United States Rides Weapons
Bonanza Wave
By Frida Berrigan
Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco, IPS
11/18/06 "fpif" -- --
War, instability, and high oil prices
have created a perfect storm of profit for the world's
weapons manufacturers. This year, military analysts predict
the biggest arms bonanza since 1993 … which is saying
something because in the aftermath of the first Gulf War the
global industry reaped the benefits of a $42 billion arms
race.
As the world's largest producer and exporter, the United
States is riding the wave. For fiscal year 2006, which ended
on September 31, the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation
Agency churned out notices for $21 billion in arms sales
offers . In most cases, that agency is required to notify
Congress of all potential major arms deals worth more than
$14 million. In one typical day—September 28—the DSCA issued
notification on $5.5 billion in agreements. South Korea
would get $1.5 billion in Patriot missile equipment and
other hardware, Turkey was offered a $2.9 billion package
including 30 F-16 fighter planes, while Jordan and Chile
were also offered weapons packages.
While not all deals are finalized with arms deliveries,
these notifications are a way of taking the pulse of the
weapons market … and it is racing. U.S. a rms sales offers
for 2006 appear to be roughly twice the levels of any other
year during the Bush administration. Noteworthy among these
are the $5 billion deal for F-16s to Pakistan and a $5.8
billion agreement to completely re-equip Saudi Arabia's
internal security force.
The Perfect Storm
In the case of Pakistan and other allies in the war on
terrorism, sales are booming as sanctions and embargoes
imposed because of human rights concerns or nuclear
proliferation are being lifted. For Saudi Arabia and other
oil-rich nations, the price at the pump (which topped $3 a
gallon this summer) freed up cash for weapons. Finally, war
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and in corners of the globe where the
war on terrorism is being waged more quietly, allows foreign
militaries to see some of the most advanced weapons systems
in action. As one U.S. government source told The Times of
London in August: “Conflicts act like a customer
demonstration show and we tend to see an upsurge in sales
because other countries [are] … impressed by what is
available.”
This storm equals rainbows and pots of gold for the defense
industry. For example, Lockheed Martin, the world's largest
weapons manufacturer, stands to reap more than $11 billion
in possible new offers. U.S. weapons companies may have
patriotic slogans (Lockheed Martin's is “We Never Forget Who
We're Working For”), but foreign sales mean the biggest
bucks because they involve systems where research and
development costs were covered by the Pentagon. Also, they
are often accompanied by lucrative deals for accessories,
spare parts, and eventual upgrades.
But, what means money in the bank for Lockheed Martin,
Raytheon, and other defense corporations, often means misery
where the weapons are shipped. Despite having some of the
world's strongest laws regulating the arms trade, almost
half of U.S. weapons end up in countries plagued with
ongoing conflict and governed by undemocratic regimes with
poor human rights records. According to the annual
Conventional Arms Sales to the Developing World released by
the Congressional Research Service in November, the United
States provided countries in the developing world with more
than $11 billion in U.S. arms last year. Of these 25
countries, all had human rights problems according to the
State Department's Human Rights Report, and 10 (including
three of the top five) were “undemocratic” in the sense that
citizens of those nations “did not have a meaningful right
to change their government” in a peaceful manner.
This is the eighth year in a row that the United States has
led in global arms deliveries. The United Kingdom trailed in
second with $3.1 billion and Russia was a close third, at
$2.8 billion in arms deliveries. Together, these three
weapons exporters where responsible for almost 70% all arms
delivered worldwide last year.
In late October, the United Nations began work on the Arms
Trade Treaty, which is aimed at curbing arms transfers to
major human rights abusers and areas of conflict. The treaty
would also urge weapons suppliers to limit weapons sales
likely to undermine development in poor nations. The United
States was the only country to vote against the resolution,
while 24 (including many other major weapons suppliers)
abstained.
The General Assembly will take the next step, but without
the active participation of the world's largest weapons
producer and exporter, this important mandate will not be
strong enough to counter the perfect storm of profiting from
war.
FPIF columnist Frida Berrigan is a senior research
associate at the New School.
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.