations.  States parties
promise to "protect and preserve the marine environment."  Since what goes
on ashore - from air pollution to run-off that makes its way into a given
nation's internal waters - can ultimately have an impact upon the oceans,
however, the UN's big power grab would also allow it to exercise authority
over land-based actions of heretofore sovereign nations.

Unfortunately, the Senate has been misled on this point by the Bush
Administration.  Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte claimed in
testimony before the Senate's Foreign Relations Committee last Thursday that
the Treaty has

"no jurisdiction over marine pollution disputes involving land-based
sources."

He insisted, "That's just not covered by the treaty." Worse yet, State
Department Legal Adviser John Bellinger, said,

"[LOST] clearly does not allow regulation over land-based pollution sources.
That would stop at the water's edge."

Thank goodness for Senator David Vitter of Louisiana who caustically
observed, if that were true, "Why is there a [LOST] section entitled
'Pollution from Land-Based sources'?" He went on to note that there is not
only a section by that name, but a subsequent section on enforcement
concerning such pollution.

Few Senators have more immediate reason to worry about LOST's dire
implications for our sovereignty than Sen. Vitter and his Democratic
colleague, Mary Landrieu.  After all, it is inconceivable that the crown
jewel of their state, New Orleans, would be in business today - even in its
diminished, post-Katrina condition - had the United States been subject to
this Treaty when that devastating hurricane hit Louisiana and Mississippi.

Enforcement of the unprecedented commitment not to pollute the marine
environment can be compelled via LOST's mandatory dispute resolution
mechanisms. In particular, the UN's Law of the Sea Tribunal is empowered to
"prescribe any provisional measures" in order "to prevent serious harm to
the marine environment." States parties are required to "comply promptly
with any [such] provisional measures."  

Surely, the sovereign act taken in an emergency situation - which dumped
into the Gulf of Mexico vast quantities of toxic waste that had accumulated
in Lake Pontchartrain after Katrina - would have been enjoined in this
manner.  Does any Senator want to assure such interference in our internal
affairs in the future?

Scarcely more appetizing is LOST's empowering of a UN agency to impose what
amount to international taxes.  To provide such an entity with a
self-financing mechanism and the authority to distribute the ocean's wealth
in ways that suit the majority of its members and its international
bureaucracy is a formula for unaccountability and corruption on an
unprecedented scale.

To date, the full malevolent potential of the Law of the Sea Treaty has been
more in prospect than in evidence.  Should the United States accede to LOST,
however, it is predictable that the Treaty's agencies will: wield their
powers in ways that will prove very harmful to American interests; intensify
the web of sovereignty-sapping obligations and regulations being promulgated
by this and other UN entities; and advance inexorably the emergence of
supranational world government.
 
The Bottom Line

Twenty-five years ago, President Ronald Reagan declined to submit our
sovereignty to the United Nations and rejected the Law of the Sea Treaty.
If anything, there are even more compelling reasons today to prevent the
UN's big power grab.








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