Call both NY Senators TODAY, Monday, March 30th
Toll Free 1-800-590-6313
CALL-IN SCRIPT
Please feel free to improvise and add additional information.
- My name is [NAME], and I live in [CITY} New York.
Thanks for taking my call.
- I am calling to encourage Senator [Schumer/Gillibrand]
to co-sponsor S. 416, the Cluster Munitions Civilian Protection Act.
- This bill will help align U.S. policy with that of our closest NATO allies,
and ensure that we are no longer using weapons that are known
to have a record of killing more civilians than soldiers.
- Will Senator [Schumer/Gillibrand] co-sponsor this bill? [Wait for reply.]
- [Depending on response, improvise from Background below.]
- Thank you.
- [Give or leave your phone number if you would like a call back.]
What are cluster bombs and what's wrong with them?
Cluster bombs open in mid-air and spew hundreds of small bomblets about
the size of a D-cell battery or a soda can over a wide area. Each of these
sub-munitions is supposed to detonate when it hits the ground, sending out
deadly shrapnel. A typical cluster bomb, which contains between dozens and
hundreds of bomblets, can kill or injure anyone in an area the size of one
or two football fields. These weapons are designed to be used on a
battlefield, against concentrations of soldiers or armored vehicles, but
are often used in civilian-populated areas instead. In addition, many of
the bomblets - between 5 to 25 percent or more - do not explode as
intended, becoming de facto landmines for many years to come. The vast
majority of cluster bomb casualties are civilians, many of them children.
How does the Cluster Munitions Civilian Protection Act (S. 416) help?
This common-sense bill would:
Prevent the U.S. military from using cluster bombs in civilian-populated
areas;-
Limit U.S. use of cluster bombs to those that have a very low
(1 percent or lower) dud rate. The dud rate describes what percentage
of bomblets fail to explode at use and, therefore, pose a hazard on the
ground to civilians after combat ends. Only a tiny portion of the U.S.
cluster submunitions arsenal meets this 99 percent reliability requirement.
What is the world doing about cluster bombs?
Over the past two years the global community negotiated a treaty banning
use, export, transfer and stockpiling of cluster bombs. In December 2008,
95 countries - including our major NATO allies - signed the Convention on
Cluster Munitions in Oslo, Norway. The U.S. did not participate in this
treaty negotiation, and it has not signed the treaty.
In July 2008 the Secretary of Defense released a new cluster bomb policy,
a direct result of international and congressional pressure on the issue.
While the policy acknowledges the need to eventually eliminate unreliable
and indiscriminate cluster bombs from the U.S. arsenal due to humanitarian
concerns, it would not do so until 2018. The time to renounce them is now,
not in ten years. Britain, the United States/ combat partner in Iraq and
Afghanistan - and the third largest user of cluster munitions in the past
decade - signed the treaty and renounced further use of cluster bombs in
December. We can too. Congress and President Obama can change U.S. policy.
What is President Obama's stance on cluster bombs?
The new administration has not yet taken a position on whether it will bring
the United States into the cluster bomb treaty. While he was in the Senate,
Obama voted for an amendment to restrict cluster bomb use, and in December
2008 his transition team promised to carefully review the new treaty. But,
with so many other issues pressing for his attention, President Obama needs
to know that he has support from the public and from the Senate to place
further restrictions on these weapons and put the U.S. on track to join
the global ban treaty. Calling your senator will help to change U.S.
policy.
Why focus on the Senate?
When the president decides to join the treaty, he will have to submit it
to the Senate for ratification. Nearly a quarter of the Senate already
supports this bill, and passage of this bill would bring the United States
pretty close to the requirements of the treaty. By increasing the list of
co-sponsors, we can show the president that there is broad public and
Senate support for bringing the United States into the cluster bomb treaty.