Exporting Death: When It Comes to Arming the Planet,
America Is Unrivaled
New report shows that over the past five years, the
United States was the top arms exporter in the
world.
By Sarah Lazare
February 23, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Alternet"
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The
United States is driving the global surge in
militarization, as the number one arms exporter over
the past five years—during which it shipped deadly
weapons to at least 96 countries—according to a
disturbing new
report by the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute (SIPRI).
From
2011 to 2015, the U.S. oversaw the dramatic rise in
weapons transfers, the global volume of which jumped
a stunning 14 percent compared to levels seen during
the previous five years.
The Middle
East was the top recipient of American arms, and
within the region, Saudi Arabia was the number one
importer. These shipments continued despite human
rights
calls for an arms embargo, over concerns that
the Saudi-led coalition is committing widespread war
crimes in Yemen.
In fact,
SIPRI researchers note that the coalition has been
able to continue its relentless aerial assault of
Yemen thanks primarily to U.S. and European
shipments. “A coalition of Arab states is putting
mainly U.S.- and European-sourced advanced arms into
use in Yemen,” said Pieter Wezeman, senior
researcher with the SIPRI Arms and Military
Expenditure Program.
Worldwide,
U.S. arms exports over the past five years jumped 27
percent over 2006-2010 levels. Weapons exports are
poised to rise even more.
“As
regional conflicts and tensions continue to mount,
the U.S. remains the leading global arms supplier by
a significant margin,” said Dr. Aude Fleurant,
director of the SIPRI Arms and Military Expenditure
Program. “[T]he U.S. arms industry has large
outstanding export orders, including for a total of
611 F-35 combat aircraft to 9 states.”
Coming in
behind the United States, Russia, China, France, and
Germany were in the top five exporters. The top five
importers were India, Saudi Arabia, China, the UAE
and Australia.
The U.S.
led the world in arms exports during a period of
rising conflict and war, leading to levels of human
displacement not seen since World War II.
The United
Nations Refugee Agency
estimated last year that one out of every 122
people on the planet has been violently uprooted
from their homes by war and persecution, thereby
forced to become refugees, asylum seekers, or
internally displaced people. If all of these
displaced people formed a country, it would be the
24th largest in the world.
Sarah Lazare is a staff writer for AlterNet.
A former staff writer for Common Dreams,
Sarah co-edited the book About Face:
Military Resisters Turn Against War. Follow
her on Twitter at @sarahlazare.
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