Cluster Munition Monitor 2017

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Introduction | Universalization | Use | Production | Transfer | Stockpiles | Retention | Transparency Reporting | National Implemenation Legislation | Interpretive Issues

Introduction

2017 marks 10 years since the launch of the Oslo Process to address the unacceptable harm caused by cluster munitions. That fast-track diplomatic initiative delivered the Convention on Cluster Munitions the following year, adopted by 107 countries.[1] Fittingly, the body of international humanitarian disarmament law that the convention belongs to further expanded this year with the adoption on 7 July of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

These instruments and the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty are all the products of strong partnerships forged by like-minded states working in cooperation with key United Nations (UN) agencies, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and non-governmental organizations united under the banner of coordinated global coalitions.[2] These treaties are having a positive impact, even without the participation of major powers such as China, Russia, and the United States (US).

As of 1 August 2017, there are 102 States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions while another 17 signatories still must ratify to become fully bound by its provisions. Since the publication of Cluster Munition Monitor 2016 in September 2016, Madagascar and Benin have ratified the Convention on Cluster Munitions, both in 2017. The last country to join or “accede” was Cuba in April 2016.

Non-signatories continue to demonstrate strong interest in and support for the convention as seen by their December 2016 votes for the second UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolution promoting implementation of the convention. A total of 141 countries, including 32 non-signatories, voted in favor of this resolution, which calls on all states outside the convention to join “as soon as possible.” Russia and Zimbabwe were the only states to vote against it as they did previously on the first UNGA resolution on the convention in 2015. The 39 countries that abstained on the 2016 resolution were all non-signatories with the exceptions, again, of signatories Cyprus and Uganda.

There have been no reports or allegations of any States Parties engaging in new use or other activities prohibited by the Convention on Cluster Munitions since 2008.

New use of cluster munitions caused civilian harm in non-signatories Syria and Yemen during the reporting period. Cluster munition attacks by Syrian government forces on opposition-held areas continued unabated throughout 2016 and the first half of 2017 in cooperation with Russia, which has participated in a joint military operation with the government since September 2015. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov provided a position paper on cluster munitions in Syria in December 2016 that did not explicitly deny or admit to Russia’s involvement in the cluster munition attacks, but made a general claim that cluster munitions have been used in accordance with international humanitarian law and not indiscriminately.

In Yemen, there were fewer cluster munition attacks in the reporting period by a Saudi Arabia-led coalition of states that has conducted a military operation since March 2015. The decrease comes after strong public outcry, global media coverage, and widespread condemnation.

There is also evidence that cluster munitions may have been used in Iraq and Libya since July 2016, but it has not been possible to verify the alleged use.

To date, 28 States Parties have destroyed their stocks of cluster munitions, all well in advance of the convention’s eight-year deadline. Collectively, States Parties have destroyed 1.4 million cluster munitions containing more than 175 million submunitions. This represents the destruction of 97% of the total reported global stocks of cluster munitions and 98% of the total number of submunitions declared by States Parties.

In 2016 alone, three States Parties destroyed 56,171 cluster munitions and 2.8 million submunitions. Spain and Switzerland are working to complete the destruction of their remaining stocks during 2018, while Slovakia has already destroyed more than 20% of its cluster munition stocks since starting in 2015 and is on track to complete destruction well in advance of its deadline.

However, no State Party has completed destruction of its cluster munition stocks since the publication of Cluster Munition Monitor 2016. Worryingly, 10 States Parties with stocks have not started destruction any of their cluster munition stocks in the past year, and several have indicated they will require financial and technical assistance to do so. Moreover, signatories with stocks, such as Cyprus, Indonesia, and Nigeria, have taken few, if any, steps to ratify the convention or declare and destroy their cluster munitions.

Specific implementation legislation to enforce the convention’s provisions has been enacted in 27 States Parties, while two-dozen more are in the process of adopting new legislation and another 32 have indicated that existing laws are sufficient to ensure their adherence. More than 80% of States Parties have provided initial transparency reports detailing the actions they are taking to implement and promote the convention.

This ban overview covers activities during the second half of 2016 and the first half of 2017, and sometimes to the end of July 2017 when data was available. The findings are drawn from detailed country profiles available from the Monitor website.[3]

Universalization

When the Convention on Cluster Munitions entered into force on 1 August 2010, becoming binding international law, 108 states had signed, of which 38 were States Parties legally bound by its provisions. Another 53 signatories have ratified since then and 11 countries have acceded. Both accession and ratification usually involve some form of parliamentary approval, typically in the form of legislation.

Accessions

Since the Convention on Cluster Munitions became binding international law in 2010, states can no longer sign, but instead must join through a process known as accession, which is essentially a process that combines signature and ratification into a single step.[4]

Since August 2010, the number of countries that are party to the convention has risen from 108 to 119, following accessions by 11 countries.[5] There have been no accessions since the publication of Cluster Munition Monitor 2016. The last country to accede to the convention was Cuba in April 2016.[6]

Ratifications

A total of 53 signatories have ratified the convention since August 2010 to become States Parties. This includes two states that have ratified since the publication of Cluster Munition Monitor 2016, both in 2017:Madagascar on 20 May and Benin on 10 July.[7]

Most of the 17 remaining signatories to the convention have committed to complete their ratification and many have conducted stakeholder consultations on the convention, but only a few appear to have parliamentary approval processes underway.[8]

Meetings and actions on cluster munitions

The Permanent Representative of the Netherlands to the Conference on Disarmament, Ambassador Henk Cor van der Kwast, presided over the Sixth Meeting of States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Geneva, Switzerland, on 5–7 September 2016. A total of 86 countries attended this meeting (60 States Parties, eight signatories, and 18 non-signatories) in addition to UN agencies, the ICRC, and the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC).[9] States Parties adopted a political declaration reaffirming their commitment to the convention and condemning “any use of cluster munitions by any actor, in conformity with Article 21.”[10] The declaration commits States Parties to “continue to call upon those who continue to use cluster munitions, as well as those who develop, produce, otherwise acquire, assist, encourage, and induce the production, stockpiling, retention, and transfer of these weapons, to cease immediately and to join as States Parties to the Convention.”[11]

This was the only international meeting of the convention in the reporting period.[12] However, the convention’s coordinating committee meets regularly and the implementation support unit has worked with the president of the Seventh Meeting of States Parties, Ambassador Michael Biontino of Germany, to convene four regional workshops aimed at encouraging universalization and implementation of the convention.

A total of 17 states from Sub-Saharan Africa attended the African Regional Workshop on the Universalization of the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on 4–5 August 2016: six States Parties, eight signatories, and three non-signatories.[13] Participants agreed to an “Addis Ababa Commitment” that expresses their support for universalization of the convention and “to prioritize the enactment of new legislation” aimed at enforcing the convention’s provisions.[14]

From Southeast Asia, seven states participated in a regional seminar on “Cooperating to implement the Convention on Cluster Munitions” in Bangkok, Thailand, on 16–17 March 2017: one State Party, two signatories, and four non-signatories.[15] The seminar did not specifically address universalization of the convention but discussed country-specific issues, with presentations by Cambodia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Thailand.[16]

Uganda co-hosted a seminar on the convention in Kampala on 29–30 May 2017, which nine African signatories attended as well as new State Party Madagascar.[17] States provided updates on their ratification efforts and discussed national implementation requirements, including transparency reporting, legislative measures, and implementation of the convention’s clearance obligations.[18]

A regional workshop on enhancing implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions in southeast Europe took place in Rakitje, Croatia, on 12–13 June 2017, with the participation of Croatia and two other States Parties from southeast Europe.[19] Participating states gave presentations on their work to implement the Convention on Cluster Munitions and discussed measures to enhance cooperation.[20]

In addition, in September 2016, New Zealand chaired a session on the Convention on Cluster Munitions at a regional meeting in Apia, Samoa, organized by the UN Regional Centre for Peace and Disarmament in Asia and the Pacific (UNRCPD) and attended by 10 Pacific island states.

At the Fifth Review Conference of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) in Geneva, held 12–16 December 2016, states endorsed a final declaration expressing “their strong determination to protect civilians from the deleterious humanitarian impact of cluster munitions.”[21] There have been no deliberations on cluster munitions at the CCW since November 2011, when the Fourth Review Conference failed to adopt a draft protocol on cluster munitions. This has left the Convention on Cluster Munitions as the sole international instrument dedicated to ending the suffering caused by cluster munitions. Only three states mentioned cluster munitions in their statements to the 2016 CCW Review Conference and there were no proposals to add cluster munitions back on the CCW’s program of work.[22]

The CMC continues its advocacy in support of the convention’s universalization and implementation. It provided small grants to 16 campaign members in 15 countries during 2016 as part of a program to support national campaigns.[23] The CMC issued an action alert in March 2017 to pressure Saudi Arabia to stop using cluster munitions in Yemen and accede to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. On 23 May 2017, CMC members participated in a Global Day of Action to Stop Explosive Investments, which included the launch in Tokyo of an updated PAX report on investments in producers of cluster munitions.[24]

The Permanent Representative of Germany to the Conference on Disarmament, Ambassador Michael Biontino, will serve as president of the convention’s Seventh Meeting of States Parties in Geneva on 4–6 September 2017.[25] Germany, as president, has held bilateral meetings with more than a dozen non-signatories that have produced and/or stockpiled cluster munitions, including Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Ukraine.[26] The UN has received sufficient funds to allow the Seventh Meeting of States Parties to be held, but $44,620 was still owed to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, according to a UN summary of contributions issued 30 June 2017.[27]

UN General Assembly Resolution 71/45

Since 2015, a UNGA resolution on the Convention on Cluster Munitions has become a key barometer of support for its provisions.

On 5 December 2016, 141 states voted in favor of adopting UNGA Resolution 71/45 that calls on states outside the Convention on Cluster Munitions to “join as soon as possible.”[28] Non-signatories Russia and Zimbabwe were the only states to vote no, while 39 states abstained. No State Party abstained or voted no on the resolution, while Cyprus and Uganda were the only signatories to abstain.

A total of 32 non-signatories voted in favor of Resolution 71/45 and 37 non-signatories abstained from the vote.[29] Several of these states made detailed statements explaining their vote on the resolution and position on joining the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[30]

The 2016 resolution voting record was almost identical to that on the first UNGA resolution promoting implementation of the convention adopted on 7 December 2015. A total of 139 states voted in favor of UNGA Resolution 70/54, while two opposed (Russia and Zimbabwe) and 39 abstained, including signatories Cyprus and Uganda.[31] Non-signatories Algeria and Kyrgyzstan voted in favor of the 2016 UNGA resolution after abstaining from the 2015 vote.

Regional universalization developments

Support for the Convention on Cluster Munitions is strongest in Sub-Saharan Africa, where 31 of its 49 countries are States Parties and 12 are signatories.[32] As of 1 August 2017, Madagascar and Benin were the only signatories in the world to ratify the convention this year. The Democratic Republic of the Congo’s parliament approved ratification of the convention in 2013, while national assemblies in Liberia and Uganda are considering draft ratification legislation.[33] Other signatories from Sub-Saharan Africa have expressed their desire to ratify and several have undertaken stakeholder consultations on the matter.[34] None of the seven non-signatories from Sub-Saharan Africa took any major steps to join the convention in the reporting period. In April 2017, Gabon told the Monitor that it does not intend to accede to the convention “in the immediate future.”[35]

There is also strong support for the convention throughout the Americas, where 24 of the 35 countries are States Parties and Haiti and Jamaica have signed but not ratified.[36] The region’s nine non-signatories include Brazil and the US, which are vocally opposed to the convention. The affirmative votes on the UNGA resolution by Caribbean non-signatories the Bahamas, Barbados, Dominica, Saint Lucia, and Suriname indicates they will likely join the convention at some point in the future.

In Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia, support for the convention is strongest in the European Union (EU), which accounts for 21 States Parties to the convention.[37] The six EU member states that have not signed the convention—Estonia, Finland, Greece, Latvia, Poland, and Romania—have abstained rather than vote yes or no on the UNGA resolution.[38] EU member state and signatory Cyprus also abstained on the resolution and its parliament made no effort to approve ratification during the reporting period. Of the 54 countries in the region, 34 are States Parties to the convention, but not Belarus, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine, or any countries from the Caucasus or Central Asia.[39]

Only 10 of the 40 states in the Asia-Pacific region are States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[40] Signatories Indonesia and the Philippines still have not concluded their years-long stakeholder consultations on the convention or introduced ratification legislation into their respective parliaments for consideration and approval.

The convention has received the least support in the Middle East and North Africa region, which has four States Parties: Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, and Tunisia.[41] Non-signatories Algeria, Jordan, and Libya voted in favor of the 2016 UNGA resolution on the convention while the other non-signatories either abstained or were absent.[42]

Use of Cluster Munitions

Summary of states that have used cluster munitions and locations used[43]

Banuse14

Global overview

Cluster munitions have been used by at least 21 governments in 40 countries and four disputed territories since the end of World War II, as detailed in the following table and the timeline of cluster munition use at the end of this chapter. Almost every region of the world has experienced cluster munition use at some point over the past 70 years, including Southeast Asia, Southeast Europe, the Caucasus, the Middle East and North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America.

Most states outside the convention have never used cluster munitions.[44] Despite rhetoric to the contrary, only Israel, Russia, and the US can be considered major or prolific users and producers of cluster munitions.[45]

Article 1 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions contains the convention’s core preventive measures designed to eliminate future humanitarian problems from cluster munitions, most crucially the absolute ban on the use of cluster munitions. Several past users of cluster munitions are now States Parties to the convention and have relinquished any use of these weapons under any circumstances.[46]

There have been no confirmed reports or allegations of new use of cluster munitions by any State Party to the convention.

Cluster munitions have been used in seven non-signatories to the convention since its August 2010 entry into force, including Cambodia (2011), Libya (2011 and 2015), South Sudan (2014), Sudan (2012 and 2015), Syria (2012–present), Ukraine (2014–2015), and Yemen (2015–present).[47]

In this reporting period (July 2016–July 2017), cluster munitions were used in Syria and Yemen, as summarized below. There is also evidence that cluster munitions may have been used in Iraq and Libya, but it was not possible to verify the alleged use.

