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ARMS TRADE RESOURCE
CENTER
US is top purveyor on weapons
sales list; Shipments grow to unstable areas
The Boston Globe
By Bryan Bender, November 13,
2006
The United States last year
provided nearly half of the weapons sold to militaries in the developing
world, as major arms sales to the most unstable regions - many already
engaged in conflict - grew to the highest level in eight years,
new US government figures show.
According to the annual assessment,
the United States supplied $8.1 billion worth of weapons to developing
countries in 2005 - 45.8 percent of the total and far more than
second-ranked Russia with 15 percent and Britain with a little more
than 13 percent.
Arms control specialists said the figures underscore how the largely
unchecked arms trade to the developing world has become a major
staple of the American weapons industry, even though introducing
many of the weapons risks fueling conflicts rather than aiding long-term
US interests.
The report was compiled by the
nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.
"We are at a point in history where many of these sales are
not essential for the self-defense of these countries and the arms
being sold continue to fuel conflicts and tensions in unstable areas,"
said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the nonpartisan Arms
Control Association in Washington. "It doesn't make much sense
over the long term."
The United States, for instance,
also signed an estimated $6.2 billion worth of new deals last year
to sell attack helicopters, missiles, and other armaments to developing
nations such as the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, India, Israel,
Egypt, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. Developing nations are designated
as all those except in North America, Western Europe, Russia, Australia,
and New Zealand.
In addition to weapons already
delivered, new contracts for future weapons deliveries topped $44
billion last year - the highest overall since 1998, according to
the report. Nearly 70 percent of them were designated for developing
nations.
Many of the US sales are justified
by American officials as critical to the war on terrorism or other
foreign policy goals such as checking an emerging China. One such
example is the recent decision to sell F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan.
The United States has long relied
on arms sales to prop up allies or enhance collective defense arrangements.
"For decades, during the
height of the Cold War, providing conventional weapons to friendly
states was an instrument of foreign policy utilized by the United
States and its allies," according to the report, titled "Conventional
Arms Transfers to Developing Nations."
"This was equally true
for the Soviet Union and its allies," the report said.
Yet there is growing evidence
that the sales are increasingly more about dollars and cents for
the US military-industrial complex and other major military economies.
The trend began after the end of the Cold War, when American, European,
Russian, and other defense industries were forced to consolidate
and competition for foreign sales heated up.
"Where before the principal
motivation for arms sales by foreign suppliers might have been to
support a foreign policy objective, today that motivation may be
based as much on economic considerations as those of foreign policy
or national security policy," said the congressional report,
which detailed both arms deliveries, or weapons actually delivered
to customers, and arms agreements, or contracts signed for future
deliveries.
Washington's desire to maintain
the status quo was on display at a meeting at the United Nations
on Oct. 26, when a UN panel voted to study whether a new treaty
might be possible to regulate the sale of conventional arms. The
United States was the only country out of 166 to vote no, though
China and Russia were among a handful of countries to abstain.
With that lone dissent, the
UN's Disarmament and International Security Committee approved a
British proposal to draw up uniform standards that might block arms
sales considered destabilizing, including those that might fuel
ongoing conflicts, violate embargoes, undermine democratic institutions,
or contribute to human rights abuses. A UN task force is set to
make its recommendations to the General Assembly next year.
But powerful interests in the
global arms industry have long stood in the way of controlling the
arms flow to the developing world.
After the 1991 Persian Gulf
War, for example, the five permanent members of the UN Security
Council - the United States, Russia, France, Britain, and China
- pledged to limit the sale of arms to the volatile Middle East,
attributing the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait to the region having been
awash in high-tech arsenals.
More than a decade later, those
pledges have gone unfulfilled. The United States is not the only
culprit.
For the first time in eight
years, Russia outpaced the United States last year in the value
of new arms transfer agreements reached with developing nations,
according to the Congressional Research Service report, authored
by Richard F. Grimmett.
Moscow inked major deals to sell missiles, warships, and other hardware
to such potential trouble spots as Iran and China, according to
the report, which is considered the most authoritative breakdown
of the global arms trade. China also agreed to provide weapons to
trouble spots such as Iran and North Korea, while major Western
European suppliers, such as Britain and France, also concluded large
orders with developing countries.
But it is the United States
that by far remains the top purveyor of high-tech arms to areas
where analysts believe the likelihood of armed conflict remains
highest. A study last year by the progressive World Policy Institute
found that the United States transferred weaponry to 18 of the 25
countries involved in an ongoing war.
"From Angola, Chad, and
Ethiopia, to Colombia, Pakistan, and the Philippines, transfers
through the two largest US arms sales programs [Foreign Military
sales and Commercial Sales] to these conflict nations totaled nearly
$1 billion in 2003," the report found.
Meanwhile, more than half of
the countries buying US arms - 13 of the 25 - were defined as undemocratic
by the State Department's annual Human Rights Report, including
top recipients Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates,
and Uzbekistan.
The agreement last year to sell
F-16s to Pakistan underscores the larger trend, according to Wade
Bouse, research director at the Arms Control Association.
"F-16s with advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles are not
for fighting Al Qaeda," Bouse said. "They are for fighting
India."
And India, which has fought
three wars with Pakistan, is considering a US offer to sell the
country F-16s. "We are creating our own market by selling to
both sides of regional conflicts," Bouse said.
With more such lucrative deals
in the offing, there is little sign that the United States - or
other major suppliers - wants a treaty to control the sales.
"The US would be significantly
affected if there was an arms treaty that took into account human
rights abuses and conflict areas," added William Hartung, director
of the Arms Trade Resource Center at the World Policy Institute
in New York. "The US government still wants to be able to do
covert and semi-covert arms transfers. And a certain amount of it
is simply keeping factories running in certain congressional districts."
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