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For the first time since the Cold War, global military spending exceeded $1 trillion
in 2004, nearly half of it by the United States, a prominent European think tank
said Tuesday.
As military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and the war on terrorism continue,
the world spent $1.035 trillion on defense during the year, corresponding to
2.6 percent of global gross domestic product, the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute said.
The figure "is only 6 percent lower in real terms than it was in (1987-88),
which was the peak," said SIPRI researcher Elisabeth Skons, who co-authored
the organization's annual report.
Worldwide military expenditure increased 6 percent in 2004, matching the average
annual increase since 2002, the institute said.
However, the figures may be on the low end, the institute said, as countries
are increasingly outsourcing services related to armed conflict, such as military
training and providing logistics in combat zones, without classifying them as
military expenses.
SIPRI, a Swedish government-funded institute, said such outsourcing has more
than doubled in the last 15 years, and was estimated to have reached $100 million
during 2004, SIPRI researcher Caroline Holmqvist said.
"This is a global phenomenon," she said, adding that it's hard to
give exact figures.
"This is an industry that is not largely regulated," she said, adding
that by 2010, global spending on such services is estimated to be twice current
levels.
The United States accounted for 47 percent of all military expenditures, while
Britain and France each made up 5 percent of the total. In all, 15 countries
accounted for 82 percent of the world's total military spending.
Besides its regular defense budget, the United States has allocated $238 billion
since 2003 to fight terrorism, according to the report. "These appropriations
are now assuming extraordinary proportions," Skons said.
The arms trade also grew sharply, with the top 100 makers of weapons increasing
their combined sales by 25 percent between 2002 and 2003, the report said. Those
companies sold weapons and arms worth $236 billion worldwide in 2003, compared
with $188 billion a year earlier. The United States accounted for 63 percent
of all arms sales in 2003, the report said.
While continued military operations in the Middle East are responsible for
much of the spending, the rest of the world is also paying more for security,
the report said.