Jordan

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Last updated: 30 July 2015

Five-Year Review: Non-signatory Jordan has expressed its support for the convention and its interest in acceding, but has not taken any steps towards accession. Jordan has participated in several meetings of the convention, most recently in 2012, and has condemned the use of cluster munitions, including in Syria and Ukraine. Jordan is not known to have used or produced cluster munitions, but it has imported them and is believed to have a stockpile.

Policy

The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan has not acceded to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Jordan has expressed its support for the convention and interest in acceding on several occasions, but no steps have been undertaken towards accession. In Jordan’s last statement on the matter in September 2012, Prince Mired Ben Raad Zeid al-Hussein informed States Parties that “We realize and appreciate the importance of the Convention on Cluster Munitions even though we are not yet a State Party. Hopefully circumstances will change some time in the not too distant future and we will be able to join.”[1] Mired, who has served as special envoy for the Mine Ban Treaty, informed States Parties in November 2010 of Jordan’s support for the convention “from the sidelines” and said, “we have yet to decide if and when we can join.”[2]

Jordan participated in two meetings of the Oslo Process that created the Convention on Cluster Munitions, but did not attend the formal negotiations in Dublin in May 2008, even as an observer.[3]

Jordan supports the work of the convention, despite its lack of accession. It attended an international conference on cluster munitions in Santiago, Chile in June 2010. Jordan participated as an observer in the convention’s first three Meeting of States Parties, most recently in 2012. Jordan has not attended the convention’s intersessional meetings held in Geneva since 2011.

As a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council, Jordan expressed concern at reports of cluster munition attacks in eastern Ukraine during a Council debate on 24 October 2014, describing the use as “a violation of the provisions of international law and a dangerous development that imperils the lives of citizens.” Jordan stated “we call for an international independent inquiry, an objective inquiry, to investigate the use of such internationally prohibited weapons.”[4] On 29 June 2015, Jordan voted in favor of a UN Security Council resolution that also expressed concern at evidence of cluster munition use in Darfur and called on the government of Sudan to “immediately investigate.”[5]

Jordan has also voted in favor of UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions condemning the use of cluster munitions in Syria, including Resolution 69/189 on 18 December 2014, which expressed “outrage” at the continued use.[6]

Jordan is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It is also a party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

Jordan is not known to have used or produced cluster munitions, but it has imported the weapons. The current status and content of Jordan’s stockpile of cluster munitions is not known.

The United States (US) transferred 31,704 artillery projectiles (M509A1, M483) containing more than 3 million dual-purpose improved conventional munition (DPICM) submunitions to Jordan in 1995.[7] According to US export records, Jordan also imported 200 CBU-71 and 150 Rockeye cluster bombs at some point between 1970 and 1995.[8] Jordan is also reported to possess the Hydra-70 air-to-surface unguided rocket system, but it is not known if the ammunition types available to it include the M261 Multi-Purpose Submunition rocket.[9]

Jordan is participating in a Saudi Arabia-led coalition of states that began attacking Ansar Allah (the Houthi) in Yemen on 25 March 2015, in a conflict that was continuing as of 20 July 2015.[10] US-supplied cluster munitions have been used in airstrikes by coalition forces, but the state or states responsible for the use have not been identified.[11] The cluster munition attacks in Yemen have been condemned by a number of states, the president of the convention’s Fifth Meeting of States Parties, the CMC, and others.[12]



[1] Statement by Prince Mired Ben Raad Zeid al-Hussein of Jordan, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 11 September 2012. Notes by the CMC.

[2] Statement by Prince Mired Ben Raad Zeid al-Hussein of Jordan, Convention on Cluster Munitions First Meeting of States Parties, Vientiane, 10 November 2010. Notes by the CMC.

[3] For more details on Jordan’s policy and practice regarding cluster munitions through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 215–216.

[6]Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic,” UNGA Resolution 69/189, 18 December 2014. Jordan voted in favor of similar UNGA resolutions on 15 May and 18 December 2013.

[7] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Department of Defense, “Excess Defense Article database,” undated.

[8] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, “Cluster Bomb Exports under FMS, FY1970–FY1995,” undated.

[9] Colin King, ed., Jane’s Explosive Ordnance Disposal 2007–2008, CD-edition, 15 January 2008 (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2008).

[10] None of the states participating in the Saudi Arabia-led coalition—Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, Pakistan, Qatar, Sudan, and UAE—are party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. The operation was initially called “Operation Decisive Storm” and then “Operation Restoring Hope.”

[11] Human Rights Watch, “Yemen: Cluster Munitions Harm Civilians,” 31 May 2015.

[12] Costa Rica Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Costa Rica condena el uso de municiones en racimo en Yemen” ("Costa Rica condemns use of cluster munitions in Yemen"), 5 May 2015.