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The new Pentagon policy appears to plan for a possible end to that ban. The memo states that until 2018, the Defense Department would seek to transfer cluster munitions that don't meet the new 1 percent failure rate to other foreign governments. Any transfer would require that the foreign government not use them after 2018, and the sale would have to be "consistent with U.S. law," according to the memo. The policy defends the use of the cluster bombs as effective weapons that "provide distinct advantages against a range of targets and can result in less collateral damage" than other weapons. And the memo concludes by saying that "blanket elimination of cluster munitions is unacceptable" and commanders will use them in accordance with the law and international agreements "in order to minimize their impact on civilian populations." A June report by the Congressional Research Service questioned whether it is feasible to design a bomb that will indeed detonate to the planned level of more than 99 percent. "While such a high level of performance might be achievable under controlled laboratory conditions," the report said, other uncontrollable circumstances, such as landing in soft ground or getting caught in a tree or vegetation, could result in more unexploded duds. According to the congressional report, the U.S. dropped more than 1,200 cluster bombs
-- containing nearly 250,000 submunitions -- in Afghanistan from 2001-2002. And the U.S. and British forces used about 13,000 of the bombs
-- with more than 1.8 million bomblets -- during the first three weeks of combat in the Iraq war. When the international treaty was adopted, backers predicted that the U.S. would never again use the weapons, and it left open the possibility that European allies could order U.S. bases within their borders to remove cluster bombs from their stocks. International leaders expect to sign the treaty in December.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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