Made In
America
How The US Dominates The World Arms Trade
By JP
Sottile
June 04,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "AntiMedia"
-
Who says
nothing is made in the USA anymore?
Certainly
not the well-heeled denizens of the State
Department’s diplomatic corps. And they should know.
That’s because they’re stationed on the frontlines
of the ongoing battle to preserve Uncle Sam’s
dominant market share of the global weapons trade.
Luckily for the Military-Industrial Complex, it
turns out that “Made In the USA” inspires a lot of
brand loyalty, even if actual loyalty is
often a harder sell (paging
Saudi Arabia). To wit, not only was America the
world’s leading arms dealer in 2014 with
$36.2 billion in sales, but it topped that 35%
surge in sales over 2013 with yet another profitable
spike to
$46.6 billion in 2015.
As
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)
determined in its
recent report on the global arms trade, the
United States maintains a commanding “33% share of
total arms exports” and is the world’s top seller
for five years running. And its customer base
includes “at least” 96 countries, which is
nearly half of the world’s nations. A robust
40% of those exports end up in the Middle East.
Perhaps that’s why the State Department is so darn
bullish on the prospects of Uncle Sam’s booming
business of selling things that go “boom!”
That’s the
takeaway from a
recent report in
Defense
News highlighting the marketing push by
“Commercial Officers” stationed at the US embassy in
Jordan. They worked the crowd at the kingdom’s
eleventh bi-annual
Special Operations Forces Exhibition and Conference
(SOFEX). Like many of the nearly
100 military-themed “trade shows” held around
the world this year alone, SOFEX
offered the profiteers of doom an opportunity to
display their merchandise and to cut deals with
bellicose browsers ready to pull the trigger on a
deadly impulse buy. Some of the bigger, “glitzy”
trade shows — like the
International Defence Exposition and Conference
(IDEX) held yearly in Abu Dhabi — are full-on
one-stop-shopping destinations for the up-and-coming
military power on the move, the newly-minted
pro-Western junta eager to armor-up, and the
forward-thinking “Coalition
Partner” looking for the latest in “kinetic
warfare.”
If nothing
else, trade shows offer defense contractors a chance
to give out “promotional
tchotchkes” to potential future customers who
might be swayed to double-back by a
branded camouflage carryall or a
Digi Camo Military Bert Stress Reliever. No
doubt it’s a tedious affair, but the presenters
toiling behind the displays are not alone on the
battlefield of commerce. That certainly was the case
at SOFEX, where the
U.S. Embassy deployed Senior Commercial Officer
Geoffrey Bogart and Regional Safety and Security
chief Cherine Maher to act as sale-force multipliers
for America’s military moneymakers. As
Jen Judson detailed, Bogart and Maher tracked
down sales leads throughout a region gripped by
chaos since America wantonly destroyed a bystander
nation under false pretenses (a.k.a. Iraq). Here are
Judson’s highlights from Bogart and Maher’s
magical misery tour of the profitable market forces
currently shaping America’s recently reshaped Middle
East:
JORDAN: “We are very
high on the safety and security market in Jordan,”
Geoffrey Bogart, a commercial officer at the US
Embassy said. Bogart said there is an abundance of
market prospects for US companies to do business in
Jordan, including in border security, cyber
security, command and control centers,
telecommunications equipment, military vehicles,
artillery, tactical equipment, bomb and metal
detectors, and closed circuit television (CCTV) and
access control.
EGYPT:
“Egypt is facing a lot of challenges
especially in terms of border control and whether
it’s from the West or the East or the North or the
South, so the main project that is going on is
border and perimeter control,” Maher said, which
means the country really wants bomb detection,
jammers and improvised explosive device diffusers.
LIBYA:
The current instability in Libya has
led to challenges for US firms, according to Maher;
however, US companies’ products are in high demand
there. “The trick is how to enter the market, who to
sell to, and making sure of export license,” she
said, adding some products that had been permitted
to be sold to Libya now have restrictions.
TUNISIA:
There is continuous growth in
Tunisia’s defense market, Maher said. Tunisia
plussed up its security forces budget in 2016 due to
growing terrorist threats in the region. The country
wants to build up its force capacity to deter
regional threats, strengthen defensive capabilities
and support counterterrorism operations.
