By William D. Hartung
November 18, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - It’s no
secret that Donald Trump is one of the most
aggressive arms salesmen in history. How do we know?
Because he tells us so at every conceivable
opportunity. It started with his
much exaggerated “$110 billion arms deal” with
Saudi Arabia, announced on his first foreign trip as
president. It continued with his White House photo
op with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in which he
brandished a map with a state-by-state rundown
of American jobs supposedly tied to arms sales to
the kingdom. And it’s never ended. In these years in
office, in fact, the president has been a staunch
advocate for his good friends at Boeing, Lockheed
Martin, Raytheon, and General Dynamics -- the main
corporate
beneficiaries of the U.S.-Saudi arms trade
(unlike the thousands of American soldiers the
president recently
sent into that country’s desert landscapes to
defend its oil facilities).
All the American arms sales to the Middle East
have had a severe and lasting set of consequences in
the region in, as a start, the
brutal Saudi/United Arab Emirates war in Yemen,
which has
killed thousands of civilians via air strikes
using U.S. weaponry and pushed millions of Yemenis
to the brink of famine. And don’t forget the recent
Turkish invasion of Syria in which both the Turkish
forces and the Kurdish-led militias they attacked
relied heavily on U.S.-supplied weaponry.
Donald Trump has made it abundantly clear that he
cares far more about making deals for that weaponry
than who uses any of it against whom. It’s important
to note, however, that, historically speaking, he’s
been anything but unique in his obsession with
promoting such weapons exports (though he is
uniquely loud about doing so).
Despite its supposedly strained relationship with
the Saudi regime, the Obama administration, for
example, still managed to offer the royals of that
kingdom a record
$136 billion in U.S. weapons between 2009 and
2017. Not all of those offers resulted in final
sales, but striking numbers did. Items sold
included Boeing F-15 combat aircraft and Apache
attack helicopters, General Dynamics M-1 tanks,
Raytheon precision-guided bombs, and Lockheed Martin
bombs, combat ships, and missile defense systems.
Many of those weapons have since been put to use in
the war in Yemen.
To its credit, the Obama administration did at
least have an internal debate on the wisdom of
continuing such a trade. In December 2016, late in
his second term, the president finally did
suspend the sale of precision-guided bombs to
the Royal Saudi Air Force due to a mounting toll of
Yemeni civilian deaths in U.S.-supplied Saudi air
strikes. This was, however, truly late in the game,
given that the Saudi regime
first intervened in Yemen in March 2015 and the
slaughter of civilians began soon after that.
By then, of course, Washington’s dominance of the
Mideast arms trade was taken for granted, despite an
occasional large British or French deal like the
scandal-plagued
Al Yamamah sale of fighter planes and other
equipment to the Saudis, the largest arms deal in
the history of the United Kingdom. According to the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute,
from 2014 to 2018 the United States accounted for
more than 54% of known arms deliveries to the
Middle East. Russia lagged far behind with a 9.5%
share of the trade, followed by France (8.6%),
England (7.2%), and Germany (4.6%). China, often
cited as a possible substitute supplier, should the
U.S. ever decide to stop arming repressive regimes
like Saudi Arabia, came in at less than 1%.
The U.S. government’s stated
rationales for pouring arms into that
ever-more-embattled region include: building
partnerships with countries theoretically willing to
fight alongside U.S. forces in a crisis; swapping
arms for access to military bases in Kuwait, the
United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and other Persian Gulf
states; creating “stability” by building up allied
militaries to be stronger than those of potential
adversaries like Iran; and generating revenue for
U.S. weapons contractors, as well as jobs for
American workers. Of course, such sales have indeed
benefited those contractors and secured access to
bases in the region, but when it comes to promoting
stability and security, historically it’s been
another story entirely.
The Nixon Doctrine and the Initial Surge
in Mideast Arms Sales
Washington’s role as the Middle East’s top arms
supplier has its roots in
remarks made by Richard Nixon half a century ago
on the island of Guam. It was the Vietnam War era
and the president was on his way to South Vietnam.
Casualties there were mounting rapidly with no clear
end to the conflict in sight. During that stopover
in Guam, Nixon assured reporters accompanying him
that it was high time to end the practice of sending
large numbers of U.S troops to overseas
battlefields. To “avoid another war like Vietnam
anywhere in the world,” he was instead putting a new
policy in place, later
described by a Pentagon official as “sending
arms instead of sending troops.”
