Take Action Home >

Tell President Obama to Sign the Mine Ban Treaty

Final signature count: 9,150

Sponsor: The Veterans Site

With thousands of casualties and incalculable humanitarian costs each year, it's time to finally sign...


For over twenty years, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) has pursued a mine-free world. Despite their tremendous efforts, however, landmines continue to threaten individuals and communities, claiming over 4,000 victims in 2011 alone. The majority of these casualties are non-combatants, including hundreds of children.

The humanitarian costs are even greater. Landmines are frequently found near roads, in farmers' fields, and around schools, rendering these areas inaccessible and slowing development, especially in post-conflict regions.

The Mine Ban Treaty, the ICBL's signature success, counts 160 countries as party to its terms. The United States is not one of them, keeping company with other hold-outs such as Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia and China.

Let's tell the President to send a new message by finally signing the treaty and banning this archaic and indiscriminate weapon system.

As reports continue to trickle in from all corners of the globe, an obvious trend emerges: land mines and other explosive remnants of war (ERW) remain a weapon of choice for anti-government groups and militant organizations. Good only for destabilizing regions and terrorizing civilian populations — not to mention exposing soldiers to unnecessary harm — these indiscriminate weapons should not be granted any legitimacy.

A few recent examples of the devastating impact include:

  • 05/17/13: Another report from the UN confirms that land mine casualties are on the rise in Myanmar, where both rebel fighters and government soldiers use the indiscriminate weapons. According to one surgeon, "The number one injury is caused by landmines, with both Burmese troops and Kachin soldiers mistakenly stepping on their own mines." Worse yet, many of the country's 80,000 displaced civilians cannot return to their homes due to the risk of recently placed mines.
  • 02/18/13: New analysis from the UN succinctly illustrates the risks posed by landmines in former conflict areas. In Somalia, where a tentative peace has taken hold after decades of fighting, civilians continue to face the threat of these military remnants from past conflicts. Even still, retreating militants use the indiscriminate weapons to carry on their struggle against government forces. And children pay the price.
To Top

The Petition:

Dear President Obama:

Despite twenty years of advocacy and aid, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) continues to face a daunting task, particularly as rogue regimes and non-state actors propagate the use of landmines into the twenty-first century. Now is the time to send a clear message to the international community: the United States supports the Mine Ban Treaty.

According to the Landmine Monitor 2012, observers confirmed over 4,000 casualties of explosive remnants of war (ERW) in at least 60 states and areas across the globe. Because of unreliable reporting the actual figure is expected to be "significantly higher". Civilians are disproportionately affected, representing three-quarters of casualties, with children making up nearly half of all civilian casualties. Of course, the humanitarian toll is more difficult to measure but no less devastating, as even the suspected presence of a minefield can be enough to stall development and reconstruction efforts, especially in post-conflict regions of the world.

The U.S. deserves some credit for its own efforts to reduce the proliferation of these destructive weapons, including:

  • the halted production of antipersonnel mines
  • the elimination of "persistent" landmines from active inventory
  • the ongoing moratorium on the export of antipersonnel mines

Given the path of U.S. landmine policy, it only makes sense to join the ban and lend the long-overdue weight of U.S. support to this worthy cause.

These archaic and indiscriminate weapon systems have no place on today's battlefield, replaced by more modern and sophisticated equipment that is safer not only for civilians but also the soldiers who handle them. Lt. General Robert G. Gard Jr. (USA, Ret.) described antipersonnel land mines as "a net liability" to U.S. interests and argued that acceding to the treaty "would be a low-cost, meaningful gesture of diplomatic goodwill with both humanitarian and practical benefits."

It is difficult to argue with this logic. President Obama, it is time for the United States to accede to the Mine Ban Treaty and join the international consensus in both word and deed.

To Top

Signatures:

Updates:

This petition is no longer active. View other causes that need your support.

Nearly two years after the overthrow of Qaddafi, land mines continue to claim lives and limbs in Libya, where hundreds of thousands of the weapons remain. Like the United States, Libya is one of the few non-signatories of the Mine Ban Treaty, and during the short conflict, pro-Qaddafi forces placed tens of thousands of mines. Another 100,000 disappeared from stockpiles in 2011 and remain unaccounted for, posing an additional risk to civilians. Sign in support of the ban below!