Hillary Clinton today voted against a bill sponsored by Senators Pat Leahy and Diane Feinstein that would have limited the use of cluster bombs, the barbaric weapons that litter the landscape of Iraq and Lebanon, threatening civilians. Before the vote, Feinstein displayed photographs of Iraqi children who were maimed when they picked up unexploded cluster munitions. Clinton was apparently unmoved. The roll call vote is HERE
Senate rejects limits on cluster bombs
WASHINGTON - The Senate on Wednesday rejected a move by Democrats to stop the Pentagon from using cluster bombs near civilian targets and to cut off sales unless purchasers abide by the same rules.
On a 70-30 vote, the Senate defeated an amendment to a Pentagon budget bill to block use of the deadly munitions near populated areas. The vote came after the State Department announced last month that it is investigating whether
Israel misused American-made cluster bombs in civilian areas of Lebanon.
Unexploded cluster bombs — anti-personnel weapons that spray bomblets over a wide area — litter homes, gardens and highways in south Lebanon after Israel's 34-day war with Hezbollah militants.
Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., have long sought to keep cluster bombs from being used near concentrated areas of civilians. They say that as many as 40 percent of the munitions fail to detonate on impact — they can still can explode later — leaving innocent civilians and children vulnerable to injury or death long after hostilities have ceased.
Relief organizations and the United Nations Mine Action Coordination Center reported finding evidence that Israel used three types of U.S.-made cluster bombs during the war with Hezbollah militants. Israel also manufactures its own cluster munitions.
"For too long, innocent civilians, not enemy combatants, have suffered the majority of casualties from cluster munitions," Leahy said. "The recent experience in Lebanon is only the latest example of the appalling human toll of injury and death. Strict rules of engagement are long overdue."
But Sen. Ted Stevens (news, bio, voting record), R-Alaska, said, "The rules of engagement properly belong with the
Department of Defense and the commander in chief."
Stevens argued that the amendment would restrict "the ability of our military to use these munitions to protect our people."
I cannot see how anyone could vote for her, save school board member from Ossinning. The moral low of Senators Schumer and Clinton have reached a new nadir in the rejection of the Feinstein-Leahy Amendment.
I hope that Mrs. Clinton never has grandchildren who find a nice shiny ball to play with on the beach in Beirut...
Were but I still a resident of NYS!