In September 2016, States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions issued a joint declaration stating that they “condemn any use by any actor” and expressing deep concern at “any and all allegations, reports or documented evidence of the use of cluster munitions, most notably in Syria and Yemen in the past year.”[48]

New use in Syria

The government of Syria has denied possessing or using cluster munitions, but its armed forces are responsible for the bulk of the more than 600 cluster munition attacks recorded in 12 of Syria’s 14 governorates in the five-year period to mid-July 2017. At least 13 types of air-dropped and ground-launched cluster munitions have been used in Syria, as shown in the following table.

Types of cluster munitions used in Syria since 2012

Bansyriause16

Evidence recorded by local activists, journalists, first responders, medical personnel, and others points to at least 238 separate attacks using cluster munitions in Syria between August 2016 and July 2017.[49] Previously, Cluster Munition Monitor 2016 reported at least 360 cluster munition attacks between July 2012 and July 2016 in multiple locations across all except two of the country’s 14 governorates.[50] Russia began its joint operation with Syrian government forces on 30 September 2015 and the past year has seen a more than 200% increase in the use of cluster munitions in Syria.[51]

All cluster munitions used in Syria since 2012 were manufactured by the Soviet Union or its successor Russia with two exceptions.[52] When and how the Syrian government obtained these cluster munitions and in what quantities remains unknown.[53] Of the cluster munition remnants that could be identified from 238 attacks in the reporting period, 115 involved the use of AO-2.5RT submunitions and 65 used ShOAB-0.5 submunitions.

In a three-page position paper attached to a December 2016 letter sent to Human Rights Watch by the Russian foreign minister, Russia did not explicitly deny or admit to its involvement in the use of cluster munitions in Syria.[54] Rather, it made the general claim that cluster munitions have been used in accordance with international humanitarian law and not indiscriminately in Syria. Previously, in December 2015, the Russian Defence Ministry stated that “Russian aviation does not use [cluster munitions]” and that “there are no such munitions at the Russian air base in Syria.”[55]

Russia’s position paper states, “no cases of indiscriminate use of air weapons have been registered so far in the course of the counter-terrorist operation in Syria” and concludes that “given all these elements we consider the question of the involvement of the Russian military personnel in the cases of indiscriminate CMs [cluster munitions] use in Syria mentioned in your letter totally inappropriate.”[56] In the paper, Russia criticizes the research findings on the use of cluster munitions in Syria as based on “unverified, unsubstantiated, and at time [sic] even misleading information.”

There is abundant evidence that Syrian government forces have used RBK-series air-dropped cluster bombs since mid-2012, when the government began its air campaign on opposition-held areas.[57] In 2012, markings on cluster munitions indicated they were produced in the 1970s and 1980s, while since September 2015, most bear production dates from 1989 into the early 1990s.[58] More advanced RBK-500 SPBE bombs containing SPBE sensor-fuzed submunitions and a ground-fired 240mm 3-O-8 mortar projectile have been used since Russia entered into its joint operation with Syrian government forces at the end of September 2015.[59]

Ground-launched cluster munitions have been used since government forces first used multi-barrel rocket launchers to deliver 122mm SAKR cluster munition rockets containing DPICM submunitions at the end of 2012.[60] In early 2014, Syrian government forces began to use 9M55K and 9M27K-series surface-to-surface rockets containing 9N235 submunitions equipped with self-destruct mechanisms.[61]

In July 2014, the first Islamic State (IS) cluster munition use was documented during its advance on Ayn al-`Arab/Kobani, involving a DPICM-like submunition with a distinctive red nylon ribbon called “ZP-39.”[62] There have also been multiple examples of use of 9M79-series Tochka ballistic missiles.

As the Syria conflict deepens, it is not possible to determine with confidence if armed groups other than IS have used cluster munitions. However, there is evidence that opposition forces have repurposed unexploded submunitions for use in air-delivered and ground-emplaced improvised explosive devices (IEDs). When activated by their victim, such devices are considered antipersonnel landmines prohibited by the Mine Ban Treaty.[63]

The US and its coalition partners have not used cluster munitions in the “Operation Inherent Resolve” military action against IS forces that started in 2014 in Syria and Iraq.[64]

The civilian harm caused by the use of cluster munitions in Syria has attracted widespread media coverage, public outcry, and condemnations from more than 140 states.[65] More than 40 of these countries have made national statements condemning the use in Syria, including by the foreign ministers of States Parties Austria, Belgium, Costa Rica, Croatia, Denmark, France, Germany, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and the UK.[66] US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson condemned the Syrian government’s use of “cluster bombs and other types of weapons that are intended to maim and kill in the most horrific ways” during an April 2017 press briefing in Moscow with the Russian foreign minister.[67]

New use in Yemen

On 26 March 2015, a Saudi Arabia-led coalition began a military operation in Yemen against Ansar Allah (Houthi) and their allied forces that continued as of 1 August 2017, despite multiple ceasefire agreements in 2016 and repeated calls for ceasefire agreements in the first half of 2017.[68] None of the states participating in the Saudi-led coalition—Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, Pakistan, Sudan, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)—are party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and others have documented evidence of at least 23 cluster munition attacks in the conflict involving the use of seven types of air-delivered and ground-launched cluster munitions made in three countries, as the following table shows.

In the second half of 2016 and the first half of 2017, fewer instances of cluster munition use were recorded in Yemen compared to the previous period. The Saudi-led coalition used Brazilian-made ASTROS II cluster munition rockets in Saada governorate on at least three locations, most recently in February 2017, according to investigations by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.[69] CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons were used in a 5 October 2016 attack on the coastal village of al-Hayma.[70]

There were allegations of more cluster munition use in Yemen during the second half of 2016 and first half of 2017, but it was not possible to verify the evidence or conclusively determine responsibility for the attacks.[71] While other cluster munition use likely went unrecorded, overall there were fewer cluster munition attacks in Yemen compared to the widely condemned attacks of 2015 and the first half of 2016 using various types of cluster munitions.

On 15 June 2017, the European Parliament (EP) adopted a resolution condemning the Saudi-led coalition airstrikes in Yemen, including its use of cluster munitions. It adopted similar resolutions on 25 February 2016 and 9 July 2015 condemning the coalition’s use of cluster munitions in Yemen.[72]

Between April 2015 and October 2016, the Saudi Arabia-led coalition used CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons in seven attacks.[73] The CBU-105 is the only cluster munition still exported by the US, but only on the condition that they are not used in civilian areas. The weapon must also have a failure rate that results in less than 1% unexploded ordnance.[74] The UAE has denied using CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons in Yemen.[75] Saudi Arabia’s coalition spokesperson Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri said the coalition used CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons once, in April 2015, but not in a populated area and claimed they are not prohibited weapons.[76]

In May 2016, the Obama administration suspended US cluster munition transfers to Saudi Arabia following reports of civilian harm in Yemen.[77] Cluster munitions are not part of major 2017 arms deals by the US with Saudi Arabia. On 30 August 2016, CBU-105 manufacturer Textron Systems announced that it is stopping its production of the weapon, effectively ending US production of cluster munitions as it was the last producer.[78]

Cluster munitions used in Yemen since April 2015[79]

Banyemenuse2021

Investigations by Amnesty International showed coalition use of UK-made BL755 cluster munitions remnants in 2015 and the first half of 2016.[80] In December 2016, Saudi Arabia finally admitted to using UK-produced cluster munitions in Yemen and said the coalition would no longer use them.[81] This marked the first time that UK-made cluster munitions have been used since the Convention on Cluster Munitions, to which the UK is party, took effect in 2010.[82] The UK rejected evidence of Saudi-led coalition use of cluster munitions in Yemen until December 2016, when British Defence Minister Michael Fallon admitted in parliament that the coalition had used “a limited number” of UK-supplied cluster munitions in the conflict.[83] The UK has publicly disclosed that it last transferred BL755 cluster munitions to Saudi Arabia in 1989, prior to the UK’s adoption of the convention.[84]

Alleged use in Libya

Evidence continues to emerge indicating that Libyan National Army (LNA) forces used cluster munitions in 2016 and the first half of 2017. An aviation-focused blog reported the following incidents:

  • Photographs published online in March 2016 and credited to the LNA indicate LNA forces may have used cluster munitions at least twice that month.[85]
  • A photograph reportedly taken 15 August 2016 at Benina airbase in Benghazi shows an RBK-250–270 PTAB 2.5M cluster bomb mounted on a MiG-21 fighter aircraft.[86]
  • Photographs reportedly taken on three different days in September 2016 show RBK-250 cluster bombs being mounted on a Mi-8t helicopters and a MiG-21 aircraft of the LNA Air Force. Reportedly these aircraft then flew sorties to the Benghazi enclave of Ganfouda.[87]
  • A photograph reportedly taken on 4 February 2017 at the Benina airbase shows at least seven RBK 250 PTAB-2.5M and RBK-250-275 AO-1SCh lying on the tarmac. The “bombing location” is listed as “Benghazi - al-Sabri.”[88]
  • Two videos reportedly taken at Benina airbase on 3 March 2017 show LNA technicians mounting two RBK-250 cluster bombs on two LNA aircraft that then allegedly flew sorties to Brega, Ras Lanuf, and Sidra.[89]

Further evidence of cluster munition use in Libya may have gone unrecorded due to a lack of media and independent reporting from the ground.

The Monitor was not able to independently verify this evidence and therefore cannot confirm cluster munition use.

Alleged use in Iraq

In the reporting period, there was one report of IS forces using cluster munition rockets containing DPICM-like submunitions against Iraqi government forces near Mosul in February 2017, killing one soldier.[90] The Monitor could not independently verify this evidence and cannot confirm the use. Previously, IS used cluster munition rockets in 2014 during its advance on the Syrian town of Kobane.[91]

Unilateral restrictions on use

Several states outside the Convention on Cluster Munitions have imposed restrictions on the possible future use of cluster munitions.

The US maintains that cluster munitions have military utility, but it has not used them since 2003 in Iraq, with the exception of a single strike in Yemen in 2009. A June 2008 US Department of Defense directive requires that any US use of cluster munitions before 2018 that results in a 1% or higher unexploded ordnance (UXO) rate must be approved by a “Combatant Commander,” a high-ranking US military official. After 2018, the US will no longer use cluster munitions that result in more than 1% UXO.

Romania has stated it restricts the use of cluster munitions to exclusively on its own territory. Poland has stated it would use cluster munitions for defensive purposes only, and does not intend to use them outside its own territory. Estonia and Finland have made similar declarations.

Non-state armed groups

Due to the relative complexity of cluster munitions and their delivery systems, very few non-state armed groups (NSAGs) have used them.

Government forces used cluster munitions against NSAGs in Syria and Yemen in the second half of 2016 and into 2017. There were allegations of use by NSAGs in Iraq by IS and Libya by the armed forces of General Hiftar. In the past, NSAG use of cluster munitions has been recorded in Afghanistan (by the Northern Alliance), BiH (by Croat and Serb militias), Croatia (by a Serb militia), Israel (by Hezbollah), Syria (by IS), and Ukraine (by opposition forces).[92]

Production of Cluster Munitions

A total of 34 states have developed or produced more than 200 types of cluster munitions, of which 18 ceased manufacturing cluster munitions prior to or upon joining the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[93]

Producers 

Sixteen countries are believed to produce cluster munitions or reserve the right to do so, as listed in the following table. None of these states have joined the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Asia and Europe account for most of producer states, with six and five producers, respectively.

Cluster munition producers

Brazil

Korea, South

China

Pakistan

Egypt

Poland

Greece

Romania

India

Russia

Iran

Singapore

Israel

Turkey

Korea, North

United States

 

Due to a lack of transparency and available data, it is not clear if cluster munitions were produced in all these countries in 2016 or the first half of 2017. Greece, Romania, Singapore, and Turkey have indicated no active production, but the Monitor continues to list them as producers as it is unclear if they have adopted a new policy forswearing any future production of cluster munitions.

On 30 August 2016, CBU-105 manufacturer Textron Systems Corporation announced that it is stopping its production of the weapon, which are manufactured for each sales order in accordance with the delivery schedule.[94] In a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Textron announced it has discontinued production of the CBU-105 because of reduced orders, stating that “the current political environment has made it difficult” to obtain sales approvals from the executive branch and Congress.[95] While the US government has yet to prohibit US production of cluster munitions, Textron’s announcement marks the effective end of US cluster munition production as it was the last manufacturer of these weapons.[96]

Previously, in November 2015, the private company Singapore Technologies Engineering (STE) announced that it has ceased production of cluster munitions.

The Monitor will continue to list Singapore and the US as producers until they formally commit to not acquire cluster munitions from their domestic industry.

Some cluster munition producers have established specific standards aimed at addressing the weapon’s failure rate and resulting UXO:

  • South Korea in 2008 issued a directive requiring that in the future it would only acquire cluster munitions with self-destruct mechanisms and a 1% or lower failure rate.[97]
  • According to US policy, cluster munitions produced after 2005 must have a UXO rate of less than 1%.[98]

Former producers 

Under Article 1(1)(b) of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties undertake to never develop, produce, or acquire cluster munitions. There have been no confirmed instances of new production of cluster munitions by any of the convention’s States Parties or signatories since the convention took effect in August 2010.

Eighteen states have ceased the production of cluster munitions, as shown by the following table. All are States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions except non-signatory Argentina, which has indicated that it does not intend to produce cluster munitions in the future.

Former producers of cluster munitions

Argentina

Italy

Australia

Japan

Belgium

Netherlands

BiH

Slovakia

Chile

South Africa

Croatia

Spain

France

Sweden

Germany

Switzerland

Iraq

United Kingdom

 

Several States Parties have provided information on the conversion or decommissioning of production facilities in their Article 7 transparency reports, including France, Japan, Slovakia, Sweden, and Switzerland.[99]

Transfer of Cluster Munitions

The true scope of the global trade in cluster munitions is difficult to ascertain due to the overall lack of transparency on arms transfers. Despite this challenge, the Monitor has identified at least 15 countries that have in the past transferred more than 50 types of cluster munitions to at least 60 other countries.[100] 

Since joining the Convention on Cluster Munitions, no State Party is known to have transferred cluster munitions other than for the purposes of stockpile destruction or for research and training purposes.[101] States Parties Chile, France, Germany, Moldova, Slovakia, Spain, and the UK exported cluster munitions before they adopted the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

While the historical record is incomplete and there are large variations in publicly available information, the US has probably been the world leader in exports, having transferred hundreds of thousands of cluster munitions containing tens of millions of submunitions to at least 30 countries and other areas.[102] Cluster munitions of Russian/Soviet origin are reported to be in the stockpiles of at least 36 states, including countries that inherited stocks after the dissolution of the USSR.[103] The full extent of China’s exports of cluster munitions is not known, but unexploded submunitions of Chinese origin have been found in Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, and Sudan.

