A source familiar with the diplomatic manoeuvres confirmed to AFP that Kerry would sign the treaty tomorrow after it was adopted earlier this year by the United Nations to regulate trade in tanks, armoured combat vehicles, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, missiles as well as small arms.
The treaty, which has been years in the making, was only adopted after tough negotiations at the United Nations. The talks had deadlocked last year after the United States asked for more time to pour over the draft text.
The pact "can strengthen global security while protecting the sovereign right of states to conduct legitimate arms trade," he added in his statement in April.
It is the first major arms accord since the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and covers all conventional weapons.
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It has no automatic enforcement. However, it seeks to force the weapons industry within accepted boundaries.
Though the United States -- which is the world's biggest arms producer -- has endorsed the treaty, the US Congress must still ratify it.
But Kerry stressed in April that the pact only referred to "international trade, and reaffirms the sovereign right of any state to regulate arms within its territory."
The pact would create "a common international standard for the national regulation of the international trade in conventional arms and require all states to develop and implement the kind of systems that the United States already has in place," Kerry said.
It would also "help reduce the risk that international transfers of conventional arms will be used to carry out the world's worst crimes, including terrorism, genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes."