The
US Pentagon will indefinitely delay a ban on the use of older types
of cluster bombs due to take effect on Jan. 1, 2019, officials said,
arguing that safety improvements in munitions technology failed to
advance enough to replace older stockpiles.
It
was unclear at what point in the future the Pentagon might be
required to stop using its existing stockpiles,
Cluster
bombs, dropped by air or fired by artillery, scatter bomblets across
a wide area, but sometimes fail to explode and are difficult to
locate and remove. That can lead to civilian deaths and injuries long
after conflicts end. A memo, which is expected to be signed by Deputy
Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan on Thursday, called cluster
munitions "legitimate weapons with clear military utility."
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