The core of what came to be known as the
Nixon Doctrine was the arming of regional
surrogates, countries with sympathetic rulers or
governments that could promote U.S. interests
without major contingents of the American military
being on hand. Of such potential surrogates at that
moment, the
most important was the Shah of Iran, with whom a
CIA-British intelligence coup replaced a
civilian government back in 1953 and who proved to
have an insatiable appetite for top-of-the-line U.S.
weaponry.
The Shah’s idea of a good time was curling up
with the latest copy of
Aviation Week and Space Technology and
perusing glossy photos of combat planes. Egged on by
the Nixon administration, his was the first and only
country to
buy the costly Grumman
F-14 combat aircraft at a time when that company
desperately needed foreign sales to bolster the
program. And the Shah put his U.S.-supplied weapons
to use, too, helping, for instance, to
put down an anti-government uprising in nearby
Oman (a short skip across the Persian Gulf), while
repressing his own population at the same time.
In the Nixon years, Saudi Arabia, too, became a
major
weapons client of Washington, not so much
because it feared its regional neighbors then, but
because it had seemingly limitless oil funds to
subsidize U.S. weapons makers at a time when the
Pentagon budget was beginning to be reduced. In
addition, Saudi sales helped recoup some of the
revenue streaming out of the U.S. to pay for higher
energy prices exacted by the newly formed OPEC oil
cartel. It was a process then quaintly known as “recycling
petrodollars.”
The Carter Years and the Quest for
Restraint
The freewheeling arms trade of the Nixon years
eventually prompted a backlash. In 1976, for the
first (and last) time, a presidential candidate --
Jimmy Carter -- made reining in the arms trade a
central theme of his 1976 campaign for the White
House. He
called for imposing greater human-rights
scrutiny on arms exports, reducing the total volume
of arms transfers, and initiating talks with the
Soviet Union on curbing sales to regions of tension
like the Middle East.
Meanwhile, members of Congress, led by Democratic
Senators Gaylord Nelson and Hubert Humphrey, felt
that it was long past time for Capitol Hill to have
a role in decision-making when it came to weapons
sales. Too often Congressional representatives
found out about major deals only by reading news
reports in the papers long after such matters had
been settled. Among the major concerns driving their
actions: the Nixon-era surge of arms sales to Saudi
Arabia, then still an avowed adversary of Israel;
the use of U.S.-supplied weapons by both sides in
the Greek-Turkish conflict over the island of
Cyprus; and covert sales to extremist right-wing
forces in southern Africa, notably the South
African-backed Union for the Total Independence of
Angola. The answer was the passage of the
Arms Export Control Act of 1978, which required
that Congress be notified of any major sales in
advance and asserted that it had the power to veto
any of them viewed as dangerous or unnecessary.
As it happened, though, neither President
Carter’s initiative nor the new legislation put a
significant dent in such arms trafficking. In the
end, for instance, Carter decided to exempt the
Shah’s Iran from serious human-rights strictures and
his hardline national security advisor, Zbigniew
Brzezinski,
undercut those talks with the Soviet Union on
reducing arms sales.
Carter also wanted to get the new
Rapid Deployment Force (RDF) he established --
which eventually morphed into the U.S. Central
Command -- access to military bases in the Persian
Gulf region and was willing to use arms deals to do
so. The RDF was to be the centerpiece of the Carter
Doctrine, a response to the 1979 Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan and the fall of the Shah of Iran. As the
president
made clear in his 1980 State of the Union
address: "An attempt by any outside forces to gain
control of the Persian Gulf region will be regarded
as an assault on the vital interests of the United
States. It will be repelled by use of any means
necessary, including the use of force." Selling arms
in the region would prove a central pillar of his
new doctrine.
Meanwhile, most major sales continued to sail
through Congress with barely a discouraging word.
Who Armed Saddam Hussein?
While the volume of those arms sales didn’t spike
dramatically under President Ronald Reagan, his
determination to weaponize anti-communist “freedom
fighters” from Afghanistan to Nicaragua sparked the
Iran-Contra scandal. At its heart lay a bizarre
and elaborate covert effort led by National Security
Council staff member Oliver North and a band of
shadowy middlemen to supply U.S. weapons to the
hostile regime of Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran. The
hope was to gain Tehran’s help in freeing U.S.
hostages in Lebanon. North and company then used the
proceeds from those sales to arm anti-government
Contra rebels in Nicaragua in violation of an
explicit Congressional ban on such aid.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Worse yet, the Reagan administration
transferred arms and provided training
to extremist mujahedeen factions in
Afghanistan, acts which would, in the
end, help arm groups and individuals
that later formed al-Qaeda (and similar
groups). That would, of course, prove a
colossal example of the kind of
blowback that unrestricted arms
trading too often generates.
