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Socialist Review, July/August 1994
Briefing
Arms
Death race
From Socialist Review, No. 177, July/August 1994.
Copyright © Socialist Review.
Copied with thanks from the Socialist Review Archive.
Marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.
- The global number of conflicts rose rapidly in 1991 and
1992. Eleven major new wars broke out, setting an all time record of
29 major wars. Deaths resulting from these wars were the highest for
17 years and have reached a massive 6 million.
- Our leaders tell us that we have been living in peaceful
times since the Second World War. In fact there have been 149 wars
with a total of 23,142,000 people killed. On an average yearly
basis, the number of deaths in this period has been twice the number
of deaths in the 19th century.
- The five acknowledged nuclear powers still hold 26,700
nuclear weapons. After all existing commitments for the reduction of
nuclear weapons have been met, the nuclear stockpiles of these five
nations still hold more than 900 times the explosive powers expended
in the Second World War – equivalent to 9,700,000,000 tons of TNT.
The nuclear stockpile provides 1.8 tons of explosive power for every
person on earth. That is enough explosive to blow the world up
several times over.
- Since the end of the Cold War there has been a small fall
in Nato’s military expenditure. In 1992 expenditure fell 10
percent below the spending peak of 1987, but in real terms it is
still one third higher than before the big spending of the 1980s. In
May 1993 Nato actually called for a halt to reductions in military
expenditure amongst its member states.
- The former USSR has reduced spending on the military
dramatically since 1990. By 1992 the military budget had slipped to
about half the level five years earlier.
- The two superpowers have reduced their nuclear weapons from
23,615 in 1987 to 17,890 in 1992, a drop of 24 percent. This has
mainly been in tactical nuclear weapons due to the expense of
‘cleaning up’ intercontinental ballistic missiles.
- World military expenditure fell by 8 percent between 1987
and 1991. In the developing countries there was a modest fall in
1990. Since then there has been a steady increase in spending
primarily in the Middle East, which dominates the arms market
(especially Saudi Arabia) and the Far East (China and the newly
industrialising economies of the Pacific rim). In these Far Eastern
countries there are all the signs of a new arms race.
- The ‘clean up’ of nuclear weapons by the superpowers is
estimated to cost more than the production costs of the weapons in
the first place. The cost of nuclear weapons in the United States
from 1946 to 1993 was $5.54 trillion.
- Since the end of the Gulf War exports of weapons to
developing countries initially rose sharply. Most of these weapons
were from the US which in 1991 took over from the former USSR as the
world’s leading weapons exporter. After the Gulf War there was
agreement amongst the Big Five nations to curb sales of weapons to
the Middle East. The opposite has happened.
- Even though stockpiles of weapons are decreasing globally
there is an emphasis on the ‘modernisation’ of weapons. There
are more high technology weapons that supposedly encompass greater
accuracy, range, velocities, rates of fire, armour, penetration,
automation and destructiveness. So there is less overall weaponry
but more effective killing power.
- In the Gulf War precision guided weapons accounted for less
than 10 percent of the munitions dropped by the allies but accounted
for 75 percent of the damage.
- There might be lower expenditure but with small weapons
there is higher proliferation as the arms market is flooded with
cheap surplus weapons from the former USSR and Eastern Europe. Many
of the weapons in the Balkans are from this surplus as well as from
Western countries.
- Britain is a leading arms exporter – £1,506 million
worth of military equipment was exported in 1992. Government
approved arms exporting is shrouded in secrecy. A government
organisation called the Defence Export Services Organisation is
responsible for procurement for the Ministry of Defence. Not even
MPs are told what is being sold, and to whom, for reasons of
‘commercial confidentiality’. This contravenes the 1991 UN
agreement to establish an arms transfer register for public
scrutiny.
- Timothy Renton, then a Foreign Office minister, said in
November 1986, ‘We do not supply arms to countries against which
there is a mandatory arms embargo, or where we believe the items are
likely to be used to violate human rights or to attack British
forces or our allies.’ This is a lie.
- Despite strict policy Britain exported tank parts, radar
and three naval craft to Iran during the Iran-Iraq War, and military
Land Rovers and radar to Iraq.
- Britain will export weapons anywhere in the world.
Applications for exporting equipment are dealt with on a ‘case by
case basis.’
- Over half of British arms exports go to the Middle East. In
1988 £10,000 million worth of military equipment was sent to Saudi
Arabia. Britain’s other large customers include India and Nigeria.
The cost of one British Aerospace Hawk is equivalent to clean water
for life for 1.5 million people.
- Some equipment from Britain is directly used for repressive
purposes. British built armoured cars were sent to Indonesia to
break up protests and have killed many. Around 200,000 people have
been killed in East Timor (one third of the population) since 1975
by Indonesian troops using guns and bombs from Britain, such as the
British Hawk aircraft.
- Computers used by secret police against people in South
Africa and Uganda were supplied by Britain.
- About 300 private arms dealers operate in London usually
dealing in unlicensed arms. This is not illegal as long as weapons
are not exported from Britain.
- Companies involved with smuggling arms to South Africa
without an export licence have often been dealt with leniently. For
example, after a massive smuggling operation in 1980 five companies
and five individuals paid £193,000 in fines between them for
smuggling arms valued at £2 million.
- British arms exports are carried out on a commercial basis.
The Export Credits Guarantee Department insures the exporters
against non-payment by overseas buyers. The Tories were not
satisfied that arms exporters were protected enough so in 1988 Alan
Clark, trade minister, set up a new £1 billion fund to cover larger
military contracts. This is paid for by the tax payer.
- International Military Services is a government-wned
company used to provide packages of arms to countries. It arranged
£2 billion worth of sales to the Shah of Iran and still has an
office in Tehran today, despite friction between governments.
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