Pentagon leaders are maintaining a 2020 policy allowing for the use of anti-personnel landmines beyond the confines of the Korean peninsula, while reviewing why former Defense Secretary Mark Esper made the decisions he did regarding the policy.
The Department of Defenseâs (DoDâs) new policy âanalysisâ comes at a time when the US Army is ploughing ahead with a multipronged approach to acquiring such new weapons, with pressure increasing on the Biden administration to reverse course. As a result, on 6 April the DoD offered up differing takes on its landmine policy. Earlier in the day, department spokesman Mike Howard emailed reporters that the policy âremains unchangedâ since January 2020.
âThe changes implemented, then addressed how we face an era of strategic competition that requires our military to become more lethal, resilient, and ready for future contingencies,â Howard wrote. âLandmines, including anti-personnel landmines, remain a vital tool in conventional warfare that the US military cannot responsibly forgo, particularly when faced with substantial and potentially overwhelming enemy forces in the early stages of combat.â
He added that these weapons enable ground troops to âshape an enemyâs movement to our benefitâ and âwithholdingâ these capabilities âirresponsibly risks American livesâ.
However, later that day, Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby said that although Howardâs response was âaccurate and factualâ, the landmine policy is under review.
âWe are analysing Secretary Esperâs decision [regarding] his policy of January 2020,â Kirby told reporters. âWe are analysing the process by which that decision was made to continue to espouse conventional landmine use.â
Once the initial examination is completed, the DoD will decide whether âfurther reviewâ is warranted, Kirby added.
The DoD did not provide Janes
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