Western
Powers Protect Arms Markets Ignoring Civilian
Killings
By Thalif Deen
January 16,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "IPS"
-
UNITED
NATIONS, Jan 14 2016
- The West continues its strong
political and military support to one of its
longstanding allies in the Middle East – Saudi
Arabia –- despite withering criticism of the
kingdom’s battlefield excesses in the ongoing war in
neighbouring Yemen.
A Saudi-led
coalition has been accused of using banned cluster
bombs, bombing civilian targets and destroying
hospitals – either by accident or by design—using
weapons provided primarily by the US, UK and France.
The Office
of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said
last week the armed conflict in Yemen continues to
take a terrible toll on civilians, with at least 81
civilians reportedly killed and 109 injured in
December.
As a
result, the toll of civilian casualties, recorded
between 26 March and 31 December 2015, are estimated
at more than 8,000 people, including nearly 2,800
killed and more than 5,300 wounded.
But Western
powers — which are quick to condemn and impose
sanctions on countries accused of civilian killings–
have refused to take any drastic action against
Saudi Arabia or its coalition partners, including
Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Sudan, the United Arab
Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain.
The Saudi
stranglehold is increasingly linked to a thriving
multi-billion dollar arms market — with British,
French and mostly American military suppliers
providing sophisticated weapons, including
state-of-the-art fighter planes, helicopters,
missiles, battle tanks and electronic warfare
systems.
The arms
supplying countries, for obvious reasons, are
unwilling to jeopardize their markets, specifically
Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi
arsenal alone includes Boeing F-15 fighter planes
(US supplied), Tornado strike aircraft (UK),
Aerospatiale Puma and Dauphin attack helicopters
(French), Bell, Apache and Sikorsky helicopters
(US), Boeing E-3A Airborne Warning Control System
(US), Sidewinder, Sparrow and Stinger missiles (US)
and Abrams and M60 battle tanks (US).
Dr. Natalie
J. Goldring, a Senior Research Fellow with the
Security Studies Programme in the Edmund A. Walsh
School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University,
told IPS that for years, the US government has
documented Saudi human rights abuses in its own
reports, including the State Department.
“Yet the
United States continues to provide a largely
open-ended weapons supply line to the Saudi
government. It’s time for the US government to act
in accordance with the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) and
with its own laws and suspend arms transfers to
Saudi Arabia,” she said.
She argued
US weapons manufacturers’ profit motives for
continuing massive weapons sales to Saudi Arabia
should not drive US military and foreign policy.
“The US
Defense Department may benefit in the short term by
keeping some weapons supply lines open with foreign
orders. But the risks to US military personnel and
US interests should be given far greater weight in
decision making,” said Goldring who also represents
the Acronym Institute on conventional weapons and
arms transfer issues, at the United Nations.
The current
issue of Time magazine says Saudi Arabia continues
to spend a bigger portion of its economy on defence
than any other nation (11 percent of gross domestic
product (GDP) compared with 3.5 percent by the US).
“It burns
through $6 billion a month to bomb Yemen, an
ill-advised war that has come to define the abrupt
change brought by King Salman since he assumed the
throne a year ago,” said Time.
But future
military spending is likely to falter due to a sharp
decline in oil prices—dropping to less than $30 per
barrel this week, down from $110 in early 2014.
According
to the Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute, from 2010-2014, the United Kingdom and
the United States were Saudi Arabia’s top weapons
suppliers.
The United
Kingdom accounted for 36 percent of the Saudis’
weapons deliveries, just edging out the United
States, which accounted for 35 percent of Saudi
weapons imports. France was a distant third at 6
percent.
In an
article in Counter Punch published last November,
William D. Hartung, director of the Arms and
Security Project the Center for International Policy
and a senior adviser to the Security Assistance
Monitor, said the recent surge in US arms
transfers to the Middle East is part of an
unprecedented boom in major US arms sales that has
been presided over by the administration of
President Barack Obama.
“The
majority of the Obama administration’s major arms
sales have gone to the Middle East and Persian Gulf,
with Saudi Arabia topping the list with over $49
billion in new agreements.”
“This is
particularly troubling given the complex array of
conflicts raging throughout the region, and given
the Saudi regime’s use of U.S.-supplied weaponry in
its military intervention in Yemen,” Hartung said.
He also
pointed out that the Obama administration has made
arms sales a central tool of its foreign policy, in
part as a way of exerting military influence without
having to put “boots on the ground” in large
numbers, as the Bush administration did in Iraq—with
disastrous consequences.
“The Obama
administration’s push for more Mideast arms sales
has been a bonanza for U.S. weapons contractors, who
have made increased exports a primary goal as
Pentagon spending levels off. Not only do foreign
sales boost company profits, but they also help keep
open production lines that would otherwise have to
close due to declining orders from the Pentagon,”
said Hartung.
For
example, he pointed out, earlier this year it was
reported that Boeing had concluded a deal to sell 40
F-18s to Kuwait, which will extend the life of the
programme for another year or more beyond its
current projected end date of early 2017.
Similarly,
the General Dynamics M-1 tank has been surviving on
a combination of Congressional add-ons and a deal
for tanks and tank upgrades for Saudi Arabia.
“But it’s
not just about money. U.S.-supplied arms are fueling
conflict in the region. The most troubling recent
sales is a deal in the works that would supply $1
billion or more in bombs and missiles for the Saudi
Air Force, again for use in the Yemen war,” Hartung
added.
Meanwhile,
hundreds of protesters took to the streets in the
Canadian capital of Ottawa last month demanding the
cancellation of a hefty 10.5 billion dollar arms
deal with Saudi Arabia which included light armoured
military vehicles.
The
contract, signed by the previous government, was
described as one of the largest arms deals between
Canada and Saudi Arabia.
The protest
was triggered by the execution of 47 prisoners,
including a Shiite cleric, on terrorism charges.
Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion, who
dismissed the protest, was quoted as saying: “What
is done is done and the contract is not something
that we’ll revisit.”
The writer can be contacted at
thalifdeen@aol.com
|