Non-signatories Brazil, Israel, South Korea, Turkey, Ukraine, and the US are known to have exported cluster munitions since 2000. In May 2016, the Obama administration suspended transfers of US cluster munitions to Saudi Arabia after reports of their use in civilian areas of Yemen.[104]

Non-signatories Georgia, India, Oman, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Turkey, and the UAE are among the recipients of cluster munitions exports since 2005.

At least two states that have not joined the Convention on Cluster Munitions have enacted a partial or complete export moratorium: Singapore and the US. 

Stockpiles of Cluster Munitions and their Destruction

Countries that have stockpiled cluster munitions[105]

Banhavestockpiles

Cluster munitions declared by States Parties[106]

Banstockpilesdeclared

Global stockpiles 

The Monitor estimates that prior to the start of the global effort to ban cluster munitions, 91 countries stockpiled millions of cluster munitions containing more than one billion submunitions, as shown in the following table.[107] At least 30 of these countries have now destroyed their stockpiled cluster munitions, while 13 States Parties to the convention still have stocks to destroy.

Stockpiles possessed by States Parties

A total of 41 States Parties have stockpiled cluster munitions at some point in time, of which 28 have now completed destruction of those stocks.

According to available information, at one point 32 States Parties stockpiled nearly 1.5 million cluster munitions containing more than 178 million submunitions, as shown in the above table.

Two more States Parties have been added to this table since Cluster Munition Monitor 2016, after they declared cluster munition stocks in their Article 7 reports:

  • Cuba reported a stockpile in March 2017 of 1,856 air-dropped cluster munitions of Soviet origin and an unspecified quantity of submunitions.[108]
  • Cameroon reported a stockpile of six BLG-66 Belouga cluster bombs made in France containing 906 submunitions.[109]

Five States Parties that have or are believed to stockpile cluster munitions are not listed in the table above due to insufficient information. Republic of the Congo, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, and South Africa have yet to formally report the status of stockpiled cluster munitions by providing initial Article 7 transparency reports. Honduras submitted its report on 8 March 2017, but did not report the stockpile it has destroyed, probably because it destroyed the cluster munitions prior to entry into force.[110]

Afghanistan and Iraq have reported the completion of stockpile destruction, but did not provide a specific date of completion or information on types and quantities destroyed. Both countries continue to report the discovery and destruction of stocks of cluster munitions believed to have been abandoned in arms caches.

States Parties that never stockpiled 

A total of 47 States Parties have confirmed never stockpiling cluster munitions, most through a direct statement in their transparency report for the convention.[111] Since September 2016, Bolivia, Mauritius, and Niger have submitted initial transparency reports confirming they have never possessed any stockpiled cluster munitions.

Stockpiles possessed by signatories 

At least five signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions have stockpiled cluster munitions:

  • Angola stated in 2010 that its entire stockpile had been destroyed and its armed forces no longer possessed cluster munitions, but it has yet to make an official declaration that all stocks of cluster munitions were destroyed.[112]
  • The Central African Republic stated in 2011 that it had destroyed a “considerable” stockpile of cluster munitions and no longer had stocks on its territory.[113]
  • Cyprus transferred 3,760 GRM 20 mortar projectiles and 2,559 M20G submunitions to State Party Bulgaria in 2014 for stockpile destruction, which has not yet commenced according to Bulgaria.[114]
  • Indonesia has acknowledged stockpiling cluster munitions, but has not disclosed information on the types and quantities possessed.
  • A Nigerian official said in 2012 that its armed forces stockpile BL755 cluster bombs.[115] In October 2015, Nigeria alleged that Boko Haram has been using BLG-66 cluster munitions recovered from arms caches.[116]

Stockpiles possessed by non-signatories 

It is not possible to provide a global estimate of the quantity of cluster munitions currently stockpiled by non-signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions as too few have disclosed information on the types and quantities possessed.

In 2011, the US said its stockpile was comprised of “more than 6 million cluster munitions.”[117] However, the US appears to have made significant progress since 2008 in removing cluster munitions from its active inventory and placing them in the demilitarization inventory for destruction.[118]

Georgia completed the destruction of 844 RBK-series cluster bombs containing 320,375 submunitions in 2013; it used Israeli-made cluster munition rockets during the 2008 conflict with Russia.[119] Greece and Ukraine have disclosed partial figures on their respective stockpiles of cluster munitions.[120]

Stockpile destruction

Cluster munitions destroyed by States Parties (as of 31 December 2016)[121]BanstockpilesdestroyedNote: Italics indicate States Parties that have not yet completed stockpile destruction.

Under Article 3 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, each State Party is required to declare and destroy all stockpiled cluster munitions under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but no later than eight years after entry into force for that State Party.

The convention’s States Parties have collectively destroyed 1.4 million cluster munitions containing more than 175 million submunitions, as shown in the above table.[122] This represents the destruction of 97% of the total reported global stocks of cluster munitions and 98% of the total number of submunitions declared by States Parties.

Destruction completed 

All States Parties that have completed destruction of their cluster munitions stocks did so well in advance of the convention’s eight-year deadline. With more than half a million cluster munitions, Germany reported the highest number of stocks of any State Party, but destroyed them all more than two years in advance of its 1 August 2018 deadline.[123]

Of the 28 States Parties that have completed destruction of their stockpiled cluster munitions, four destroyed their stocks before the convention’s August 2010 entry into force: Ecuador in 2004, Colombia in 2009, and Moldova and Norway in July 2010.

In the period since then, 20 States Parties have completed their stockpile destruction obligation under the convention:

  • Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, and Montenegro in the last four months of 2010
  • BiH, Hungary, and Portugal in 2011;
  • The Netherlands in 2012;
  • Chile, Côte d’Ivoire, Macedonia FYR, and the UK in 2013;
  • Canada and Denmark in 2014;
  • Germany, Italy, Japan, Mozambique, and Sweden in 2015; and
  • France in 2016.

No States Parties completed the destruction of their cluster munition stocks in the second half of 2016 or first half of 2017.

States Parties Afghanistan, Republic of the Congo, Honduras, and Iraq report or state that they have completed stockpile destruction, but did not specify the date of completion or the total quantity destroyed.[124]

Stockpile destruction by year since entry into force

Year

Number of States Parties

Cluster munitions destroyed

Submunitions (millions) destroyed

2011

10

107,000

17.6

2012

9

173,973

27

2013

10

130,380

24

2014

8

121,585

16.4

2015

9

79,184

8.7

2016

3

56,171

2.8

 

Destruction underway 

During 2016, three States Parties destroyed 56,171 cluster munitions and nearly 2.8 million submunitions, as shown in the following table. 

Cluster munitions destroyed by States Parties in 2016

State Party

Cluster munitions destroyed

Submunitions destroyed

Slovakia

92

4,550

Spain

669

14,040

Switzerland

55,410

2,752,193

Total

56,171

2,770,783

 

Three States Parties are in the process of stockpile destruction:

  • Slovakia destroyed 163 cluster munitions and 11,666 submunitions prior to the convention’s 1 January 2016 entry into force for the country and destroyed a futher 92 cluster munitions and 4,550 submunitions in 2016.[125] This represents nearly 21% of its total declared stocks of cluster munitions and 5% of the submunitions. Slovakia is on track to complete destruction well in advance of its 1 January 2024 deadline.
  • Spain reported in April 2017 a revised stockpile total of 2,095 MAT-120 cluster munitions and 61,005 submunitions.[126] It destroyed 669 cluster munitions and 14,040 submunitions in 2016 and has committed to destroy the remaining stocks by its 1 August 2018 deadline.
  • Switzerland is on track to complete destruction in 2018, in advance of its 1 January 2021 deadline. By the end of 2016, Switzerland had destroyed a total of 177,152 cluster munitions and 9,879,347 submunitions, which represents 86% of its original stockpile of cluster munitions and nearly 81% of its original stockpile of submunitions.

Ten States Parties with cluster munition stockpiles did not destroy any in the reporting period:

  • In April 2017, Botswana reported that it has requested assistance from Norwegian People’s Aid to destroy its stockpiled cluster munitions
  • Bulgaria reported in June 2017 that a stockpile destruction program by the Bulgarian Armed Forces, managed by the NATO Support and Procurement Agency, was suspended in January 2017 because Expal Bulgaria, the contractor selected, “could not meet the criteria for authorization under the Bulgarian legislation.”[127] Bulgarian authorities are now exploring “new options for the destruction of the cluster munitions” by the country’s 1 October 2019 deadline.
  • Cameroon has not indicated if it has a plan in place to destroy its stockpile of cluster munitions by its 1 January 2021 deadline.[128]
  • Croatia’s stockpile destruction deadline is 1 August 2018. It did not destroy any cluster munition stocks in 2016 after making progress on its stockpile destruction in 2015.[129]
  • Cuba reported a stockpile in its initial transparency report, provided in March 2017.[130] It has committed to destroy the stocks by its 1 October 2026 deadline in accordance with relevant environmental and safety measures and applicable national and international standards and procedures.
  • Guinea is believed to stockpile cluster munitions, but has not provided its Article 7 transparency report for the convention, originally due in September 2015.
  • Guinea-Bissau has requested financial and technical assistance to destroy its stockpiled cluster munitions by the 1 May 2019 deadline. It still has not submitted a transparency report for the convention—due in 2011—listing the types and quantities.[131]
  • Peru completed a “preparation and testing” phase for stockpile destruction in May 2016.[132] It stated in June 2017 that Norwegian People’s Aid is scheduled to visit the country in August 2017 to provide a training on how to safely destroy the stocks and then the destruction process will begin so that it can be completed by the 1 March 2021 deadline.[133]
  • Slovenia reported the completion of its stockpile destruction in 2011, but the Monitor has listed it as a stockpiler again after Bulgaria reported that 41,825 PAT794 submunitions transferred from Slovenia for stockpile destruction are still on Bulgarian territory and held by the company EXPAL Bulgaria.[134]
  • South Africa has not submitted its initial Article 7 transparency report for the convention, originally due by 29 April 2016. In September 2016, South Africa told States Parties that it has a “small stockpile of aircraft-delivered cluster bombs and artillery-delivered cluster shells.”[135] It said that these stocks have been taken out of commission and “ring-fenced for planned disposal,” which it said it hoped to commence in the coming months.

Retention

Article 3 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions permits the retention of cluster munitions and submunitions for the development of training in detection, clearance, and destruction techniques, and for the development of counter-measures such as armor to protect troops and equipment from the weapons.

The CMC questioned the need for this provision when the convention was negotiated, as it saw no compelling reason to retain live cluster munitions and explosive submunitions for research and training purposes. In their transparency reports, statements and letters, and implementation legislation, most States Parties have expressed the view that there is no need to retain any live cluster munitions or explosive submunitions for training in detection, clearance, and destruction techniques, or for the development of counter-measures. This includes 21 States Parties that have stockpiled cluster munitions.[136]

Despite this, 11 States Parties—all from Europe—are retaining cluster munitions for training and research purposes, as shown in the following table. The quantity retained at the end of calendar year 2016 and quantity and types used or “consumed” for permitted purposes in this period are listed in the following table, which also notes the initial quantity of cluster munitions retained.

Cluster munitions retained for training (as of 31 December 2016)[137]

Banretained

Germany remains the State Party with the highest number of retained cluster munitions, but it again reduced the total number after consuming the retained cluster munitions during explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) training in 2016. Czech Republic, France, Spain, and Switzerland also reduced the number of cluster munitions retained for training in 2016.

Switzerland reported a significantly reduced number of retained cluster munitions in April 2017, but it did not report if the cluster munitions were consumed in the course of training or destroyed as part of its ongoing stockpile destruction process.[138]

Italy, the Netherlands, Slovakia, and Sweden have yet to consume any of their retained cluster munitions.[139]

Czech Republic, Denmark, and Sweden are retaining individual submunitions only.

Most States Parties retaining cluster munitions for training have significantly reduced the number retained since making their initial declarations. This would indicate that the initial amounts retained were likely too high, but it is still not clear if current holdings constitute the “minimum number absolutely necessary” as required by the convention for the permitted purposes.

States Parties Australia and the UK initially retained cluster munitions, but have since destroyed and not replaced them. Some States Parties that have stockpiled cluster munitions—Chile, Croatia, and Moldova—have declared the retention of inert items that have been rendered free from explosives and no longer qualify as cluster munitions or submunitions under the convention.

 Transparency Reporting

Under Article 7 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties are obliged to submit an initial transparency report within 180 days of the convention taking effect for that country. An updated report is due by 30 April each year thereafter, covering activities in the previous calendar year. The CMC encourages states to submit their transparency reports by the deadline and provide complete information, including definitive statements.[140]

According to the UN Office of Disarmament Affairs website, a total of 82 States Parties have submitted an initial transparency report for the convention as of 30 July 2017.[141] This represents 82% of States Parties for which the obligation applied at that time. This is almost the same rate of compliance as the previous year.[142]

Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, Mauritius, and Niger have provided initial transparency reports since the convention’s Sixth Meeting of States Parties in September 2016. Two State Parties have transparency reporting deadlines pending in 2018: Madagascar is due by 30 April, while Benin is due by 30 June.

A total of 18 States Parties have missed the deadline to submit their initial transparency reports, as listed in the following table.

Overdue initial Article 7 reports (as of 30 June 2017)

State Party

Original Deadline

Belize

28 August 2015

Cape Verde

28 September 2011

Comoros

30 June 2011

Republic of Congo

28 August 2015

Cook Islands

30 July 2012

Dominican Republic

28 November 2012

Fiji

30 April 2011

Guinea

19 April 2015

Guinea-Bissau

28 October 2011

Guyana

27 September 2015

Iceland

31 July 2016

Nauru

28 January 2014

Palestine

27 December 2015

Rwanda

31 July 2016

Somalia

31 August 2016

South Africa

29 April 2016

Togo

29 May 2013

Tunisia

28 August 2011

 

As of 30 June 2017, a total of 50 States Parties have submitted their annual updated transparency report covering activities in 2016.[143] Twenty-seven States Parties have yet to submit their annual updated reports, which were due by 30 April 2017.[144]

Prior to ratifying, Canada provided voluntary transparency reports for the convention in 2011–2014, while Palau provided reports in 2011 and 2016. DRC submitted voluntary reports in 2011, 2012, and 2014.