LEBANON:
Lebanon is interested in border
security; however, it’s particularly interested in
securing public buildings and providing for civilian
protection due to ongoing insecurity in some towns
and cities near Beirut, Maher said.
IRAQ:
Maher said Iraq has a particularly
“dynamic” market valued in 2014 at about $7.6
billion, which is about 3.44 percent of its GDP.
With the ongoing war against the Islamic State
group, it is anticipated that Iraq will soon spend
around $19 billion, which would make up about 18 to
20 percent of its GDP. Like all the other countries
in the region, Iraq is investing heavily in safety
and security equipment, and also wants personal
protective gear and security systems for residential
and commercial buildings, according to Maher.
A “dynamic”
market is right … that is, if you’re General
Dynamics. Or Lockheed Martin. Or Boeing. Or any of
the big six defense contractors who together took
home $90.29 billion of the
over $175 billion worth of taxpayer dollars
doled out last year to the top 100 military
contractors. Not coincidentally, seven of the top
eight U.S. Government contractors are defense
companies, with only
health care services provider McKesson making it
past a phalanx of defense wheelers and dealers.
It’s a
rarified world greased last year by
$127.39 million of lobbying largesse and another
$32.66 million spent so far this year, according
to
OpenSecrets.org. Of course, lobbying offers a
great bang for the buck when it comes to stoking
sales. A
MapLight analysis earlier this year
found that “major U.S. government contractors
have received $1,171 in taxpayer money for every $1
invested in lobbying and political action committee
contributions during the last decade.”
Now that’s
some serious ROI!
Still,
nothing quite compares to the breeder reactor effect
that comes from using expensive military hardware to
destroy regimes in a never-ending global war against
a tactic. Regime change touched off civil war in
Iraq. That spread to Syria which, in turn, sent over
660,000 refugees into Jordan and over
one million refugees into Lebanon … all of which
explains why Bogart and Maher are so bullish on the
sale of security-related products to those two
nations and why the entire region is in the midst of
a military buying spree.
Then there
is the chaotic aftermath of regime change in Libya,
which threatens to spill over to two more booming
markets — Tunisia and Egypt. Of course, Egypt had
its own U.S.-endorsed internal regime change at the
hands of a
loyal customer and longtime recipient of
American “aid”— the Egyptian military. It was really
a “coup,” but U.S. law would’ve prevented selling
Egypt’s military junta tear gas canisters marked “Made
In USA” (among other things) if it was
officially a coup d’etat, so the Obama
Administration simply
didn’t call it a coup.
Now,
according to Ms. Maher, Egypt’s military is in the
market for yet more military hardware that,
according to
a
new GAO report detailed by
The Intercept, is not being properly or
legally vetted by the State Department. Those
purchases are easily funded by the $6.4 billion in
U.S. aid since the coup in 2011. And (go figure)
Egypt’s wishlist is justified, in part, by the
sudden need to ward off interlopers from
regime-changed Libya, which, according to the
aforementioned Ms. Maher, is still a red-hot market
for U.S. arms dealers … if they can get the export
licenses.
And so the
dynamic market churns onward — with tax dollars
paying the salaries of State Department “Commercial
Officers” who work for the heavily-subsidized U.S.
defense industry as salespeople in overseas markets
destabilized by taxpayer-funded wars fought by
taxpayer-supported American soldiers armed with
weaponry purchased from that self-same defense
industry with — you guessed it — more tax dollars.
The
“diplomats” in the State Department act as important
go-betweens in the process, helping “customers”
navigate the military-industrial complexities of
end-user certificates, export licenses, and human
rights restrictions so they can spend
taxpayer-funded U.S. “aid” that invariably ends up
back in the coffers of Lockheed, Boeing, Raytheon,
and so on.
Once the
money makes it back home to the defense industry,
those companies invest some of their windfalls into
lobbying, into SuperPACS, into both political
parties, and directly into campaigns of the
Congressional cronies who dutifully rubberstamp the
defense budget that enriches the defense industry.
So far this year, they’ve poured
over $17 million into those efforts and, in
turn, they’ve provided the fuel to run the “dynamic”
perpetual machine in which the State Department is a
vital cog.
And this is
why the folks at the State Department know full-well
that, in fact, America still actually makes
something — it is the world’s leading manufacturer
of war.
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