Even as the exposure of North’s operation
highlighted U.S. arms transfers to Iran, the Reagan
administration and the following one of President
George H.W. Bush would directly and indirectly
supply nearly half a billion dollars worth of
arms and arms-making technology to Iran’s sworn
enemy, Iraqi autocrat Saddam Hussein. Those arms
would bolster Saddam’s regime both
in its war with Iran in the 1980s and in its 1991
invasion of Kuwait that led to Washington’s first
Gulf War. The U.S. was admittedly hardly alone in
fueling the buildup of the Iraqi military. All five
permanent members of the United Nations Security
Council (the U.S., the Soviet Union, France, the
United Kingdom, and China)
provided weapons or weapons technology to that
country in the run-up to its intervention in Kuwait.
The embarrassment and public criticism generated
by the revelation that the U.S. and other major
suppliers had helped arm the Iraqi military created
a new opening for restraint. Leaders in the U.S.,
Great Britain, and other arms-trading nations
pledged to do better in the future by increasing
information about and scrutiny of their sales to the
region. This resulted in two main initiatives: the
United Nations
arms trade register, where member states were
urged to voluntarily report their arms imports and
exports, and
talks among those five Security Council members
(the largest suppliers of weapons to the Middle
East) on limiting arms sales to the region.
However, the P-5 talks, as they were called,
quickly fell apart when China decided to sell a
medium-range missile system to Saudi Arabia and
President Bill Clinton’s administration began making
new regional weapons deals at a pace of more than
$1 billion per month while negotiations were
underway. The other suppliers concluded that the
Clinton arms surge violated the spirit of the talks,
which soon collapsed, leading in the presidency of
George W. Bush to a whole new Iraqi debacle.
The most important series of arms deals during
the George W. Bush years involved the training and
equipping of the Iraqi military in the wake of the
invasion of Iraq and the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein. But
$25 billion in U.S. arms and training was not
enough to create a force capable of defeating the
modestly armed militants of ISIS, when they swept
into northern Iraq in 2014 and captured large swaths
of territory and major cities, including Mosul.
Iraqi security forces, short on food and equipment
due to corruption and incompetence, were also short
on morale, and in some cases virtually abandoned
their posts (and
U.S. weaponry) in the face of those ISIS
attacks.
The Addiction Continues
Donald Trump has carried on the practice of
offering weaponry in quantity to allies in the
Middle East, especially the Saudis, though his major
rationale for the deals is to
generate domestic jobs and revenues for the
major weapons contractors. In fact, investing money
and effort in almost anything else, from
infrastructure to renewable energy technologies,
would
produce more jobs in the U.S. No matter though,
the beat just goes on.
One notable development of the Trump years has
been a revived Congressional interest in curbing
weapons sales, with a particular focus on ending
support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen. (Watching
Turkish and Kurdish forces face off, each armed in a
major way by the U.S., should certainly add to that
desire.) Under the leadership of Senator Chris
Murphy (D-CT), Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT),
Senator Mike Lee (R-UT), Representative Ro Khanna
(D-CA), and Representative Ted Lieu (D-CA), Congress
has voted to
block bomb sales and other forms of military
support for Saudi Arabia, only to have their efforts
vetoed by President Trump, that country’s main
protector in Washington. Still, congressional action
on Saudi sales has been unprecedented in its
persistence and scope. It may yet prevail, if a
Democrat wins the presidency in 2020. After all,
every one of the major presidential contenders has
pledged to end arms sales that support the Saudi
war effort in Yemen.
Such deals with Saudi Arabia and other Mideast
states may be hugely popular with the companies that
profit from the trade, but the vast majority of
Americans
oppose runaway arms trading on the sensible
grounds that it makes the world less safe. The
question now is: Will Congress play a greater role
in attempting to block such weapons deals with the
Saudis and human-rights abusers or will America’s
weapons-sales addiction and its monopoly position in
the Middle Eastern arms trade simply continue,
setting the stage for future disasters of every
sort?
William D. Hartung, a
TomDispatch regular, is the
director of the Arms and Security Project at the
Center for International Policy and the author of
Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of
the Military-Industrial Complex.
Follow TomDispatch on
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Frostlands, Beverly Gologorsky's novel
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A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred
McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and
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Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since
World War II.
Copyright 2019 William Hartung
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