Untitled Document
As insecurity mounts from Najaf to New Orleans, more weapons and high-tech
military equipment are flowing into some of the globe's most vulnerable and
war-torn regions.
The Congressional Research Service recently found that global arms
sales rose to $37 billion in 2004 -- the highest level since 2000.
U.S. companies such as Lockheed Martin and Boeing rang up $12.4 billion
in weapons contracts -- more than one-third of the total and more than twice
what Russia -- the second largest exporter -- sold.
The Departments of State, Commerce and Defense are all involved in
different aspects of approving licenses, managing logistics and (in many cases)
loaning or granting funds to nations as they seek weapons from U.S. corporations.
The findings, published in the annual "Conventional Weapons Transfers
to Developing Nations" report, were released against the backdrop of the
global war on terror in which many countries are increasing military spending
as insecurity rises.
They also came in the wake of rampant and irresponsible use of guns in the
hurricane-ravaged Southeast that hindered aid delivery, increased tension and
led to more misery and suffering. The U.S. policy of arming friends and allies
is alarming
The U.S. has a long-standing (and accelerating) policy of arming, training
and aiding some of the world's most repressive regimes.
Close anti-terrorism allies include the authoritarian Uzbekistan and the thinly
veiled military dictatorship of Gen. Pervez Musharraf in Pakistan.
In the Philippines, Colombia and elsewhere, U.S. weapons and military training
have been turned against civilians. From Indonesia to the Sudan, U.S. geopolitical
interests and access to resources are trumping concerns about human rights,
ongoing conflict and the pressing need for development.
The U.S. transfers more weapons and military services than any other country
in the world. In the last decade, the U.S. sold $177.5 billion in arms to foreign
nations. In 2003, the last year for which full data is available, the Pentagon
and State Department delivered or licensed the delivery of $5.7 billion in weaponry
to countries which can ill afford advanced weaponry -- nations in the developing
world saddled with debt and struggling with poverty.
Despite having some of the world's strongest laws regulating the arms trade,
almost half of these weapons went to countries plagued with ongoing conflict
and governed by undemocratic regimes with poor human rights records. In 2003,
$2.7 billion in weaponry went to governments deemed undemocratic by the U.S.
State Department's Human Rights Report, in the sense that citizens of those
nations "did not have a meaningful right to change their government"
in a peaceful manner.
Another $97.4 million in weapons went to governments deemed by the State Department
to have "poor" human rights records.
The U.S. transferred weaponry to 18 of the 25 countries involved in active
conflicts in 2003, the last year for which full Pentagon data is available.
From Chad to Ethiopia, from Algeria to India, transfers to conflict nations
through the two largest arms sales programs totaled more than $1 billion.
When poor human rights records, serious patterns of abuse and histories of
conflict are all factored in, 20 of the top 25 U.S. arms clients in the developing
world in 2003 -- a full 80 percent -- were either undemocratic regimes or governments
with records of major human rights abuses.
That's unacceptable. It's time that President Bush begin to honor his pledge
to "end tyranny in our world" as part of the war on terrorism by overhauling
U.S. weapons transfer policy. Greater global security will follow.