A small number of states have used voluntary Form J to report on actions to promote universalization and discourage use of cluster munitions, list cooperation and assistance support, or report on other important matters such as their position on interpretive issues.[145]

National Implementation Measures  

According to Article 9 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties are required to take “all appropriate legal, administrative and other measures to implement this Convention, including the imposition of penal sanctions.”[146] The CMC urges all States Parties to enact comprehensive national legislation to enforce the convention’s provisions and provide binding, enduring, and unequivocal rules.

A total of 27 States Parties have enacted specific legislative measures to implement the convention’s provisions, as listed in the table below. Some enacted legislation prior to ratifying or acceding to the convention, often by combining the legislative approval process for both implementation and ratification/accession. A total of 11 states enacted implementing legislation prior to the convention’s August 2010 entry into force and 16 states have done so since then.

States with implementing legislation for the Convention on Cluster Munitions

Before entry into force in August 2010 (year enacted)

Since entry into force (year enacted)

Austria (2008)
Belgium (2006)
Ecuador (2010)
France (2010)
Germany (2009)
Ireland (2008)
Japan (2009)
Luxembourg (2009)
New Zealand (2009)
Norway (2008)
UK (2010)

Australia (2012)
Bulgaria (2015)
Canada (2014)
Cook Islands (2011)
Czech Republic (2011)
Guatemala (2012)
Hungary (2012)
Iceland (2015)
Italy (2011)
Liechtenstein (2013)
Mauritius (2016)
Samoa (2012)
Spain (2015)
Sweden (2012)
Switzerland (2012)
Togo (2015)

 

No States Parties adopted implementing legislation for the convention in the second half of 2016 or first half of 2017. The last country to enact implementing legislation for the convention was Mauritius in June 2016.

Legislation under consideration 

At least 24 States Parties have stated that they are planning or are in the process of drafting, reviewing, or adopting specific legislative measures to implement the convention: Afghanistan, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Colombia, Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Grenada, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lesotho, Malawi, Mali, Niger, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Swaziland, and Zambia.

Existing law deemed sufficient 

At least 32 States Parties have indicated that their existing laws will suffice to enforce their adherence to the convention: Albania, Andorra, BiH, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Croatia, Denmark, El Salvador, Guinea-Bissau, Holy See, Iraq, Lithuania, Macedonia FYR, Malta, Mauritania, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Palau, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, San Marino, Senegal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Tunisia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uruguay.

In the reporting period:

  • Cuba reported sufficient existing legislation to ensure adherence to the convention in its initial Article 7 transparency report in March 2017.
  • New Zealand reported new policy that requires investors to disclose lists of individual assets to help ensure that the funds are not used for production of cluster munitions.
  • Switzerland adapted the Swiss Criminal Code and Military Criminal Code to criminalize the use of prohibited weapons as a war crime.

Status unknown 

The status of national implementation measures is unknown or unclear in the other States Parties, many of which have not provided an initial Article 7 transparency report.

Interpretive Issues 

During the Oslo Process and the final negotiations in Dublin, where the Convention on Cluster Munitions was adopted on 30 May 2008, it appeared that there was not a uniform view on some important issues related to interpretation and implementation of the convention. The CMC encourages States Parties and signatories that have not yet done so to express their views on the following issues of concern so that common understandings can be reached:

  • The prohibition on assistance during joint military operations with states not party that may use cluster munitions (“interoperability”);
  • The prohibitions on transit and foreign stockpiling of cluster munitions; and
  • The prohibition on investment in production of cluster munitions.

Several States Parties and signatories to the convention have elaborated their views on these issues, including through Article 7 transparency reports, statements at meetings, parliamentary debates, and direct communications with the CMC and the Monitor. Several strong implementation laws provide useful models for how to implement certain provisions of the convention. Yet, as of 21 July 2016, more than three-dozen States Parties had not articulated their views on even one of these interpretive issues.[147]

More than 400 US Department of State cables made public by Wikileaks in 2010–2011 demonstrate how the US—despite not participating in the Oslo Process—made numerous attempts to influence its allies, partners, and other states on the content of the draft Convention on Cluster Munitions, particularly with respect to interoperability, and US stocks and foreign stockpiling.[148]

Interoperability and the prohibition on assistance

Article 1 of the convention obliges States Parties “never under any circumstances to…assist, encourage or induce anyone to engage in any activity prohibited to a State Party under this Convention.” Yet during the Oslo Process, some states expressed concern about the application of the prohibition on assistance during joint military operations with countries that have not joined the convention. In response to these “interoperability” concerns, Article 21 on “Relations with States not Party to this Convention” was included in the convention. The CMC has strongly criticized Article 21 for being politically motivated and for leaving a degree of ambiguity about how the prohibition on assistance would be applied in joint military operations.

Article 21 states that States Parties “may engage in military cooperation and operations with States not party to this Convention that might engage in activities prohibited to a State Party.” It does not, however, negate a State Party’s obligations under Article 1 to “never under any circumstances” assist with prohibited acts. The article also requires States Parties to discourage use of cluster munitions by those not party and to encourage them to join the convention. Together, Article 1 and Article 21 should have a unified and coherent purpose, as the convention cannot both require States Parties to discourage the use of cluster munitions and, by implication, allow them to encourage it. Furthermore, to interpret Article 21 as qualifying Article 1 would run counter to the object and purpose of the convention, which is to eliminate cluster munitions and the harm they cause to civilians.

The CMC’s position is therefore that States Parties must not intentionally or deliberately assist, induce, or encourage any activity prohibited under the Convention on Cluster Munitions, even when engaging in joint operations with states not party.

At least 37 States Parties and signatories have agreed that the convention’s Article 21 provision on interoperability should not be read as allowing states to avoid their specific obligation under Article 1 to prohibit assistance with prohibited acts.[149]

States Parties Australia, Canada, Japan, and the UK have indicated their support for the contrary view that the convention’s Article 1 prohibition on assistance with prohibited acts may be overridden by the interoperability provisions contained in Article 21:

  • Australia’s Criminal Code Amendment (Cluster Munitions Prohibition) Act 2012 has been heavily criticized for allowing Australian military personnel to assist with cluster munition use by states not party. Section 72.41 of Australia’s implementing legislation provides a defence to the offence provisions where prohibited conduct takes place in the course of military cooperation or operations with a foreign country that is not a party to the Convention.”[150] During joint or coalition military operations, Australian Defence Force personnel could help plan operations or provide intelligence for, and/or contribute logistical support to coalition members during which a state not party uses cluster munitions.[151]
  • Canada’s Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act 2014 has elicited similar criticism for its provisions allowing Canadian Armed Forces and public officials to “direct or authorize” an act that “may involve” a state not party performing activities prohibited under the convention during joint military operations.[152] In March 2015, the Chief of Defence Staff issued a directive to “provide direction on prohibited and permitted activities to [Canadian Armed Forces] personnel who might become involved in cluster munition related activities.”[153]
  • Japan has been reluctant to publicly discuss its interpretation of Article 21.[154] However, in a June 2008 State Department cable, a senior Japanese official apparently told the US that Japan interprets the convention as enabling the US and Japan to continue to engage in military cooperation and conduct operations that involve US-owned cluster munitions.[155]
  • The UK’s 2010 implementation law permits assistance with a number of acts prohibited under the convention if the assistance occurs during joint military operations.[156] In addition, the UK stated in 2011 that its interpretation of Article 21 is that “notwithstanding the provisions of Article 1 [prohibition on assistance], Article 21(3) allows States Parties to participate in military operations and cooperation with non-States Parties who may use cluster munitions. UK law and operational practice reflect this.”[157]

States Parties France, the Netherlands, and Spain have provided the view that Article 21 allows for military cooperation in joint operations, but have not indicated the forms of assistance allowed. Spain’s 2015 implementation law establishes that military cooperation and participation in military operations by Spain, its military personnel, or its nationals with states that are not party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions and that use cluster munitions is not prohibited.[158] After Spain’s opposition parties called for the draft legislation to prohibit Spain’s involvement at all times in military operations with other states that use cluster munitions, the draft legislation was adjusted to incorporate the positive obligations of Article 21(2) of the convention, requiring Spain to work for universalization and to discourage the use of cluster munitions.

Transit and foreign stockpiling

The CMC has stated that the injunction to not provide any form of direct or indirect assistance with prohibited acts contained in Article 1 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions should be seen as banning the transit of cluster munitions across or through the national territory, airspace, or waters of a State Party. The convention should be seen as banning the stockpiling of cluster munitions by a state not party on the territory of a State Party.

At least 33 States Parties and signatories have declared that transit and foreign stockpiling are prohibited by the convention.[159]

States Parties that have indicated support for the opposite view—that transit and foreign stockpiling are not prohibited by the convention—include Australia, Canada, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, and the UK.

US stockpiling and transit 

States Parties Norway and the UK have confirmed that the US has removed its stockpiled cluster munitions from their respective territories. The UK announced in 2010 that there were “no foreign stockpiles of cluster munitions in the UK or on any UK territory.”[160] According to a Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs official, the US removed its stockpiled cluster munitions from Norway in 2010.[161]

The US Department of State cables released by Wikileaks show that the US has stockpiled and therefore may still store cluster munitions in States Parties Afghanistan, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Spain, as well as in non-signatories Israel, Qatar, and perhaps Kuwait:

  • A US cable dated December 2008 states, “The United States currently has a very small stockpile of cluster munitions in Afghanistan.”[162]
  • Germany has not expressed clear views on the convention’s prohibition on foreign stockpiling of cluster munitions, but according to a December 2008 cable, it has engaged with the US on the matter of cluster munitions that may be stockpiled by the US in Germany.[163]
  • Italy, Spain, and Qatar were identified by the US in a November 2008 cable as “states in which the US stores cluster munitions,” even though apparently Qatar “may be unaware of US cluster munitions stockpiles in the country.”[164] In its initial report for the convention Spain reported that it was informing non-signatories which it cooperates with in joint military operations of its international obligations prohibiting stockpiling of prohibited weapons on territory under its jurisdiction or control.[165]
  • Japan maintains that US military bases in Japan are under US jurisdiction and control, so the possession of cluster munitions by US forces does not violate the national law or the convention. A December 2008 cable states that Japan “recognizes U.S. forces in Japan are not under Japan’s control and hence the GOJ [government of Japan] cannot compel them to take action or to penalize them.”[166]
  • According to a cable detailing the inaugural meeting on 1 May 2008 of the “U.S.-Israeli Cluster Munitions Working Group (CMWG),” until US cluster munitions are transferred from the War Reserve Stockpiles for use by Israel in wartime, “they are considered to be under U.S. title, and U.S. legislation now prevents such a transfer of any cluster munitions with less than a one percent failure rate.”[167]
  • According to a May 2007 cable, the US may store cluster munitions in Kuwait.[168]

Disinvestment

Several States Parties as well as the CMC view the convention’s Article 1 ban on assistance with prohibited acts as constituting a prohibition on investment in the production of cluster munitions. The Dubrovnik Action Plan adopted by States Parties at the convention’s First Review Conference in 2015 encourages the adoption of national legislation prohibiting investments in producers of cluster munitions.[169]

Since 2007, 10 States Parties have enacted legislation that explicitly prohibits investment in cluster munitions, as shown in the table below.[170]

Disinvestment laws on cluster munitions

State Party

Year enacted

Belgium

2007

Ireland

2008

Italy

2011

Liechtenstein

2013

Luxembourg

2009

Netherlands

2013

New Zealand

2009

Samoa

2012

Spain

2015

Switzerland

2013

 

Four States Parties enacted legislation on cluster munitions containing provisions on disinvestment prior to the convention’s 1 August 2010 entry into force, while six have adopted disinvestment laws in the period since.

No country enacted legislation relating to cluster munitions disinvestment in 2016 or the first half of 2017, but a bill presented in the Canadian Senate in December 2016 proposes an amendment to the country’s implementing legislation for the convention to explicitly prohibit investments.[171]

At least 28 States Parties and signatories to the convention have elaborated their view that investment in cluster munition production is a form of assistance that is prohibited by the convention: Australia, BiH, Cameroon, Canada, Colombia, Republic of the Congo, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, DRC, France, Ghana, Guatemala, the Holy See, Hungary, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Madagascar, Malawi, Malta, Mexico, Niger, Norway, Rwanda, Senegal, Slovenia, the UK, and Zambia.

A few States Parties to the convention have expressed the contrary view that the convention does not prohibit investment in cluster munition production, including Germany, Japan, and Sweden.

Government pension funds in Australia, Ireland, France, New Zealand, Norway, Luxembourg, and Sweden have either fully or partially withdrawn investments, or banned investments, in cluster munition producers.

Financial institutions have acted to stop investment in cluster munition producers and promote socially responsible investment in Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.

At least two companies in states not party to the convention have ceased production of cluster munitions, in part due to divestment and inquiries from numerous investors: US company Textron Systems announced in August 2016 it is stopping cluster munition production, while Singapore Technologies Engineering announced in November 2015 that it no longer manufactures cluster munitions and landmines.

CMC co-founder and member PAX continues to lead advocacy and research to encourage governments to legislate against investment in cluster munition producers and provide clear guidance to financial institutions and investors. PAX issued an updated report on global investment in cluster munition producers at a press conference in Tokyo in May 2017.[172]

Timeline of cluster munition use[173]

Date

Location

Known details of use

2012–present

Syria

Syrian government forces have used 13 types of cluster munitions, including air-dropped bombs, dispensers fixed to aircraft, and ground-launched rockets, while Islamic State (IS) forces have used at least one type of cluster munition. Cluster munition attacks increased after Russia began its joint military operation with Syrian government forces in September 2015, including the use of two types not used before in Syria.

2015–present

Yemen

A Saudi Arabia-led coalition of states that began a military operation against Ansar Allah forces (the Houthi) in Yemen on 25 March 2015 has used CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons, CBU-58 and CBU-87 bombs, BL755 cluster munitions, and M26 and ASTROS rockets. Cluster munitions containing “ZP-39” submunitions have been used, but the user is not known.

