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UN arms talks end without deal
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) July 28, 2012

Qatar mulls purchase of 200 German tanks: report
Berlin (AFP) July 29, 2012 - Qatar is considering buying up to 200 German tanks at a cost of around two billion euros ($2.46 billion), according to a report published on Sunday.

News weekly Spiegel reported that the Qataris were interested in acquiring the Leopard-2 tanks and that a delegation from defence firm Krauss-Maffei Wegmann had already travelled to Qatar to discuss the possible deal.

Last month, Saudi Arabia expressed interest in buying between 600 and 800 Leopard-2 tanks, Germany's main battle tank, for up to 10 billion euros, according to media reports.

The reported sale caused difficulties for Chancellor Angela Merkel, who came under fire from opposition politicians and even members of her own ruling centre-right coalition in light of democratic uprisings in the Middle East.

Spiegel said both Merkel's office and the economy ministry were in favour of the deal with Doha.


UN negotiations to draft the first international treaty on the multi-billion-dollar arms trade have ended without a deal, with some diplomats blaming the United States for the deadlock.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon said Friday he was "disappointed" that member states failed to clinch an agreement after several years of preparatory work and four weeks of negotiations, calling it a "setback."

But he vowed "steadfast" commitment to obtaining a "robust" arms trade treaty, noting that countries had agreed to pursue negotiations.

"There is already considerable common ground and states can build on the hard work that has been done during these negotiations," he added.

Some diplomats said Washington had refused to vote on the proposed text, saying it needed more time before the midnight deadline and was worried about a pushback from the US Congress.

Russia and other countries followed suit.

"It's the fault of the United States that we failed," a Western diplomat said, requesting anonymity to speak freely about the subject.

"They derailed the process and we will have to wait for the US presidential elections" in November to get out of the impasse, the diplomat added.

But State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said, in a written statement issued late Friday, that the United States supported a second round of negotiations, conducted on the basis of consensus, on the treaty next year.

Nuland noted that while the illicit trafficking in conventional arms was an important national security concern for the United States, Washington did not support a vote at the UN General Assembly on the current text.

"While we sought to conclude this month's negotiations with a Treaty, more time is a reasonable request for such a complex and critical issue," the spokeswoman said. "The current text reflects considerable positive progress, but it needs further review and refinement."

She did not offer any specifics, but said that the United States continued to believe that any arms trade treaty "should require states to develop their own national regulations and controls and strengthen the rule of law regarding arms sales."

Conference chairman Ambassador Roberto Garcia Moritan of Argentina acknowledged that some countries had objected to the final treaty draft. The UN General Assembly, which begins its new session in late September, will decide whether and when there will be more negotiations.

In the end, 90 countries -- including all European Union members, and states from Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa -- signed the text, saying they were "disappointed but... not discouraged" and vowing to soon finalize a treaty based on Moritan's draft.

A consensus of all 193 countries involved in the talks had been required to agree on the accord.

"We always thought this was going be difficult and that this outcome was a possible one," said Moritan.

But he predicted that delegates would have a treaty in their hands "soon."

France's main negotiator, Ambassador Jean-Hugues Simon-Michel, said the failure to reach agreement was the "worst possible scenario" and that diplomats may now have to start all over again.

"The result is rather frustrating and the ball is now in the country of the General Assembly," he told AFP.

Rights groups were also quick to blame the stalemate on the United States, where any treaty on conventional arms sales is vehemently opposed by the powerful gun lobby.

"It was a lack of political will on the part of President (Barack) Obama to take this historic opportunity forward to reduce the effect of the illicit arms trade," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association.

He called for "leadership" from Washington, Moscow, London and other major arms exporters and importers, while Oxfam America's senior policy adviser Scott Stedjan blamed the impasse on a lack of "political courage" from Obama.

The White House's failure of courage to press this treaty to conclusion today... is a loss for hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians that die each year from armed violence fueled by the unregulated transfer of arms," said Stedjan.

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Mexico criticizes failure on arms trade treaty
Mexico City (AFP) July 28, 2012 - Mexico criticized Saturday the failure of UN member states to clinch an international treaty regulating the multibillion-dollar arms trade, saying a minority of countries blocked it.

In a statement, the Mexican foreign ministry highlighted a requirement that a consensus of the 193 members of the United Nations agree to the text.

The rule "makes it impossible to reach agreements when there is broad and clear support, which is nullified by the opposition of a minority of states," it said in the statement.

The negotiations at the United Nations ended Friday without agreement on the proposed treaty to regulate the estimated $70 billion of international trade in conventional weapons each year.

Some diplomats said Washington had refused to vote on the proposed treaty, demanding more time before the midnight deadline amid worries about a pushback from the US Congress.

Mexico has long insisted that weapons sold in the United States are fueling a drug war within its borders that has left more than 50,000 dead over the past five and a half years.

"The Mexican government regrets that this international conference -- which had generated great expectations in many countries and civil society -- has not been able to end with the adoption of the agreement, despite the efforts made," the foreign ministry said.

Nevertheless, it said "the conference was able to advance considerably on a draft text that should be improved."

Mexico has argued for "an effective and robust treaty that prohibits the transfer of conventional arms when they risk being used to commit serious violations of international law and that establishes mechanisms to prevent their being diverted to the illicit market."



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MILPLEX
UN arms treaty talks go down to the wire
United Nations (AFP) July 27, 2012
Negotiations were coming down to the wire at the United Nations Friday to craft a landmark treaty to regulate the $70 billion global arms trade. The talks in New York are due to end at midnight (0400 GMT Saturday) but the world's biggest arms producers have been haggling over the scope of the conventional weapons treaty. The accord must be agreed on by a consensus of all 193 countries involv ... read more


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