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safety protocols

  • J
    🧨 We Need a Better Way to Talk About Landmines. Finland just pulled out of the global treaty banning landmines — and it’s stirred up a storm. Human rights groups like Amnesty International are calling it a dangerous step backwards. And I get it: landmines are horrifying. They don’t just kill soldiers — they stay buried for decades, injuring kids, farmers, and civilians long after the war is over.

    But here’s the problem: a total ban on landmines, while morally noble, doesn’t hold up in the real world anymore.

    Ukraine has shown us that when you’re facing a massive invasion, landmines can be an effective defensive tool. And not every country can rely on drones and smart weapons — especially when those systems are being jammed, hacked, or destroyed.

    At the same time, Finland’s full withdrawal from the treaty is dangerous too. It weakens a global norm that’s protected civilians for over two decades. Other countries — including bad actors — could now see landmines as “back on the table.”

    So what do we do?

    We need a new treaty — one that balances military reality with humanitarian responsibility.

    Here’s what that could look like:

    ✅ Landmines can only be used to defend internationally recognised borders
    ✅ Only if those borders have been stable for 15–25 years
    ✅ Only with self-deactivating mines, not the old “set and forget” type
    ✅ Mandatory reporting and cleanup, with international oversight

    And most importantly: countries wouldn’t want to mine their own land unless they had to. That’s a built-in restraint we can work with.

    This isn’t about giving up on humanitarian principles. It’s about updating them for a world where war has come back, and survival isn’t guaranteed.

    We can’t afford absolutism. But we can’t afford chaos either. It’s time for a smarter middle ground — one that protects both lives and sovereignty.

    👉 What do you think? Would a new treaty like this work?
    peteSA•...
    I like the guidelines you suggested. I'd probably add a requirement for multiple failsafes, which you alluded to in the "self deactivating" bullet. Like they can receive a shut off signal, but also have a countdown timer that shuts them off after a given time period....
    ethics
    military strategy
    safety protocols
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