2016

Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan

There is credible evidence that two types of cluster munition rockets were used in Nagorno-Karabakh in April 2016. Armenia and Azerbaijan denied using cluster munitions while accusing each other of use. The Monitor has not been able to conduct an independent investigation to make a conclusive determination about responsibility.

2016

Somalia

Kenya has denied an allegation that it used BL755 cluster munitions in Somalia in January 2016 in an attack against al-Shabaab. The Monitor could not confirm this use of cluster munitions or identify the responsible party.

2015

Sudan

The Sudanese Air Force was responsible for cluster munition attacks in Southern Kordofan in February, March, and May 2015 using RBK-500 AO-2.5 RT cluster bombs.

2015

Libya

In February and March 2015, remnants of air-dropped cluster bombs were recorded at Bin Jawad and Sirte respectively. The Libyan Air Force bombed both locations in early 2015, but it was not possible to conclusively determine responsibility.

2014–2015

Ukraine

From mid-July until a February 2015 ceasefire, both Ukrainian government forces and opposition groups backed by Russia used two types of cluster munition rockets in eastern Ukraine: 300mm 9M55K-series Smerch rockets delivering 72 9N235 submunitions and 220mm 9M27K-series Uragan rockets containing 30 9N235 submunitions or 30 9N210 submunitions.

2014

South Sudan

In Jonglei State, the UN found the remnants of at least eight RBK-250-275 cluster bombs and AO-1SCh submunitions by the road 16 kilometers south of Bor in the week of 7 February, in an area not known to be contaminated by remnants before that time.

2012

Sudan

There were two compelling allegations of cluster munition use by the armed forces of Sudan in Southern Kordofan state, involving a Chinese Type-81 DPICM in Troji on 29 February and a RBK-500 AO-2.5RT cluster bomb in Ongolo on 15 April.

2011

Libya

Libyan government forces used MAT-120 mortar-fired cluster munitions, RBK-250 PTAB-2.5M cluster bombs, and 122mm cargo rockets containing an unidentified type of DPICM.

2011

Cambodia

Thai forces fired artillery-delivered cluster munitions with M42/M46 and M85 type DPICM submunitions into Cambodia during border clashes near Preah Vihear temple.

2009

Yemen

The US used at least five TLAM-D cruise missiles, each containing 166 BLU-97 submunitions, to attack a “training camp” in Abyan governorate on 17 December. Northern Saada governorate is contaminated by cluster munitions used in late 2009 during fighting by the government of Yemen, Houthi rebels, and Saudi Arabia. The user responsible is not clear, but remnants include US-made CBU-52 cluster bombs and BLU-97, BLU-61, and M42/M46 submunitions as well as Soviet-made RBK-250-275 AO-1SCh cluster bombs.

2008

Georgia

Russian and Georgian forces used cluster munitions during the August 2008 conflict. Submunitions cleared by deminers include air-dropped AO-2.5RTM and rocket-delivered 9N210 and M095.

2006

Lebanon

Israeli forces used ground-launched and air-dropped cluster munitions against Hezbollah. The UN estimates that Israel used up to 4 million submunitions.

2006

Israel

Hezbollah fired more than 100 Chinese-produced Type-81 122mm cluster munition rockets into northern Israel.

2003

Iraq

The US and the UK used nearly 13,000 cluster munitions, containing an estimated 1.8 to 2 million submunitions in the three weeks of major combat.

Unknown

Uganda

RBK-250-275 bombs and AO-1SCh submunitions have been found in the northern district of Gulu.

2001–2002

Afghanistan

The US dropped 1,228 cluster bombs containing 248,056 submunitions.

1999

Yugoslavia, Federal Republic of (FRY)

The US, the UK, and the Netherlands dropped 1,765 cluster bombs containing 295,000 submunitions in what is now Kosovo, Montenegro, Serbia, and Albania. FRY also used cluster munitions.

1999

Chechnya

Russian forces used cluster munitions against NSAGs.

1998–2003

Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

Deminers have found BL755 bombs, BLU-63 cluster munitions, and PM-1 submunitions.

1998–1999

Albania

Yugoslav forces used rocket-delivered cluster munitions in disputed border areas, and NATO forces conducted six aerial cluster munition strikes.

1998

Colombia

The Colombian air force used a World War II-era cluster munition in an attack on Santo Domingo in the municipality of Tame on 13 December.

1998

Ethiopia, Eritrea

Ethiopia attacked Asmara airport and dropped BL-755 bombs in Gash-Barka province in Eritrea. Eritrea used cluster munitions in two separate strikes in Mekele, including at a school.

1998

Afghanistan/Sudan

In August, US ships and submarines fired 66 TLAM-D Block 3 cruise missiles, each containing 166 BLU-97 submunitions, at a factory in Khartoum, Sudan, and at reported NSAG training camps in Afghanistan.

1997

Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone has said that Nigerian peacekeepers in the Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) used BLG-66 Beluga bombs on the eastern town of Kenema. ECOMOG Force Commander General Victor Malu denied these reports.

1996–1999

Sudan

Sudanese government forces used air-dropped cluster munitions in southern Sudan, including Chilean-made PM-1 submunitions.

1995

Croatia

An NSAG used Orkan M-87 multiple rocket launchers in an attack on the city of Zagreb on 2–3 May. Additionally, the Croatian government claimed that Serb forces used BL-755 bombs in Sisak, Kutina, and along the Kupa River.

1994–1996

Chechnya

Russian forces used cluster munitions against NSAGs.

1992–1997

Tajikistan

ShOAB and AO-2.5RT submunitions have been found in the town of Gharm in the Rasht Valley, used by unknown forces in civil war.

1992–1995

Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH)

Yugoslav forces and NSAGs used cluster munitions during the war. NATO aircraft dropped two CBU-87 bombs.

1992–1994

Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan

Submunition contamination has been identified in at least 162 locations in Nagorno-Karabakh. Submunition types cleared by deminers include PTAB-1, ShOAB-0.5, and AO-2.5. There are also reports of contamination in other parts of occupied Azerbaijan, adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh.

1992–1994

Angola

Deminers have found dud Soviet-made PTAB and AO-2.5 RT submunitions in various locations.

1991

Iraq, Kuwait

The US, France, and the UK dropped 61,000 cluster bombs containing some 20 million submunitions. The number of cluster munitions delivered by surface-launched artillery and rocket systems is not known, but an estimated 30 million or more DPICM submunitions were used in the conflict.

1991

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabian and US forces used artillery-delivered and air-dropped cluster munitions against Iraqi forces during the Battle of Khafji.

1988

Iran

US Navy aircraft attacked Iranian Revolutionary Guard speedboats and an Iranian Navy ship using Mk-20 Rockeye bombs during Operation Praying Mantis.

1986–1987

Chad

French aircraft dropped cluster munitions on a Libyan airfield at Wadi Doum. Libyan forces also used AO-1SCh and PTAB-2.5 submunitions at various locations.

1986

Libya

US Navy aircraft attacked Libyan ships using Mk-20 Rockeye cluster bombs in the Gulf of Sidra on 25 March. On 14–15 April, US Navy aircraft dropped 60 Rockeye bombs on Benina Airfield.

1984–1988

Iran, Iraq

It has been reported that Iraq first used air-dropped bombs in 1984. Iraq reportedly used Ababil-50 surface-to-surface cluster munition rockets during the later stages of the war.

1983

Lebanon

US Navy aircraft dropped 12 CBU-59 and 28 Mk-20 Rockeye bombs against Syrian air defense units near Beirut.

1983

Grenada

US Navy aircraft dropped 21 Mk-20 Rockeye bombs during close air support operations.

1982

Falkland Islands/Malvinas

UK forces dropped 107 BL755 cluster bombs containing a total of 15,729 submunitions.

1982

Lebanon

Israel used cluster munitions against Syrian forces and NSAGs in Lebanon.

1979–1989

Afghanistan

Soviet forces extensively used air-dropped and rocket-delivered cluster munitions. NSAGs also used rocket-delivered cluster munitions on a smaller scale.

1978

Lebanon

Israel used cluster munitions in southern Lebanon.

1977–1978

Somalia

Contamination discovered in 2013 in Somali border region. Submunitions found include PTAB-2.5M and AO-1SCh, but the party that used the weapons is unknown.

1975–1988

Western Sahara, Mauritania

Moroccan forces used artillery-fired and air-dropped cluster munitions against an NSAG in Western Sahara. Cluster munition remnants of the same types used by Morocco in Western Sahara have been found in Mauritania.

1973

Egypt, Syria

Israel used air-dropped cluster munitions against Egyptian air defense installations in the Suez Canal zone and on reported NSAG training camps near Damascus.

1970s

Zambia

Remnants of cluster munitions, including unexploded submunitions from air-dropped bombs, have been found at Chikumbi and Shang’ombo.

1965–1975

Cambodia, Lao PDR, Vietnam

According to a Handicap International (HI) review of US bombing data, approximately 80,000 cluster munitions, containing 26 million submunitions, were dropped on Cambodia in 1969–1973; over 414,000 cluster bombs, containing at least 260 million submunitions, were dropped on Lao PDR in 1965–1973; and over 296,000 cluster munitions, containing nearly 97 million submunitions, were dropped in Vietnam in 1965–1975.

1939–1945

Italy, Libya, Malta, Palau, Solomon Islands, USSR, the UK, possibly other locations

Munitions similar in function to modern cluster munitions were used by belligerent parties during World War II in Europe, North Africa, and the Pacific.

  

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[1] The convention text was adopted by consensus by the 107 governments that were full participants in the negotiations. However, adoption does not have any legal obligation attached. Sixteen countries adopted the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Dublin on 30 May 2008, but never signed or acceded: Argentina, Bahrain, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Estonia, Finland, Kyrgyzstan, Malaysia, Morocco, Papua New Guinea, Qatar, Serbia, Sudan, Timor-Leste, Vanuatu, and Venezuela.

[2] There are 162 States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty and one signatory (Marshall Islands). All States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions have joined the Mine Ban Treaty except Cuba, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Palestine, while 47 Mine Ban Treaty States Parties have yet to accede to the Convention on Cluster Munitions (Algeria, Argentina, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belarus, Bhutan, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Dominica, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Finland, Gabon, Greece, Jordan, Kiribati, Kuwait, Latvia, Malaysia, Maldives, Niue, Oman, Papua New Guinea, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Saint Lucia, Serbia, Solomon Islands, South Sudan, Sudan, Suriname, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Ukraine, Vanuatu, Venezuela, Yemen, and Zimbabwe).

[4]The convention enters into force for each individual state on the first day of the sixth month after their deposit of the instrument of accession or ratification with the UN in New York. The Monitor lists a country as a State Party as soon as the deposit has occurred.

[5] Ninety-four states signed the convention in Oslo on 3–4 December 2008, while 10 signed in 2009 and four signed in the first seven months of 2010 before the convention entered into force.

[6] Grenada, Swaziland, and Trinidad and Tobago acceded in 2011; Andorra, and Saint Kitts and Nevis in 2013; Belize and Guyana in 2014; Palestine, Mauritius, and Slovakia in 2015; and Cuba in 2016.

[7] Prior to entry into force, four signatories ratified upon signing the convention in 2008, 22 in 2009, and 12 in 2010 before 1 August. After entry into force, 11 ratified in the last five months of 2010, 15 in 2011, 10 in 2012, five in 2013, two in 2014, seven in 2015, one in 2016, and two in 2017 as of 1 August.

[8] Of the 17 signatories left to ratify the convention, 12 are from Sub-Saharan Africa, two are from the Americas, two from Asia-Pacific, and one from Europe. Signatories are bound by the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties not to engage in acts that “would defeat the object and purpose” of any treaty they have signed. Thus, signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions have committed to never acquire, produce, transfer, or use cluster munitions, even if they have not yet ratified. The Vienna Convention is considered customary international law and binding on all countries.

[9] Eighteen non-signatories attended the meeting: Argentina, China, Finland, Greece, Kazakhstan, Libya, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, South Korea, Serbia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Thailand, Turkey, Vietnam, and Yemen. See, List of Participants, Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meeting of States Parties, 20 September 2016, bit.ly/CCM6MSPparticipants.

[10] Australia, Cuba, Iraq, Lao PDR, Nicaragua, New Zealand, and the UK made comments and/or suggested amendments to the declaration prior to its adoption. See the website for the Sixth Meeting of States Parties, bit.ly/CCM6MSPuniversalization.

[11] See the political declaration annexed to the “Final report of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 5–7 September 2016,” CCM/MSP/2016/9, 30 September 2016, bit.ly/CCMFinalReport2016.

[12] At their First Review Conference in September 2015, States Parties agreed to no longer hold intersessional meetings of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, ending a process that started in 2011.

[13] Participants included States Parties Botswana, Cameroon, Ghana, Mauritania, Swaziland, and Zambia; signatories Angola, Djibouti, Gambia, Madagascar, Namibia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda; and non-signatories Ethiopia, Gabon, and Zimbabwe. See, Final Workshop Report, African Regional Workshop on the Universalization of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, 4–5 August 2016, bit.ly/CCMAfricanWorkshop.

[14] The Addis Ababa Commitment on Universalization and Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Addis Ababa, 4–5 August 2016, bit.ly/AddisAbabaCommitment.

[15] Participants included State Party Lao PDR, signatories Indonesia and Philippines, and non-signatories Cambodia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. See, South East Asia regional seminar on the Country Coalition Concept, bit.ly/CCMSEAsiaSeminar.

[16] Final Report of the South East Asian regional Seminar on the Country Coalition Concept, Bangkok, 17 March 2017, bit.ly/CCMSEAsiaSeminarReport.

[17] Participants included signatories Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Gambia, Kenya, Liberia, Namibia, Nigeria, São Tomé and Príncipe, Tanzania, Uganda, and new State Party Madagascar.

[18] See, Kampala CCM ratification seminar, bit.ly/CCMKampalaSeminar.

[19] Regional participants included States Parties Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), and Croatia. States Parties Cuba and Peru also participated. See, South East Europe regional seminar on the Country Coalition Concept, bit.ly/CCMSEAsiaCountryCoalition.

[20] Presentations of Albania, bit.ly/CCMEEuropeAlbania; of BiH, bit.ly/CCMEEuropeBiH; of Croatia, bit.ly/CCMEEuropeCroatia; of Cuba, bit.ly/CCMEEuropeCuba; and of Peru, bit.ly/CCMEEuropePeru.

