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  • We Arm the World

    We Arm the World
    The United States once again leads the world in exporting weapons

    by Frida Berrigan
    Published on Saturday, January 3, 2009 by In These Times

    A $7 billion missile-defense system for the United Arab Emirates. An
    estimated $15 billion potential sale of Lockheed Martin's brand-new
    fighter plane to Israel. Billions of dollars in weaponry for Taiwan and
    Turkey. These and other recent deals helped make the United States the
    world's leading arms-exporting nation.

    In 2007, U.S. foreign military sales agreements totaled more than $32
    billion ' nearly triple the amount during President Bush's first full
    year in office.

    The Pentagon routinely justifies weapons sales as `promoting regional
    stability,' but many of these arms end up in the world's war zones. In
    2006 and 2007, the five biggest recipients of U.S. weapons were
    Pakistan ($3.5 billion), Iraq ($2.2 billion), Israel ($2.2 billion),
    Afghanistan ($1.9 billion) and Colombia ($580 million) - all countries
    where conflict rages.

    In Pakistan, the fighting ranges from communal violence and state
    repression, to attacks against India, to deadly battles between
    Pakistani military and al Qaeda forces in the northwest provinces.
    Israel has used U.S.-supplied weapons in the West Bank and Gaza, as
    well as in the 2006 invasion of Lebanon. Colombia uses U.S. weaponry to
    fight the drug war. Of the 27 major conflicts during 2006 and 2007, 19
    of them involved U.S-supplied weapons.

    While full data is not yet available for 2008, the United States
    continues to flood warzones with more destabilizing weapons. In 2008,
    the Pentagon brokered more than $12.5 billion in possible foreign
    military sales to Iraq, including guns, ammunition, tanks and attack
    helicopters.

    Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi analyst with American Friends Service Committee,
    notes the chance that this weaponry will promote peace and democracy in
    Iraq is slim.

    `The current Iraqi armed forces are the same forces and militias that
    have been committing ethnic and sectarian cleansing during the last
    years and they have a violent record full of human rights violations,
    torture and assassinations,' says Jarrar.

    What's more, the United States cannot successfully track its weapons.
    Hundreds of thousands of U.S.-supplied pistols and automatic weapons
    destined for Iraqi security forces between 2004 and 2005 remain lost,
    according to the Government Accountability Office.

    The Pentagon has `no idea where they are,' Rachel Stohl, a senior
    analyst at the Center for Defense Information, a national-security
    think tank, told the Washington Post in 2007. `It likely means that the
    United States is unintentionally providing weapons to bad actors.'

    U.S. law curbs weapons sales to countries engaged in a `gross and
    consistent' pattern of human rights abuses or to countries using U.S.
    weapons for aggressive purposes. But these requirements are often set
    aside in favor of short-term objectives.

    Michael Klare, director of the Amherst, Mass.-based Five College
    Program in Peace and World Security Studies, has followed the arms
    trade for decades. He discounts official claims that the delivery of
    arms can help promote stability.

    `The more we help one side, the more that regime's opponents are driven
    to seek arms from another supplier, leading to an inevitable spiral of
    arms buying, provocation and conflict,' Klare says.

    According to Stohl, `The Bush administration has demonstrated a
    willingness to provide weapons and military training to weak and
    failing states and countries that have been repeatedly criticized by
    the U.S. State Department for human rights violations, lack of
    democracy and even support of terrorism.'

    The Obama administration could mark a new era in arms trade. On the
    campaign trail, Obama expressed openness to signing the global cluster
    munitions ban, but he has yet to speak about a global Arms Trade Treaty
    ' which would establish more rigorous conditions for weapons exports '
    or about curbing weapons sales, in general.

    `The arms trade is never a panacea for instability,' Klare says. `It
    can only enflame regional tensions and heighten the risk of war.'


    Frida Berrigan is a senior program associate with the New America
    Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative. Information in this article
    is drawn from a new report she co-authored with William D. Hartung,
    "U.S. Weapons at War: Beyond the Bush Legacy."
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