Originally posted by Nilsen
Ok... I will give the report the benefit of the doubt and try and find another number.
As a side question, what number would you say would be the point were you would say that cluster munitions civilian vs military casualties is "acceptable".
Are you and any of you other cluster munition supporters arguing that they kill and maim alot of innocent civilians decades after the conflicts are over?
OK, just taking the Vietnam/Cambodia example. In Cambodia they mentioned a 120-140 odd casualties IIRC.
Would you agree that cluster munitions were responsible for 1000's of casualties, if not tens of thousands against the North Vietnamese military (remembering casualties could infer a minor wound, not necessarily a death).
If we said there were tens of thousands NVA wounded or killed by cluster munitions during the bombing of the Ho Chi Minh trail, and then took a figure of say 20,000 casaulties. Then the 140 odd civilians killed becomes a LESS THAN ONE PERCENT casaulty rate. Somewhat at odds with the 98% this organisation claims.
Now, my figures are pure conjecture. But I would doubt the civilian versus military casualty rate would climb above 1 or 2%.
BTW, nilsen, I'm not pro-cluster bomb. I'm not pro-any-munitions really. My wife is cambodian, I got married in cambodia (no I am not cambodian nor asian). When she first came to New Zealand it took a long time for her to accept there were no dangers in going for a simple walk or bike ride. So I am quite aware of the issues.
What annoys me the most is people who lie, and this report uses a lot of lies. There are better, honest, ways to get the message across.
and IMHO cluster munitions and mines are like the pollution problem. Sure you may sign up the US and some other leaders to a no-use policy, but the 3rd world countries are going to keep using them and thats where the real problem lies.