[21] Final Report of the CCW Fifth Review Conference, Geneva, 23 December 2016, bit.ly/CCW5ReviewFinalReport.

[22] India expressed disappointment that the CCW Fourth Review Conference did not adopt a protocol on cluster munitions, while Colombia and Spain briefly discussed national legislative initiatives on cluster munitions. See, statements of India, bit.ly/CCW4ReviewIndia; of Colombia, bit.ly/CCW4ReviewColombia; and of Spain, bit.ly/CCW4ReviewSpain.

[23] Campaigners received support for their outreach activities in countries including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Canada, Colombia, DRC, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Somalia. International Campaign to Ban Landmines–Cluster Munition Coalition (ICBL–CMC), “2016 Annual Report,” March 2017, bit.ly/ICBLCMC16AnnualReport.

[24] See, PAX, Worldwide investments in Cluster Munitions: a shared responsibility (Utrecht, May 2017), bit.ly/PAXWorldInvestment.

[25] See the website of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Seventh Meeting of States Parties, bit.ly/CCM7MSP. The first five annual meetings of the Convention on Cluster Munitions and the First Review Conference were held in States Parties that are contaminated by cluster munition remnants and/or leaders of the convention: Lao PDR in 2010, Lebanon in 2011, Norway in 2012, Zambia in 2013, Costa Rica in 2014, and Croatia in 2015.

[26] Minutes of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Coordination Committee Meeting, Geneva, 23 March 2017, bit.ly/CCMcoordination17.

[27] A total of 51 countries owe funds to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Non-signatory South Korea owes the most (US$6,126), followed by State Party Mexico ($5,134), and non-signatory Brazil ($4,320). See, UN Finance Office, Status of Contributions of BWC, CCW, CCM, OTW as at 30 June 2017, bit.ly/UNcontributions17.

[28] The Netherlands introduced UNGA Resolution 71/45 on Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, with 28 co-sponsors: Angola, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Chile, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Laos, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Montenegro, New Zealand, Norway, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Portugal, Slovakia, Sweden, and Switzerland. “Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 71/45, 5 December 2016, bit.ly/UNGAResolution71-45.

[29] These non-signatories voted in favor: Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Dominica, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kiribati, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, Saint Lucia, Singapore, Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, and Venezuela. These non-signatories abstained: Argentina, Armenia, Bahrain, Belarus, Brazil, China, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, Georgia, Greece, India, Iran, Israel, Kuwait, Latvia, Morocco, Myanmar, Nepal, Oman, Pakistan, Poland, Qatar, South Korea, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, South Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates (UAE), United States (US), Uzbekistan, Vietnam, and Yemen.

[30] The following abstainers elaborated their views on the draft resolution on the Convention on Cluster Munitions: Brazil, Pakistan, Poland (on behalf of Greece, Estonia, Finland, and Romania), South Korea, and the US. State Party Cuba also spoke. See, UN, “Record of First Committee 24th meeting,” A/C.1/71/PV.24, 31 October 2016. Signatory Cyprus also elaborated its views. See, undocs.org/A/C.1/71/PV.24.

[31] “Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 70/54, 7 December 2015, bit.ly/UNGAResolution70-54.

[32] Mauritius and Swaziland acceded to the convention, while the rest signed and ratified.

[33] Email from Teresa Dybeck, Programme Manager, Parliamentary Forum on Small Arms and Light Weapons, 27 July 2015; and ICBL-CMC meeting with Lt. Col. David Okello, Director of Foreign Liaison, Ministry of Defense, Uganda, Addis Ababa, 5 August 2016.

[34] Angola, Central African Republic, Djibouti, Gambia, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, São Tomé e Príncipe, and Tanzania.

[35] This is an unofficial translation from the original, which was in French: “Les autorities gabonaises avaient deja ete saisies a ce sujet et qu'elles n'avaient pas juge opportun pour le Gabon, du moins dans l'immediat, d'adherer a cette Convention, pour des raisons internes.” Letter 536MPGG/Ed.K.M./2017 from Amb. Marianne Odette Bibalou Bounda, Permanent Representative of Gabon to the UN in Geneva, 20 April 2017. Received by mail on 14 June 2017.

[36] Of the 24 States Parties from the Americas, 18 signed and ratified the convention: Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Uruguay.

[37] From Europe, Andorra and Slovakia acceded to the convention, while 32 other countries have signed and ratified: Albania, Austria, Belgium, BiH, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Holy See, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia FYR, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.

[38] Poland provided an explanation on behalf of itself, Greece, Estonia, Finland, and Romania that expressed “support [for] the humanitarian goal of the Convention on Cluster Munitions” but said “at the same time, we believe that humanitarian concerns must be balanced with States’ legitimate security concerns and military and defence needs.” Explanation of Vote by Greece, Estonia, Finland, and Poland, delivered by Poland, UNGA First Committee on Disarmament and International Security, New York, 31 October 2016, bit.ly/UNGAPoland31Oct2016 .

[39] Outside of the EU, the 13 other European and Central Asian non-signatories are: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Serbia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

[40] There are 19 non-signatories from Asia (Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China, India, North Korea, South Korea, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Timor-Leste, and Vietnam) and nine non-signatories from the Pacific (Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu).

[41] The 15 non-signatories from the Middle East and North Africa are: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE, and Yemen. Bahrain, Morocco, and Qatar joined in the consensus adoption of the convention at the conclusion of the negotiations in May 2008.

[42] Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Kuwait, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE, and Yemen.

[43] This accounting of states using cluster munitions is incomplete as cluster munitions have been used in other countries, but the party responsible for the use is not clear. This includes in Angola, Azerbaijan, DRC, Mozambique, Myanmar (Burma), Somalia, South Sudan, Tajikistan, Uganda, and Zambia, as well as Nagorno-Karabakh.

[44] Non-signatory stockpilers Estonia, Finland, Turkey, and the UAE state that they have never used cluster munitions, while a dozen non-signatories with cluster munition stocks are not known to have ever used them: Algeria, Argentina, Bahrain, Belarus, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Mongolia, Oman, Qatar, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.

[45] Nine non-signatories known to produce cluster munitions stated that they have never used cluster munitions: Brazil, China, Egypt,Greece, South Korea, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, and Turkey. The Monitor has not verified any use of cluster munitions by four other producers: India, Iran, North Korea, and Singapore. That leaves Israel, Russia, and the US as the only countries to both produce and use cluster munitions.

[46] Colombia, France, Iraq, the Netherlands, South Africa, and the UK.

[47] There was also an allegation that a weapon that appears to meet the criteria of a cluster munition was used in non-signatory Myanmar in early 2013. The Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in Myanmar’s northern Kachin state claimed that the Myanmar army used cluster munitions against KIA forces in an attack near the town of Laiza on 26 January 2013. Photographs showed the remnants of an M1A1 cluster adapter and 20-pound fragmentation bombs.

[48] See the political declaration annexed to the “Final report of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 5–7 September 2016,” CCM/MSP/2016/9, 30 September 2016, bit.ly/CCMFinalReport2016.

[49] Since 2012, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has researched and reported cluster munition use in Syria as part of its responsibility as chair of the CMC and ban policy editor for the campaign’s Cluster Munition Monitor reporting initiative. The information described here and contained in the Monitor’s Syria country profile summarizes and updates information published in HRW reports and monitored by HRW, drawing on reporting by local media and activists—including videos—and witness accounts. HRW generally only records cluster munition attacks if the attack and/or remnants were filmed to ensure visual confirmation and for which at least one other source has confirmed the use of cluster munitions. The actual number of attacks is probably much higher, as local activists reported many more incidents of what appear to be cluster munition use.

[50] As of July 2017, the Monitor has yet to see any evidence of cluster munition use in the governorates of Tartus or As-Suwayda.

[51] Previously, there were at least 76 cluster munition attacks by the Russian-Syrian joint operation on opposition-controlled territory between 30 September 2015 and 20 July 2016.

[52] Cluster munition rockets manufactured in Egypt have also been used in Syria, while the so-called Islamic State (IS) has used cluster munitions rockets of unknown origin containing a DPICM-type submunition called “ZP-39” in Syria.

[53] In 2004, Jane’s Information Group listed Syria as possessing some of the RBK-series air-dropped bombs as well as the KMGU dispensers, indicating that the stocks used after 2012 were not newly-acquired. Robert Hewson, ed., Jane’s Air-Launched Weapons, Issue 44 (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2004), p. 846.

[54] “Russia’s Position on the Use of Cluster Munitions in Syria,” Position Paper annexed to letter to HRW from Sergey Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, 9 December 2016, bit.ly/HRWRussiaOnCM.

[55] Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, “Russian Defence Ministry commented on briefing of Amnesty International,” 23 December 2015, bit.ly/RussianCommentOnAmnesty15.

[56] “Russia’s Position on the Use of Cluster Munitions in Syria,” Position Paper annexed to letter to HRW from Sergey Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, 9 December 2016, bit.ly/HRWRussiaOnCM.

[57] The 250-kilogram class RBK-series cluster bombs can be delivered by jet aircraft as well as rotary wing aircraft, such as Mi-24 and Mi-8 series helicopters. Brown Moses Blog, “Evidence of cluster bombs being deployed in Syria,” 10 July 2012, bit.ly/CMinSyria12; and HRW Press Release, “Syria: Evidence of Cluster Munitions Use by Syrian Forces,” 12 July 2012, bit.ly/HRW-CMuseInSyria12.

[58] Most RBK-500 SPBE cluster bombs used in Syria were manufactured in 1990 and 1991.

[59] HRW, “Russia/Syria: Extensive Recent Use of Cluster Munitions,” 20 December 2015, bit.ly/HRWRussiaSyriaCM15.

[60] It is not known if the 122mm rockets are SAKR-18 or SAKR-36 variants, which contain 72 and 98 submunitions respectively. The design of the fuze system in this type of submunition makes it very sensitive and submunitions that fail to explode on initial impact are liable to detonate if disturbed. HRW Press Release, “Syria: Army Using New Type of Cluster Munition,” 14 January 2013, bit.ly/HRWnewCMinSyria13.

[61] Armament Research Services, “9M27K Series Cargo Rockets in Syria,” 22 February 2014, bit.ly/ARSCargoRockets14; and HRW Press Release, “Syria: New Deadly Cluster Munition Attacks,” 19 February 2014, bit.ly/HRWSyriaDeadlyAttacks14.

[62] HRW, “Syria: Evidence of Islamic State Cluster Munition Use,” 1 September 2014, bit.ly/HRW-ISuseCMinSyra. Markings on some of the submunitions indicate they were manufactured in 1993. Brown Moses Blog, “The markings on what’s assumed to be a Sakr submunition suggests the designation is ZP39, made in 1993,” 4 April 2014, twitter.com/Brown_Moses/status/452120358271725568.

[63] A video uploaded to YouTube on 26 March 2014, reportedly of arms captured by government forces from rebel groups, shows submunitions prepared for use as IEDs, youtu.be/UTwbnoRQodc.

[64] The CMC has warned the US against using any cluster munitions in the operation. Letter from CMC US to President Barack Obama, 30 March 2015, bit.ly/CMCLettertoUS15.

[65] A total of 143 countries have condemned the use of cluster munitions in Syria via national statements and/or by endorsing resolutions or joint statements. They include 93 States Parties and signatories (Afghanistan, Albania, Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Belize, Benin, BiH, Botswana, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Canada, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, Colombia, Comoros, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, DRC, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Gambia, Germany, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia FYR, Madagascar, Malawi, Malta, Mauritania, Mexico, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Mozambique, Nauru, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Palau, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Samoa, San Marino, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, the UK, and Uruguay) and 50 non-signatories (Argentina, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bahrain, Barbados, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Dominica, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, Gabon, Georgia, Greece, Israel, Jordan, Kiribati, South Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Mauritius, Micronesia, Mongolia, Morocco, Myanmar, Oman, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Slovakia, Solomon Islands, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Turkey, Tuvalu, Ukraine, UAE, the US, Vanuatu, and Yemen).

[66] These countries have made national statements condemning the use of cluster munitions in Syria: Australia, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Czech Rep., Ecuador, Ghana, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Mauritania, Netherlands, New Zealand, Peru, Portugal, Qatar, Slovenia, Somalia, South Africa, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Turkey, and the US.

[67] US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, “Remarks With Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at a Press Availability,” Moscow, 12 April 2017, bit.ly/Tillersonremarks17.

[68] UN-brokered ceasefires went into effect on 10 April 2016, 19 October 2016, and 19 November 2016.

[69] HRW, “Yemen: Brazil-Made Cluster Munitions Harm Civilians,” 23 December 2016, bit.ly/HRW-BrazilCMinYemen16; Amnesty International, “Yemen: Saudi Arabia-led coalition uses banned Brazilian cluster munitions on residential areas,” 9 March 2017, bit.ly/AI-SaudiCoalitionCM; and HRW, “Yemen: Cluster Munitions Wound Children,” 17 March 2017, bit.ly/HRW-CMandChildren17.

[70] Alex Emmons and Mohammed Ali Kalfood, “Banned by 119 countries, US cluster bombs continue to orphan Yemeni children,” The Intercept, 14 December 2016, bit.ly/USCMandChildren16.

[71] There was an allegation of cluster munition use on Kitaf in Saada on 2 January 2017. See, ابورشاد (@9291lY42qRjwiIO), “(2-Jan-2017) cluster munitions by US-Saudi coalition on Kitaf #Saada residential areas,” 16 January 2017, twitter.com/9291lY42qRjwiIO/status/821069526800433158. Remnants of an ASTROS cluster munition rocket were photographed after an attack on Kitaf in Saada on 21 May 2017. See, Ahmad Algohbary (@AhmadAlgohbary), “Photo of cluster bombs dropped by #Saudi jets today on Ketaf area #Saada #Yemen #UK & #US r involved n this crimes Can anyone identify it?,” 21 May 2017, twitter.com/AhmadAlgohbary/status/866356122487226368.

[72] European Parliament, “Resolution on the humanitarian situation in Yemen,” 15 June 2017, bit.ly/EUResJune17; EP, “Resolution on the humanitarian situation in Yemen,” 25 February 2016, bit.ly/EUResFeb16; and EP, “Joint Motion for a Resolution on the situation in Yemen,” 8 July 2015, bit.ly/EUResMotionJuly15. The earliest resolution was adopted without a vote.

