Military Implications of an SPS

International Liability appear in Appendices A and C, respectively, in: Carl Q. Christol, "Satellite Power Systems (SPS): International Agreements," DOE/ NASA, HCP/R-4024-08, October 1978.) 6. Oppenheim, op. cit., Section 508. 7. However, "a treaty, being a contract, must not be confused with various documents having a relation to treaties but not in themselves treaties— namely a memoire, a proposal, a note verbal, or a proces-verbal." Oppenheim, ibid., Section 491. 8. Oppenheim, ibid., Section 492. 9. Oppenheim, ibid., Section 509a. 10. Richard R. Colino, The INTELSAT Definitive Arrangements: Ushering in a New Era in Satellite Communications, p.l, Monograph No. 9, European Broadcasting Union (1973). 11. Section 301, Communications Satellite Act of 1962, P.L. 624, Eighty-Seventh Congress, Second Session. 12. Article 153, Informal Composite Negotiating Text/Revision 1, United Nations Third Conference on the Law of the Sea, Eighth Session (March 19 — April 27, 1979) . 13. See Section 5.2, in the main text of this report. 14. Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, Including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, entered into force with respect to the United States, October 10, 1967. 15. Stephen Gorove, "Interpreting Article II of the Outer Space Treaty," Fordham Law Review 32r 352 (1969). 16. The text to the proposed Moon Treaty is reprinted as an appendix to: Arthur M. Dula, "Free Enterprise and the Proposed Moon Treaty," Houston Journal of International Law 2(1), 3-33 (1980). 17. "The United Nations Moon Treaty," Draft Position Paper, Los Angeles Section, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, p. 2 (February 14, 1980).

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