In
Middle of NRA Speech, Trump Signs Order to Withdraw From Global Arms Treaty
Donald Trump
announced during a speech to the National Rifle Association Friday that he is
withdrawing the U.S. from a global arms treaty that aims to restrict the flow
of weapons to human rights abusers.
"I hope you're
happy," Trump told the crowd gathered at the NRA's
annual convention in Indianapolis as he signed a letter asking the Senate to stop the treaty
ratification process.
The Arms Trade Treaty
(ATT) was negotiated at the United Nations and signed by former President
Barack Obama in 2013, but Congress never ratified the agreement.
Adotei Akwei, deputy
director for advocacy and government relations for Amnesty International USA,
warned in a statement that the president's move could
open the "floodgates for arms sales with weakened human rights criteria,
which could potentially fuel brutal conflicts and make everyone less
safe."
"This announcement is a misguided blow to efforts to promote international peace and security," said Akwei. "As the biggest arms exporter, the U.S. signature to the ATT was an important step towards ensuring that dangerous weapons stay out of the wrong hands."
Louis Charbonneau,
U.N. director for Human Rights Watch, tweeted that the NRA has been working to
undermine the treaty and mislead people about its aims from the very beginning.
The NRA has characterized the arms treaty as an
attack on the Second Amendment, but Amnesty's Akwei said the ATT "in no
way interferes" with the U.S. Constitution.
According to the Washington Post,
the ATT "seeks to prevent illicit arms transfers that fuel destructive
conflicts, making it harder to conduct weapon sales in violation of arms
embargoes.
About 100 countries, including U.S. allies in Europe, have ratified the treaty while more than 30 others have signed but not ratified.
Countries that have shunned the treaty entirely include Russia, North Korea, and Syria." And now the United States.
About 100 countries, including U.S. allies in Europe, have ratified the treaty while more than 30 others have signed but not ratified.
Countries that have shunned the treaty entirely include Russia, North Korea, and Syria." And now the United States.
Rachel Stohl, managing
director of the nonpartisan Stimson Center and former consultant to the ATT
negotiations, said Trump's decision to withdraw U.S. support for the treaty is
"misguided" and potentially dangerous.
"The ATT was
intended prevent the irresponsible and illegal transfer of conventional arms to
commit violations of human rights and international humanitarian law,"
Stohl said in a statement.
"[T]he United
States is instead choosing to be in the company of governments that routinely
flout responsible transfer controls," Stohl added.