Time to rein in the global arms trade
Arms sales need to be curbed to prevent thousands more people from
dying from wars that can and should be prevented.
Even as the world remains mired in the greatest economic crisis since
the Great Depression, one sector continues to thrive: global arms
exports. Arms exporting countries and weapons contractors are scrambling
to expand foreign sales at a time when their own military budgets are
levelling off or declining. This new export push has dangerous
consequences for international security.
Conservatively estimated at $40 to $50 billion per year, the trade is
dominated by a few players. The United States has accounted for half or
more of the value of international weapons exports in recent years,
followed by Russia at about 20 percent.
Weapons sales by these and other major players directly contradict
the need to cut back on weapons proliferation at a time of rapid
political change and ongoing conflict.
The war on everyone's mind at the moment is in Syria, where the Assad
regime has been slaughtering opponents of its dictatorial rule with
impunity. Russia is by far Syria's largest arms supplier, and that
connection combined with its historic political ties to Damascus has led
it to oppose a United Nations embargo on weapons transfers to Syria even
as the killing there escalates.
Pressure from the United States and other supporters of an embargo
has resulted in a voluntary Russian pledge to end sales of small arms
and ammunition to Syria, but it continues to transfer other kinds of
weapons, along with spare parts that help keep the Syrian military up
and running.
Embargo
Despite efforts by Washington to promote an arms embargo, there is an
element of hypocrisy in current US policy towards Syria. Even as it is
pressing for a weapons cutoff, Washington is buying helicopters for use
in Afghanistan from the very same Russian company - Rosoboronexport -
that is the prime supplier of arms to the Syrian military. Ken Roth, the
director of Human Rights Watch, has denounced this relationship, arguing
that "the bottom line is that no one should do business with any company
that may be an accomplice to crimes against humanity."
The Pentagon has ignored this demand, arguing that the purchase of
Russian helicopters is "essential."
Stopping US complicity with Rosoboronexport would be one small but
important step towards promoting an embargo.
Russia isn't the only country engaged in questionable arms deals in
the Middle East. The United States is in the midst of fulfilling a
record $60 billion order from Saudi Arabia, one of the most tyrannical
regimes in the region and one that has fiercely resisted moves towards
democracy within its own borders and in neighbouring Bahrain, where it
has sent troops to help suppress the democracy movement there.
In addition to the Saudi deal, the United States is currently
committed to supplying arms to Bahrain, although a sale of armored
vehicles has been delayed under pressure from Congress and a network of
human rights groups spearheaded by Amnesty International. Last but not
least, Washington has continued its commitment to supply over $1 billion
in annual aid to the Egyptian military at a time when that country has
far greater need for economic assistance to help bolster its transition
to democracy.
The acceleration of weapons exports ignores the fact that we are
still a world at war, with at least two dozen major conflicts now under
way, according to the Canada-based Project Ploughshares. Over a third of
these wars are in Africa, with Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the
Congo the most deadly of all, causing hundreds of thousands of deaths -
mostly of civilians. China has been a major supplier to Sudan, while a
variety of arms dealers, neighbouring countries, and other war
profiteers are pouring arms into the Congo in exchange for access to the
country's natural resources.
Modest
US arms transfers to Latin America are relatively modest compared to
those other regions, but sales through traditional channels are
complemented by a dizzying array of other programs that supply arms and
training under the guise of fighting the drug war or promoting
military-to-military relationships.
The largest new market is Mexico, where US-subsidised weapons
transfers topped $300 million in 2010 to a country that received little
or no US weaponry in the early 2000s. The cruel irony of this process is
that it puts US weapons on both sides of the conflict, as the cartels
take advantage of loose gun laws to buy weapons in the US even as
Washington dramatically increases its weapons transfers to government
forces. The question raised by this flurry of arms trafficking is what
can be done to rein it in, at a time when it is doing so much damage to
human life, fuelling conflicts that are killing thousands of people per
day.
- Third World Network Features
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