-Caveat Lector-

U.S. supplies abusive regimes

http://www.sunspot.net/news/nationworld/bal-te.journal24jun23.column?coll=bal%2Dhome%2Dheadlines

Merchant: The United States, which leads the world in arms sales, provides
weapons used against civilians, a nonproliferation group says.

By Jay Hancock
Originally published Jun 23, 2001

The $20 billion or so worth of guns, ammunition, jet fighters, tanks,
missiles and other weapons that the United States sells to the world each
year is roughly the same in value as U.S. automobile exports. The
difference is that auto shipments are declining.

Arms sales brokered by the Pentagon rose to $11.8 billion in 1999 (the
latest figures available) from $10.3 billion in 1998 and $7.7 billion in
1997. That does not include billions more in weapons sold directly by U.S.
makers to overseas buyers. Defense hardware licensed for export in 1999 was
valued at $18.5 billion, but the Federation of American Scientists
estimates that less than half the licensed amount is actually sold in a
given year.

In 1999 the State Department also licensed $28.4 billion in deals involving
the export of U.S. expertise in arms manufacturing or operations. As with
weapons exports, not all the licenses for technical assistance are used.

The United States is the world's biggest weapons purveyor. Its $11.8
million in Pentagon-brokered sales for 1999 accounted for more than a third
of the $30.3 billion of comparable global sales for that year, according to
the Congressional Research Service, and a move by the Bush administration
to reduce weapons-export paperwork may set the stage for a new spurt in sales.

Arms analysts express concern about all international weapons sales, but
are especially critical of U.S. munitions deals with nations that have
serious human rights problems.

"Governments with some of the worst human rights records have received
American weapons and training," and are undoubtedly committing abuses using
U.S.-supplied arms, says a new report by the Council for a Livable World,
an antiproliferation group in Washington.

U.S. government records reinforce that claim. The following list names the
top 15 U.S. arms customers among nations deemed by the State Department to
have human rights records that are "poor," "poor in some areas" or
"generally poor," and identifies those countries' worst abuses.

Collectively the countries committed thousands of summary executions,
beatings and tortures.

The sales figures, which include both completed Pentagon shipments and
commercial licenses that may not have resulted in a purchase, are from 1999.

Arms manufacturers and U.S. officials acknowledge that many buyers of
American weapons have poor human rights records. But they argue that its
role as weapons procurer gives Washington leverage to keep oppressive
regimes from behaving in even worse ways and that the regimes could easily
buy arms elsewhere.


Saudi Arabia. Value of U.S. arms purchased: $1.55 billion. U.S. equipment:
F-15 jet fighters; machine guns, ammunition; armored cars; guided bombs;
Hawk, Maverick, Patriot and TOW missiles. Types of abuses: torture,
beatings by religious and civil police; lack of freedom of religion.

Algeria. Value: $288 million. Equipment: electronics components; aircraft
spare parts; explosives. Abuses: extrajudicial killings; police beatings
and torture; arbitrary arrest; denial of fair trial.

Venezuela. Value: $142 million. Equipment: F-16 fighter spare parts;
explosives; rifle cartridges; chemical agents and herbicides; armored
personnel carriers. Abuses: extrajudicial killings; police torture and
beatings; impunity for human rights offenders; arbitrary arrest .

Colombia. Value: $29 million. Equipment: aircraft parts; pistols; grenade
launchers; night vision goggles; riot control chemicals; rifles; machine
guns; missile parts. Abuses: extrajudicial killings; disappearances;
arbitrary arrest.

Rwanda. Value: $18 million. Equipment: radar components, parts. Abuses:
extrajudicial killings; deaths from harsh prison conditions;
disappearances; beatings; torture; arbitrary arrest.

Ecuador. Value: $14 million. Equipment: ammunition; aircraft parts;
pistols, revolvers and rifles; submachine guns; radio equipment; chemical
agents. Abuses: extrajudicial killings, torture and abuse by police;
impunity for human rights violators; arbitrary detention.

Peru. Value: $11 million. pistols, rifles, revolvers. Equipment:
ammunition; gyroscopes; riot control chemicals; A-37 training aircraft
parts; machine guns; electronics parts. Abuses: extrajudicial killings;
torture and beatings by police and military; arbitrary arrest.

Bosnia. Value: $7 million. Equipment: chemical agents and herbicides;
oxygen masks; electronics parts; communications equipment. Abuses: torture
and beatings; arbitrary arrest.

Dominican Republic. Value: $8 million. Equipment: herbicides; rifle
cartridges; helicopters; pistols, revolvers and rifles. Abuses:
extrajudicial killings, torture and beatings by police; arbitrary detention.

Georgia. Value: $3 million. Equipment: rifles; patrol-boat components;
radios and other communications equipment. Abuses: poor prison conditions;
torture and beatings by security forces; arbitrary detention.

Cameroon. Value: $3 million. Equipment: helmets; rifle and carbine parts;
C-130 transport aircraft parts; telescopes. Abuses: extrajudicial killings;
excessive use of force by police; disappearances; widespread torture and
beatings; arbitrary arrest; life-threatening prison conditions.

Uzbekistan. Value: $3 million. Equipment: tactical radios/ TOW missile
spare parts. Abuses: torture, beatings; harsh prison conditions; arbitrary
detention

Uganda. Value: $2 million. Equipment: tactical radios; supply and logistics
operations; training. Abuses: extrajudicial killings by army and police;
ritual murders of children by rebels; beatings and torture by security
forces; arbitrary detention.

Ghana. Value: $2 million. Equipment: rifle cartridges; pistols and
revolvers; construction materials; training. Abuses: extrajudicial
killings; beatings; arbitrary detention.

Zambia. Value: $1 million. Equipment: miscellaneous boats; pistols and
revolvers; helicopter parts. Abuses: deaths caused by harsh prison
conditions; police beatings; arbitrary imprisonment

SOURCES: State Department, Defense Department, Council for a Livable World,
Congressional Research Service, Federation of American Scientists

Copyright © 2001, The Baltimore Sun

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