US Votes ‘No’ on Third Committee’s Resolution

The United States of America today voted ‘no’ on the UN Third Committee’s resolution.

Deputy Representative to ECOSOC John F. Sammis today stressed that the United States takes very seriously issues regarding private security companies, military contractors and their accountability.

“The United States continues to believe that the most effective and immediate way of addressing these concerns is through better implementation of existing laws- both national and international,” Mr. Sammis said.

Sammis said this would be done “through robust collaborative efforts that bring together industry, civil society and governments to work directly on raising standards, such as the Montreux Document and the International Code of Conduct for Private Security Service Providers.”

He explained that the resolution before prejudges the ongoing work of the intergovernmental working group, strays from the original mandate to “consider the possibility” of elaborating an international regulatory framework, and rushes to support a poorly considered, legally binding instrument where additional law is not needed at this time.

“Additionally, in attempting to build on the problematic draft convention proposed by the Working Group on Mercenaries, this resolution would create a time-consuming, resource-intensive process that is not likely to produce practical results.” – Mr. Sammis.

He stressed that the Working Group’s draft convention is unworkable and inappropriately broad. He said it would likely prohibit military and police training programs provided by private companies, making it difficult for many countries to obtain necessary training services.

Mr. Sammis said the U.S. was worried about how the draft convention might affect UN humanitarian and peacekeeping efforts. There is also the possibility of unintended consequences.

He said, “It could also impact UN humanitarian and peacekeeping efforts, many of which rely on private contractors for logistics, security, and training. It would even reach broad categories of conduct not appropriately regulated in such a convention, including information security or material support to militaries.”

He noted that devoting resources to drafting a formal convention is premature, in light of still-evolving domestic and international efforts, such as the Montreux Document and the Code of Conduct.

“We believe that we should allow these efforts to mature so as to further distill key insights and best practices before a decision on formal drafting of a convention is warranted. For all of these reasons, the United States regrets that we must call a vote and vote no on this resolution.” – Mr. Sammis.

Mina Fabulous follows the news, especially what is going on in the US State Department. Mina turns State Department waffle into plain English. Mina Fabulous is the pen name of Carmen Avalino, the NewsBlaze production editor. When she isn’t preparing stories for NewsBlaze writers, she writes stories, but to separate her editing and writing identities, she uses the name given by her family and friends.