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  • Shift in US arms-sales policy deplored

    Al-Jazeera, Qatar
    July 28 2004

    Shift in US arms-sales policy deplored
    By Ben Duncan in Washington DC

    US foreign policy is now driven by the need for logistical support


    US arms-control experts are expressing concern that the need for
    allies has made Washington more willing to sell dangerous weapons to
    countries previously shunned owing to poor human-rights records,
    nuclear-proliferation activities and suspected links to terrorism.

    They cite such nations as Pakistan, which provides much of the
    intelligence and manpower needed to go after armed organisations bent
    on attacking US interests.

    Then there are allies in Central Asia that provide basing and
    overflight rights for the US military. In the case of Djibouti,
    cooperation is needed to secure ports of entry used by people
    described by the US as terrorists going to and from the Horn of
    Africa.

    Officials from the Bush administration often cite 11 September 2001
    as the day the world changed. One of the changes included relaxing
    arms-export regulations in an effort to curry favour with countries
    deemed strategically important in the fight against al-Qaida and
    other jihadist groups, some experts said.


    Policy reversal

    "Certainly the day after the 9/11 bombing attacks, we saw the Bush
    administration ask for a blanket lifting of restrictions on
    arms-export controls," said Rachel Stohl, a senior analyst at the
    Center for Defence Information (CDI), a Washington thinktank.


    Once Taliban's sponsor, Pakistan
    today is an indispensable US ally

    This constitutes a reversal of a long-standing US policy, Stohl wrote
    in a recent CDI report.

    "The Bush administration has expressed a willingness to provide
    weapons to countries that in the past have been criticised for
    human-rights violations, lack of democracy, and even support of
    terrorism," she said.

    In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, President George Bush waived
    sanctions established under the Arms Export Control Act against
    India, Pakistan and several other countries.

    Bush said the sanctions were not in the "national security interests
    of the United States", a move some experts said sent a message that
    the US would lift penalties on states that provided assistance in the
    "war on terrorism".

    "We are definitely seeing, since the war on terrorism, this ramping
    up in arms export, especially to new allies in the campaign," said
    Frida Berrigan, deputy director of the Arms Trade Project at the
    World Policy Institute.


    New yardstick

    Congress passed the Arms Export Control Act in 1976 to establish a
    licensing system for the commercial sale of arms to foreign
    governments.

    "We are definitely seeing, since the war on terrorism, this ramping
    up in arms export, especially to new allies in the campaign"

    Frida Berrigan,
    Deputy Director of the Arms Trade Project at the World
    Policy Institute, Washington DC

    "That is the yardstick by which all arms exports are supposed to be
    measured, but that yardstick isn't being used," Berrigan said.

    Prior to September 11, US sanctions greatly diminished weapons sales
    to several countries now receiving such aid, according to a recent
    CDI report.

    Pakistan, India, Armenia, Tajikistan and Yugoslavia have all had
    their sanctions lifted and are all considered allies in the US war on
    terrorism.

    In the case of Pakistan, the need to secure its help in confronting
    Taliban and al-Qaida fighters in neighbouring Afghanistan was of such
    strategic importance, that past transgressions involving nuclear
    proliferation were overlooked, experts say.

    "We needed to woo them, we needed to get them back in the fold," said
    Matt Schroeder, project manager of the Arms Sales Monitoring Project
    at the Federation of American Scientists.


    Blank cheques?

    By most accounts, Pakistan's cooperation in the "war on terror" has
    been significant. Such assistance was rewarded with $75 million in
    2002 for the purchase of US-made weapons and more than $200 million
    in 2003 for such purposes, according to the CDI report.

    Pakistan was recently given "major non-NATO ally status", making it
    eligible to receive increased levels of US military equipment.

    Several countries in Central Asia, including Tajikistan, Uzbekistan,
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, received substantial US funding in the two
    years after 9/11 for weapons or military training. All had been
    denied such assistance before the attacks, yet subsequently all were
    recruited as allies in the "war on terrorism".

    Some, as in the case of Turkmenistan, provided overflight rights,
    while others such as Azerbaijan were given millions of dollars for
    "specialised training and equipment to prevent and respond to
    terrorist incidents".


    Central Asian nations are getting
    rewards for security cooperation

    Many of these countries have troubling political histories involving
    military coups, civil wars and various inter-state conflicts.

    Some arms-control experts worry about the difficulty of ensuring that
    weapons sold to such countries aren't diverted into the hands of
    terrorist groups or other private militias.

    "A lot of the mechanisms that are in place to control and safeguard
    US weapons from being misused aren't enforced," Berrigan says.

    End-user agreements, designed to ensure that weapons shipments reach
    their intended destinations, have been broken in the past, she said,
    and the offending nations often go unpunished.

    "We are sort of looking the other way when they violate end-user
    agreements," she says.


    'Counter-intuitive'

    With the rise of illegal arms trafficking, experts fear the
    possibility that US arms shipments will be bought and rerouted by
    third-party middlemen to free-lance terrorists seeking high-tech
    weaponry.

    "The risk of diversion is significant," Stohl said.


    Experts say the risk of diversion
    of US arms exports is significant


    Stohl said the Bush policy of expanding arms sales to countries with
    unstable political climates is "counter-intuitive" in the post-9/11
    environment.

    Some analysts also question the practice of lifting arms-export
    sanctions against countries often criticised for human-rights
    violations.

    Several countries in Central Asia condemned for human-rights abuses
    by the State Department have benefited from US military assistance in
    exchange for support in the "war on terrorism", experts say.

    The sale of small arms, in particular, has allowed certain countries
    to crack down on political dissent from opposition groups, Berrigan
    said.

    "These are the sort of weapons that are used to perpetrate
    human-rights abuses," she said.
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