President’s
Message
Law of the Sea Convention is Essential to U.S.
Naval Power
The sea services of our nation must maintain their leading role in shaping
global rules and policies that affect our freedom of navigation and maritime
mobility, two essential elements of U.S. naval power. That is why it is
now time for Congress to ratify the Law of the Sea Convention and thereby
strengthen our national security.
The Convention codifies access and transit rights for our ships and enhances
the nation’s prosecution of the global war on terrorism. Our nation
has much to gain and nothing to lose by becoming a party to the Convention,
which is a comprehensive international legal framework governing the world’s
oceans. The United States should now join 145 nations that use the Convention
as a means to assure access to the oceans. In November, the Convention
will be opened for amendment. As a party to the Convention, the United
States would have a major role in shaping changes to come.
The Law of the Sea Convention is a complex document that touches on wide
range of U.S. maritime concerns. Since it was finalized in 1982, a primary
U.S. interest in the Convention has been to preserve essential navigational
freedoms and thereby enhance the mobility of U.S. naval power. That is
why every chief of naval operations (CNO), the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
the Department of Defense have consistently and strongly supported U.S.
ratification.
Our current CNO, Adm. Vern Clark, said in a March 18 letter to Sen. Richard
G. Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations,
that accession to the Convention will support “our ability to operate
around the globe, anytime, anywhere, allowing the Navy to project power
where and when needed.”
The Convention guarantees, for example, that ships and aircraft may transit
straits that otherwise may have been closed by the territorial claims
of nearby states. More than 135 straits are affected, including the Strait
of Hormuz, entryway to the Persian Gulf, and the Strait of Malacca, the
main sea route between the Indian and Pacific oceans.
In fact, the United States’ interest as a global naval power was
behind its initial participation in talks on the Convention as the United
Nations conducted negotiations from 1973 to 1982. Our policy makers were
concerned that transit and access rights of U.S. warships could be restricted
by the rising number of claims from other nations over territorial seas,
fishing zones and offshore high seas areas. Today, Adm. Clark wants the
United States to join because, he said, “the Law of the Sea Convention
helps assure access to the largest maneuver space on the planet —
the sea — under authority of widely recognized and accepted law
and not the threat of force.”
Much of our government’s initial delay in ratification was linked
to objections by many industrialized countries to sections related to
deep seabed mining. However, changes to the Convention in 1994 remedied
each of the U.S. objections.
Despite its advantages, the Law of the Sea Convention remains controversial
because of widespread — and erroneous — belief that it would
adversely affect U.S. sovereignty, inhibit our intelligence gathering
activities or hamper the U.S. Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI)
through which our forces seek to interdict shipments of weapons of mass
destruction.
Critics point to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, created
to settle disputes, as a threat to U.S. sovereignty. However, parties
to the Convention are free to agree on any method of dispute settlement
they desire — and the U.S. will not select the Tribunal.
Fears that ratification would diminish our collection of intelligence
are linked to a section of the Convention containing a list of activities
that would deprive a vessel of the right of innocent passage through territorial
seas. These activities include the collection of certain types of information
and the requirement that submarines navigate on the surface. However,
such activity is not a violation of the Convention. Intelligence-gathering
activities are not prohibited nor adversely affected by the Convention.
The Bush Administration’s PSI — potentially a major weapon
in the global war on terrorism — seeks the support of all nations
in international efforts to board and search vessels suspected of transporting
weapons of mass destruction. Adm. Michael G. Mullen, vice chief of naval
operations, told Lugar’s committee that being party to the Convention
“would greatly strengthen” the Navy’s ability to support
the PSI by reinforcing freedom of navigation rights on which the service
depends for its operational mobility.
We learned in Iraq that even allies sometimes will block access to key
battle areas. Our freedom of navigation cannot be contingent on the approval
of nations along global sea lanes. A legal regimen for the world’s
oceans will help guarantee worldwide mobility for our military.
The Law of the Sea Convention is good for our sea services. It strengthens
our country. The time for ratification is at hand.
Sheila M. McNeill, National President
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