[73] “اليمن : إسقاط طيران العدوان السعودي الامريكي قنابل مظلية محرمة دوليا,” 17 April 2015, YouTube.com; Fatik Al-Rodaini (@Fatikr), “Types of bombs being parchuted [sic] by Saudi warplanes in Saada N #Yemen,” 27 April 2015, twitter.com/Fatikr/status/592777902736965632; and HRW, “Yemen: Saudi-led Airstrikes Used Cluster Munitions,” 3 May 2015, bit.ly/HRWSaudiStrikesYemen15.

[74] The US states that CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons are the only cluster munitions “that meet that our stringent requirements for unexploded ordnance rates, which may not exceed 1 percent.” Jeff Rathke, Acting Deputy Spokesperson, US Department of State Press Conference, 4 May 2015.

[75] A diplomatic representative of the UAE told the CMC that the UAE is not using CBU-105 Sensor Fuzed Weapons because they are banned by the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions. Interview with UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs Representative, Geneva, 12 April 2016.

[76] Asiri told CNN on 4 May 2015 that Saudi Arabia had used CBU-105 in Yemen against armored vehicles only, describing it as an “anti-vehicle weapon” and stating, “We do not use it against persons. We don’t have any operation in the cities.” Ben Brumfield and Slma Shelbayah, “Report: Saudi Arabia used U.S.-supplied cluster bombs in Yemen,” CNN, 4 May 2015, bit.ly/CNNonUSCM. See also: “Saudi Arabia accused of using cluster bombs in Yemen airstrikes,” The Financial Times, 3 May 2015, bit.ly/FinancialTimes15. Asiri told Bloomberg News that the categorization of the cluster munitions as banned “isn’t correct.” Alaa Shahine, “Saudis deny sending troops to Yemen, reject cluster-bomb report,” Bloomberg News, 3 May 2015, bit.ly/CMuseOnCiv; and “Rights group: Saudi Arabia used US cluster bombs on civilians,” CNN, 29 February 2016, bit.ly/USCMinYemen.

[77] According to Foreign Policy, a senior US official said the administration acknowledges reports that the weapons had been used “in areas in which civilians are alleged to have been present or in the vicinity” and added, “We take such concerns seriously and are seeking additional information.” John Hudson, “White House blocks transfer of cluster bombs to Saudi Arabia,” Foreign Policy, 27 May 2016, bit.ly/UStransferblock27May2016; and HRW, “US: Stop Providing Cluster Munitions,” 2 June 2016, bit.ly/USStopGivingCM. HRW collected evidence showing CBU-105s were used in or near civilian areas in apparent violation of US export law. A woman and two children were injured in their homes by CBU-105 attack on 12 December 2015 on the port town of Hodaida, while at least two civilians were wounded in an attack near al-Amar village in Saada governorate on 27 April 2015. HRW also found at least three instances where CBU-105s malfunctioned as their “skeet” or submunitions did not separate from the BLU-108 canister and did not explode. HRW, “Yemen: Cluster Munitions Harm Civilians,” 31 May 2015,bit.ly/CMHarmtoCivilians; and HRW, “Yemen: Saudis Using US Cluster Munitions,” 6 May 2016, bit.ly/HRW-SaudisUseUSCM.

[78] “Last US cluster-bomb maker to cease production,” AFP, 1 September 2016, bit.ly/AFP-LastCMProduction.

[79] HRW could not determine who used ground-launched cluster munitions containing “ZP-39” submunitions in Saada in April 2015, but Saudi Arabia and Houthi forces both possess rocket launchers and tube artillery capable of delivering them.

[80] Amnesty International, “Children among civilians killed and maimed in cluster bomb minefields in Yemen,” 22 May 2016, bit.ly/AmnestyYemen22May2016; and Amnesty International, “Yemen: Evidence counters UK claims about the use of British-made cluster munitions in Yemen,” 6 June 2016, bit.ly/AmnestyYemen06June2016.

[81] “Saudi Arabia admits it used UK-made cluster bombs in Yemen,” The Guardian, 19 December 2016, bit.ly/YemenAdmitsUKCluster.

[82] Kenya has denied an allegation that it used BL755 cluster munitions in Somalia in January 2016 in an attack against al-Shabaab. The Monitor could not confirm this use of cluster munitions or identify the responsible party.

[83] “Yemen: Arab coalition to stop using UK cluster bombs,” Reuters, 19 December 2016, bit.ly/AgreeToStopInYemen. In May 2016, the UK’s then-Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond told parliament that “there is no evidence yet that Saudi Arabia has used cluster munitions” in Yemen. Jeremy Binney, “UK rejects claim BL 755 cluster munition used in Yemen,” IHS Jane’s Defence Weekly, 26 May 2016.

[84] “MoD to investigate claims Saudis used UK cluster bombs in Yemen,” The Guardian, 24 May 2016, bit.ly/MoDInvestigateSaudi.

[85] Photographs reportedly taken late on the evening of 28 March 2016 show RBK-250 cluster bombs being mounted on Mi-8T and Mi-35 helicopters at Labraq airbase in the eastern city of Beida. Arnaud Delalande, “‘Libyan airstrikes’ situation update 26–28 March 2016,” AeroHistory blog, 29 March 2016, bit.ly/LibyaStrikes26Mar2016. A photograph reportedly taken late in the evening of 8 March 2016 at Benina airbase in Benghazi shows an RBK-250-275 AO-1SCh cluster bomb mounted on a Mi-8T helicopter. Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan National Army used night vision systems and RBK-250 cluster bombs on its helicopters for night combat missions,” AeroHistory blog, 10 March 2016, bit.ly/LibyaRBK250Mar2016.

[86] “The Libyan National Army’s Planes and Helicopters Are Scattering Cluster Munitions Across Libya,” War is Boring, 27 August 2016, bit.ly/WarBoringLibyaEscalates.

[87] Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan National Army still loads its Mi-8s with cluster bombs,” AeroHistory blog, 12 September 2016, bit.ly/LibyaLoad12Sept2016; and Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan MiG-23ML has dropped two RBK-250s cluster bombs in Oil Crescend area today,” AeroHistory blog, 14 September 2016, bit.ly/LibyaRBK14Sep2016; and Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan CBU monitoring,” AeroHistory blog, 15 September 2016, https://aerohisto.blogspot.ca/p/libyan-cbu.html.

[88] Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan CBU monitoring,” AeroHistory blog, 4 February 2017, http://aerohisto.blogspot.fr/p/libyan-cbu.html.

[89] Arnaud Delalande, “Libyan CBU monitoring” AeroHistory blog, 3 March 2016, https://aerohisto.blogspot.ca/p/libyan-cbu.html.

[90] Nabih Bulos, “Islamic State fires cluster bombs at Iraqi government forces,” Los Angeles Times, 21 February 2017, bit.ly/IS_Iraq_LATimes.

[91] HRW, “Syria: Evidence of Islamic State Cluster Munition Use,” 1 September 2014, bit.ly/HRW-ISuseCMinSyra; and Brown Moses Blog, “The markings on what’s assumed to be a Sakr submunition suggests the designation is ZP39, made in 1993,” 4 April 2014, twitter.com/Brown_Moses/status/452120358271725568.

[92] In 2006, Hezbollah fired more than 100 cluster munition rockets from southern Lebanon into northern Israel. See, ICBL, Cluster Munition Monitor 2010 (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada: October 2010), p.159.

[93] The loading, assembling, and packaging of submunitions and carrier munitions into a condition suitable for storage or use in combat is considered production of cluster munitions. Modifying the original manufacturers’ delivery configuration for improved combat performance is also considered a form of production.

[94] “Last US cluster-bomb maker to cease production,” AFP, 1 September 2016, bit.ly/AFPLastUSCluster.

[95] Majorie Censer, “Textron to discontinue production of sensor-fuzed weapon,” Inside Defense, 30 August 2016, bit.ly/TextronDiscontinue.

[96] Orbital ATK (formerly Alliant Techsystems) of Hopkins, Minnesota manufactured a solid rocket motor for the BLU-108 canisters contained in the CBU-105, but produced it only for use in that weapon.

[97] Statement of the Republic of Korea, CCW Meeting of High Contracting Parties, Geneva, 13 November 2008.

[98] Secretary of Defense William Cohen, “Memorandum for the Secretaries of the Military Departments, Subject: DoD Policy on Submunition Reliability (U),” 10 January 2001.

[99] Belgium, Croatia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the UK did not report on the conversion or decommissioning of production facilities, most likely because production of cluster munitions ceased before they became States Parties to the convention. BiH, which inherited the production capacity of former Yugoslavia, has declared, “There are no production facilities for [cluster munitions] in Bosnia and Herzegovina.” BiH, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form E, 20 August 2011, bit.ly/BihCCMArt7-20Aug2011.

[100] There is no comprehensive accounting available of global transfers of cluster munitions, but at least seven States Parties exported them in the past (Chile, France, Germany, Moldova, Slovakia, Spain, and the UK), in addition to exports by non-signatories Brazil, Egypt, Israel, Russia, South Korea, Turkey, the US, and Yugoslavia.

[101] At least 11 States Parties have transferred cluster munition stocks to other countries for the purposes of destruction, including Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Japan, Netherlands, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.

[102] US recipients include Argentina, Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Canada, Colombia, Egypt, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Morocco, the Netherlands, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Spain, Thailand, Turkey, UAE, and the UK, as well as Taiwan.

[103] Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, Georgia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, India, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, North Korea, Kuwait, Libya, Macedonia FYR, Moldova, Mongolia, Mozambique, Peru, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Syria, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. In addition, Soviet cluster munition remnants have been identified in South Sudan and Sudan.

[104] John Hudson, “White House blocks transfer of cluster bombs to Saudi Arabia,” Foreign Policy, 27 May 2016, bit.ly/UStransferblock27May2016.

[105] This information is drawn from Cluster Munition Monitor Ban policy country profiles, which in turn use information provided by states in the transparency reports, statements, and other outlets. This year Cluster Munition Monitor has added Cameroon and Cyprus to the list of countries that stockpile cluster munitions while Slovenia’s status has been changed back to current possession, as detailed in the Stockpile destruction section of this overview.

[106] There are some changes to the total numbers of cluster munitions and/or submunitions previously reported due to revisions based on adjusted information provided in transparency reports. See the country profiles for full information.

[107] The number of countries that have stockpiled cluster munitions has increased significantly since 2002, when HRW listed 56 states that stockpiled. This is largely due to new information disclosed by States Parties under the Convention on Cluster Munitions. HRW, “Memorandum to CCW Delegates: A Global Overview of Explosive Submunitions,” 20 May 2002, www.hrw.org/node/66890.

[108] Cuba, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 30 March 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database. From the information provided by Cuba, it is not possible at this point to determine the quantity of explosive submunitions contained in the types stockpiled.

[109] Cameroon, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, August 2014, bit.ly/CCMArt7database. Cameroon’s 2014 and 2015 transparency reports containing this information do not appear to have been uploaded to the UN website until 2016. An internet archiving service shows that the UN database of Convention on Cluster Munitions transparency reports did not have any reports for Cameroon until August 2016. See, bit.ly/WayBackCCMArt7.

[110] According to officials, the stockpile of air-dropped Rockeye cluster bombs and an unidentified type of artillery-delivered cluster munitions were destroyed before 2007. HRW meetings with Honduran officials, in San José, 5 September 2007; and in Vienna, 3–5 December 2007.

[111] Albania, Andorra, Australia, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Colombia, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Ireland, Holy See, Honduras, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malawi, Malta, Mauritius, Mexico, Monaco, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, San Marino, Swaziland, Trinidad and Tobago, Uruguay, and Zambia have made definitive statements, either in transparency reports or in interventions at official meetings. However, other States Parties did not indicate if they possess stockpiles, but simply indicated “not applicable” or “none” in the form or left the form blank. The CMC has urged all states to clearly indicate in their next reports that there are no cluster munitions stockpiled under their jurisdiction and control, including by stating a more unequivocal response such as “zero.”

[112] CMC meetings with Maria Madalena Neto, Victim Assistance Coordinator, Intersectoral Commission on Demining and Humanitarian Assistance (Comissão Nacional Intersectorial de Desminagem e Assistência Humanitária, CNIDAH), International Conference on the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Santiago, 7–9 June 2010. Notes by the CMC/HRW. Neto later confirmed this statement, noting that the air force led a task force responsible for the program. Email from Maria Madalena Neto, CNIDAH, 13 August 2010.

[113] Statement of the Central African Republic, Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Meeting of States Parties, Beirut, 14 September 2011, bit.ly/CCMCAR14Sep2011.

[114] Bulgaria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 29 June 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[115] Statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Intersessional Meetings, Geneva, 18 April 2012, bit.ly/CCMNigeria18April2012. Jane’s Information Group has reported that the Nigeria Air Force possesses British-made BL755 cluster bombs. Robert Hewson, ed., Jane’s Air-Launched Weapons, Issue 44 (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2004), p. 843.

[116] “Boko Haram has cluster bombs: Nigeria’s DHQ,” The News Nigeria, 8 October 2015, bit.ly/BokoHarmClusters2015.

[117] Statement of the US, CCW Fourth Review Conference, Geneva, 14 November 2011, bit.ly/CCWUS14Nov2011. The types of cluster munitions included in this figure were listed on a slide projected during an informal briefing to CCW delegates by a member of the US delegation. Several of the types (such as CBU-58, CBU-55B, and M509A1) were not listed in the “active” or “total” inventory by the Department of Defense in a report to Congress in late 2004.

[118] A June 2008 US Department of Defense directive guides US policy on cluster munitions. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, “Memorandum for the Secretaries of the Military Departments, Subject: DOD Policy on Cluster Munitions and Unintended Harm to Civilians,” 19 June 2008, bit.ly/USMemo19Jun2008. There is a lack of detailed information on the demilitarization process, including the number and types destroyed, but according to a December 2015 US Army presentation there are currently 136,000 tons of cluster munitions in the demilitarization account. It did not indicate the type, but described the munitions as “rounds” which indicates artillery-delivered DPICM. According to the presentation, an additional 272,000 tons “remain in service accounts which would require disposal.” Rickey Peer, US Army, “Joint Munitions Command (JMC) Overview, Conventional Ammunition Demil Program,” Global Demil Symposium, 8 December 2015, slide 5, www.dtic.mil/ndia/2015demil/Peer.pdf.

