Steps to Get the Treaty
in Force
UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
Step One: (Individual Signature Track) - U.N.
Member State leaders can individually sign the Space Preservation
Treaty and immediately deposit it with the U.N. Secretary
General as Treaty Depositary, at any time. Concurrently, the
Space Preservation Treaty can also be signed by Member States
coming together simultaneously in an International Treaty
conference. Each signing Member State whether individually
or at the Treaty conference - must then ratify the Treaty
and deposit instruments of ratification with the U.N. Secretary
General. The Space Preservation Treaty will go into force
as soon as the first twenty instruments of ratification are
received from Member States who have signed the Treaty.
Step Two: An international Treaty Conference for the
Space Preservation Treaty shall be convened as soon
as possible in a designated location and under sponsorship
of an appropriate and willing Member State(s) and of international
NGO sponsors to facilitate the process.
Once the Treaty Conference has been called, the Space Preservation
Treaty approval process has two stages: Treaty-signing and
Treaty ratification (a vote of approval by a Member State's
Parliament or Congress). As the 1997 Land Mines Treaty Conference
demonstrates, all of these procedures can be accomplished
on an expedited basis, once participating Member States have
decided to synchronize and commit their policies on banning
space-based weapons.
TREATY
SIGNING - An authorized representative of a Member State
signs the Space Preservation Treaty (e.g. President, Prime
Minister, Foreign Minister, Secretary of State). This signed
copy is then deposited with the U.N. Secretary General's
office as Treaty Depositary.
TREATY RATIFICATION - The Member State also sends a copy
of the signed Space Preservation Treaty to its Parliament
or Congress for an emergency vote of ratification.
Once the Treaty is ratified by the Member State's Congress
or Parliament, a certificate of ratification is also deposited
with the U.N. Secretary General's office, as evidence that
the Treaty has been signed and ratified.
Step Three: Treaty Enter Into Force - As
soon as the first 20 countries have signed and ratified the
Space Preservation Treaty, and deposited certificates of ratification
with the U.N. Secretary General's office, the Treaty goes
into force. This means that all of its provisions become operative
under international law, including an outer space peacekeeping
agency, which can now be established (Article IV) to monitor
and enforce the ban on space-based weapons.
As a practical matter, a Treaty Conference will provide those
Member States leaders who have voted for a multi-lateral agreement
banning space-based weapons in recent General Assembly resolutions
with the time, place and opportunity to sign and ratify the
Space Preservation Treaty.
On the public record, most Member States have voted in favor
of banning space-based weapons.
Given the margin of approval on actual votes in the U.N. General
Assembly, it is possible and feasible to get a worldwide ban
on space-based weapons because there exists the political
will and consciousness among most world leaders to ban space-based
weapons. In addition, this is a win-win situation for all
life on earth and in the universe.
The Space Preservation Treaty, in an analogous manner to the
1945 United Nations Charter, creates a new international space
Treaty entity an outer space peacekeeping agency comparable
to the original United Nations organization. This new Treaty
entity - the Outer Space Peacekeeping Agency - has exclusive
monitoring and enforcement jurisdiction in outer space to
make it possible to achieve a ban on all space-based weapons.
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