[119] “Time schedule for cluster bomb disposal: Attachment 1.4,” undated but provided by the Press Office of the OSCE Secretariat, 7 May 2014.

[120] Email from Yannis Mallikourtis, Permanent Mission of Greece in Geneva, 14 June 2011; and presentation of the Ukraine, “Impact of the CCW Draft Protocol VI (current version) on Ukraine’s Defense Capability,” Geneva, 1 April 2011, slide 2.

[121] Before the convention took effect, Belgium, Colombia, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, and the UK destroyed a total of 713,049 cluster munitions containing more than 78 million submunitions. The numbers of munitions reported destroyed by these countries prior to entry into force are included in this table. See the relevant Monitor country profiles for more information.

[122] This includes the information submitted by States Parties on a voluntary basis for cluster munitions and submunitions destroyed before entry into force.

[123] Federal Foreign Office and Federal Ministry of Defence press release, “Germany fulfils Oslo Convention obligations ahead of time – 50,000 tonnes of cluster munitions destroyed,” 25 November 2015, bit.ly/GermanyCompletes25Nov2015.

[124] The Republic of the Congo informed States Parties in 2011 that it had no stocks of cluster munitions, but has not provided its transparency report, originally due in August 2015. Statement of Republic of the Congo, Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Meeting of States Parties, Beirut, 15 September 2011, www.clusterconvention.org/files/2011/09/cl_congo.pdf. In 2011, clearance personnel destroyed cluster munitions remnants and PTAB-2.5M and AO-1SCh submunitions from an arms depot that was bombed during the 1997–1998 conflict. Cluster munitions were also apparently part of weapons stockpiles destroyed in 2008–2010 with the assistance of UK-based humanitarian demining organization Mines Advisory Group (MAG).

[125] Slovakia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 28 April 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[126] It explained that a review of the stocks found that only 21 projectiles were “functional” and that the rest were comprised of components that, if assembled, would total 2,095 cluster munitions. Spain, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 30 April 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[127] Bulgaria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 29 June 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[128] Cameroon, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, August 2014, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[129] Croatia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Reports, Form B, 9 May 2016, and 19 May 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[130] Cuba, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 30 March 2014, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[131] In 2013 and 2011, Guinea-Bissau blamed the delay on a lack of information on its stockpile of cluster munitions. Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fourth Meeting of States Parties, Lusaka, 11 September 2013, www.clusterconvention.org/files/2013/09/Guinea-Bissau-SP.pdf. In June 2011, Guinea-Bissau warned the Article 7 report could be delayed due to its review of the status of stockpiled cluster munitions. Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Convention on Cluster Munitions Intersessional Meetings, Session on Clearance and Risk Reduction, Geneva, 29 June 2011.

[132] Statement of Peru, Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 6 September 2016, http://www.clusterconvention.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Peru-1.pdfwww.clusterconvention.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Peru-1.pdf; and Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[133] Presentation of Peru, South East Europe regional seminar on the Country Coalition Concept, Rakitje, Croatia, 12–13 June 2017, www.clusterconvention.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/08.-Peru.pdf.

[134] Bulgaria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 18 May 2016. In the 2017 report, Bulgaria stated that: “As it was previously declared, due to wrong interpretation of the CCM provisions by the private company ‘EXPAL BULGARIA’ JSC some 41825 submunitions, owned by the Armed Forces of the Republic of Slovenia, are stockpiled in the company’s warehouses. In January 2017, a Slovenian delegation inspected the warehouses of ‘EXPAL BULGARIA’ JSC and the remaining submunitions. ‘EXPAL BULGARIA’ JSC has undertaken the necessary procedure to obtain a permission to destroy these cluster submunitions.” Bulgaria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form B, 29 June 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[135] Statement of South Africa, Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, September 2016, www.clusterconvention.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/South-Africa.pdf.

[136] Afghanistan, Austria, BiH, Botswana, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Ecuador, Hungary, Iraq, Japan, Macedonia FYR, Montenegro, Mozambique, Norway, Peru, Portugal, and Slovenia.

[137] Please see the Ban policy country profiles and/or relevant Article 7 transparency reports for more information on retention, including the specific types of cluster munitions retained. The quantity totals may include individual submunitions retained, which are not contained in a delivery container.

[138] Switzerland, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form C, 30 April 2017, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[139] The Netherlands declared an additional four cluster munitions and about 800 submunitions retained for training when they were discovered after the completion of stockpile destruction in 2012.

[140] A small number of states are not providing definitive statements throughout their reports. Notably, some simply submit “not applicable” in response to particular information requests. States should, for example, include a short narrative statement on Form E on conversion of production facilities, i.e., “Country X never produced cluster munitions,” instead of simply putting “N/A” on the form. In addition, only a small number of states used voluntary Form J.

[141] These States Parties have submitted initial Article 7 transparency reports for the Convention on Cluster Munitions: Afghanistan, Albania, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Austria, Belgium, BiH, Bolivia, Botswana, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Canada, Chad, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Germany, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Holy See, Honduras, Hungary, Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia FYR, Malawi, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Mozambique, Netherlands, New Zealand, Niger, Nicaragua, Niger, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, San Marino, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, the UK, Uruguay, and Zambia. The UN has listed the Moldova twice on its Article 7 website, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[142]Cluster Munition Monitor 2016 reported an 82% compliance rate for initial transparency reporting, while Cluster Munition Monitor 2015 reported 80% compliance. The 2015–2017 compliance rate is an improvement on the 77% compliance rate reported by Cluster Munition Monitor 2014, and the “three-quarters” compliance rate recorded by Cluster Munition Monitor 2012 and Cluster Munition Monitor 2013.

[143] Afghanistan, Albania, Australia, Austria, Belgium, BiH, Botswana, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, El Salvador, France, Germany, Guatemala, Holy See, Hungary, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia FYR, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Peru, Portugal, San Marino, Senegal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Swaziland, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK, and Zambia.

[144] Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Chile, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Grenada, Ireland, Lesotho, Malawi, Mali, Malta, Monaco, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uruguay.

[145] Austria, Belgium, Colombia, DRC, France, Guatemala, Ireland, Japan, Lao PDR, Lebanon, New Zealand, Norway, Slovakia, Spain, and Zambia have utilized Form J in their initial Article 7 transparency reports.

[146] For recommendations of best practice in this field, see HRW and Harvard Law School’s International Human Rights Clinic, “Staying Strong: Key Components and Positive Precedent for Convention on Cluster Munitions Legislation,” September 2014, bit.ly/StayingStrong2014; ICRC, “Model Law, Convention on Cluster Munitions: Legislation for Common Law States on the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions,” 2013; and “Model Legislation: Cluster Munitions Act 2011,” prepared by New Zealand for small states not possessing cluster munitions and not contaminated by them, 2013. See, bit.ly/CCMModelLeg.

[147] The States Parties that have yet to publicly elaborate a view on any of these interpretive issues include: Afghanistan, Albania, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Bolivia, Botswana, Cape Verde, Cook Islands, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Fiji, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Honduras, Iraq, Lesotho, Lithuania, Mauritania, Moldova, Monaco, Mozambique, Nauru, Palau, Palestine, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, San Marino, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Swaziland, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, and Uruguay.

[148] As of July 2012, Wikileaks had made public a total of 428 cables relating to cluster munitions that originated from 100 locations in the 2003–2010 period.

[149] At least 37 States Parties and signatories have previously stated their agreement with this view: Austria, Belgium, BiH, Bulgaria, Burundi, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, DRC, Ecuador, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Holy See, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Montenegro, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Portugal, Senegal, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, and Togo. See, CMC, Cluster Munition Monitor 2012 (Geneva: ICBL-CMC, August 2012), pp. 34–35; CMC, Cluster Munition Monitor 2011 (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, October 2011), pp. 25–27; ICBL, Cluster Munition Monitor 2010 (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, October 2010), pp. 20–21; and HRW and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 25–26. See also, HRW and Harvard Law School’s International Human Rights Clinic, “Staying Strong,” pp. 19–23, bit.ly/StayingStrong2014.

[150] Bills digest 72 2010–11 on the Criminal Code Amendment (Cluster Munitions Prohibition) Bill 2010, 1 March 2011, bit.ly/Digest72_2010–11.

[151] Criminal Code Amendment (Cluster Munitions Prohibition) Act 2012, No. 114, 2012, www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/C2012A00114/Download.

[152] “Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act (S.C. 2014, c. 27),” sec. 11(1)(a-b).

[153] Canada, Convention on Cluster Munitions voluntary Article 7 Report, Form A, 29 April 2015, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[154] At the convention’s 2011 intersessional meetings, Japan stated that the use of cluster munitions in joint military operations is “totally under control” and warned the meeting that “we should not discuss Article 21 here while the appropriate military officials are absent.” Statement of Japan, Convention on Cluster Munitions Intersessional Meetings, Geneva, 30 June 2011. Notes by the CMC/HRW.

[155] “Oslo convention on cluster munitions will not prevent U.S.-Japan military operations,” US Department of State cable 08TOKYO1748 dated 25 June 2008, released by Wikileaks on 16 June 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08TOKYO1748_a.html.

[156] Cluster Munitions (Prohibitions) Act, ch. 11, 2010, sec. 9 and schedule 2, www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/11/pdfs/ukpga_20100011_en.pdf.

[157] Statement of the UK, Convention on Cluster Munitions Intersessional Meetings, Geneva, 30 June 2011, bit.ly/UK2011OtherIssues.

[158] Article 2, Section 3 of the Amendment to Spain’s Law 33/1998.

[159] Austria, Belgium, BiH, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Colombia, Comoros, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, DRC, Ecuador, France, Germany, Ghana, Guatemala, Holy See, Ireland, Lao PDR, Luxembourg, Macedonia FYR, Madagascar, Malawi, Malta, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Senegal, Slovenia, Spain, and Zambia. See CMC, Cluster Munition Monitor 2011 (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, October 2011), pp. 27–29; ICBL, Cluster Munition Monitor 2010 (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, October 2010), pp. 20–21; and HRW and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 25–26.

[160] Section 8 of the UK’s legislation states that its foreign secretary may grant authorization for visiting forces of states not party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions to “possess cluster munitions on, or transfer them through, UK territory.” In 2011, UK officials stated that the only such authorization given to date was provided by former Foreign Secretary David Miliband to the US Department of State to permit the US to transfer its cluster munitions out of UK territory. Statement by Jeremy Browne, Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, House of Commons Debate, Hansard (London: HMSO, 1 November 2011), Column 589W, bit.ly/Browne1Nov2011.

[161] According to a Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs official, “After the adoption of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Norway discussed with the USA the issue of their stockpile of cluster munitions on Norwegian territory. Norway offered to destroy these cluster munitions together with our own stockpiles. However, the USA decided to remove their stocks, something which happened during the spring of 2010.” Email from Ingunn Vatne, Senior Advisor, Department for Human Rights, Democracy and Humanitarian Assistance, Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1 August 2012. According to a 2008 US cable, the US stockpile in Norway apparently consisted of “2,544 rounds” of “D563 Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions (DPICM)” and “2,528 rounds” of “D864 Extended Range Dual Purpose ICM.” See, “Norway raises question concerning U.S. cluster munitions,” US Department of State cable 08OSLO676 dated 17 December 2008, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08OSLO676_a.html.

[162] “Demarche to Afghanistan on cluster munitions,” US Department of State cable 08STATE134777 dated 29 December 2008, released by Wikileaks on 2 December 2010, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08STATE134777_a.html.

[163] A US cable dated 2 December 2008 citing a discussion between US officials and Gregor Köbel, then-Director of the Conventional Arms Control Division of the German Federal Foreign Office, states “Koebel stressed that the US will continue to be able to store and transport CM in Germany, noting that this should be of ‘no concern whatsoever to our American colleagues.’” “MFA gives reassurances on stockpiling of US cluster munitions in Germany,” US Department of State cable 08BERLIN1609 dated 2 December 2008, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08BERLIN1609_a.html. See also, “Demarche to Germany Regarding Convention on Cluster Munitions,” US Department of State cable 08STATE125631 dated 26 November 2008, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08STATE125631_a.html.

[164] The cable states, “Rome should note that cluster munitions are stored at Aviano and Camp Darby.” “Demarche to Italy, Spain and Qatar Regarding Convention on Cluster Munitions,” US Department of State cable 08STATE125632 dated 26 November 2008, released by Wikileaks on 30 August 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08STATE125632_a.html.

[165] Spain, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Forms A and J, 27 January 2011, bit.ly/CCMArt7database.

[166] “Consultations with Japan on implementing the Oslo convention on cluster munitions,” US Department of State cable 08TOKYO3532 dated 30 December 2008, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08TOKYO3532_a.html.

[167] “Cluster munitions: Israeli’s operational defensive capabilities crisis,” US Department of State cable dated 18 April 2008, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08TELAVIV1012_a.html.

[168] The cable contains the text of a message sent from a US military advisor to UAE authorities concerning a transfer of “ammunition immediately via US Air Force aircraft from Kuwait stockpile to Lebanon.” With respect to the items to be transferred, the cable states: “The United States will not approve any cluster munitions or white phosphorus.” See, “Follow-up on UAE response to Lebanese request for emergency aid,” US Department of State cable 07ABUDHABI876 dated 24 May 2007, released by Wikileaks on 1 September 2011, https://search.wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/07ABUDHABI876_a.html.

[169] Dubrovnik Action Plan, First Review Conference of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 10 September 2015, bit.ly/DubrovnikActionPlan.

[170] Italy’s Law No. 95 bans financial assistance to anyone for any act prohibited by the convention, a provision that supports a ban on investment in the production of cluster munitions. However, the Italian Campaign to Ban Landmines has advocated for a separate, more detailed law.

[171] Parliament of Canada, “Bill S-235 An Act to amend the Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act (investments),” 15 December 2016, bit.ly/BillS235.

[172] PAX, Worldwide investments in Cluster Munitions: a shared responsibility (Utrecht, May 2017), www.stopexplosiveinvestments.org/report.

[173] For more detailed information, please see the relevant Cluster Munition Monitor country profile online at: www.the-monitor.org. This accounting does not capture every location of cluster munitions use. Cluster munitions have been used in some countries, but the party responsible for the use is not clear.