America -- the world's arms pusher
No one is paying much attention to it, but our top export is the deadliest.
By Frida Berrigan
Los Angeles Times
May 21, 2007
THEY DON'T CALL US the sole superpower for nothing. Paul Wolfowitz might be
looking for a new job right now, but the term he used to describe the
pervasiveness of U.S. power back when he was a mere deputy secretary of Defense
— hyperpower — still fits the bill. Consider some of the areas in which the
United States is still No. 1:
• First in weapons sales: Since 2001, U.S. global military sales have totaled
$10 billion to $13 billion. That's a lot of weapons, but in fiscal 2006, the
Pentagon broke its own recent record, inking arms sales agreements worth $21
billion.
• First in sales of surface-to-air missiles: From 2001 to 2005, the U.S.
delivered 2,099 surface-to-air missiles like the Sparrow and AMRAAM to nations
in the developing world, 20% more than Russia, the next largest supplier.
• First in sales of military ships: During that same period, the U.S. sent 10
"major surface combatants," such as aircraft carriers and destroyers, to
developing nations. Collectively, the four major European weapons producers
shipped 13.
• First in military training: A thoughtful empire knows that it's not enough to
send weapons; you have to teach people how to use them. The Pentagon plans on
training the militaries of 138 nations in 2008 at a cost of nearly $90 million.
No other nation comes close.
Rest assured, governments around the world, often at each others' throats, will
want U.S. weapons long after their people have turned up their noses at a range
of once dominant American consumer goods. The "trade" publication Defense News,
for instance, recently reported that Turkey and the U.S. signed a $1.78-billion
deal for Lockheed Martin F-16 fighter planes. As it happens, these planes are
already ubiquitous — Israel flies them; so does the United Arab Emirates,
Poland, South Korea, Venezuela, Oman and Portugal, among others. Buying our
weaponry is one of the few ways you can actually join the American imperial
project!
In order to remain on top in the competitive jet field, Lockheed Martin, for
example, does far more than just sell airplanes. TAI — Turkey's aerospace
corporation — will receive a boost with this sale because Lockheed Martin is
handing over responsibility for portions of production, assembly and testing to
Turkish workers.
The Turkish air force already has 215 F-16 fighter planes and plans to buy 100
of Lockheed Martin's new F-35 Joint Strike Fighter as well, in a deal estimated
at $10.7 billion over the next 15 years. That's $10.7 billion on fighter planes
for a country that ranks 94th on the United Nations' human development index,
below Lebanon, Colombia and Grenada and far below all the European nations that
Ankara is courting as it seeks to join the European Union. Now that's a real
American sales job for you!
HERE'S THE strange thing, though: This genuine, gold-medal
manufacturing-and-sales job on weapons simply never gets the attention it
deserves. As a result, most Americans have no idea how proud they should be of
our weapons manufacturers and the Pentagon — essentially our global sales force.
They make sure our weapons travel the planet and regularly demonstrate their
value in small wars from Latin America to Central Asia.
There's tons of data on the weapons trade, but who knows about any of it? I help
produce one of a dozen or so sober annual (or semiannual) reports quantifying
the business of war-making, so I know that these reports get desultory,
obligatory media attention. Only once in a blue moon do they get the sort of
full-court-press treatment that befits our No. 1 product line.
Even when there is coverage, the inside-the-fold, fact-heavy, wonky news stories
on the arms trade, however useful, can't possibly convey the feel of a business
that has always preferred the shadows to the sun. The connection between the
factory that makes a weapons system and the community where that weapon "does
its duty" is invariably missing in action, as are the relationships among the
companies making the weapons and the generals (on-duty and retired) and
politicians making the deals, or raking in their own cuts of the profits for
themselves and/or their constituencies. In other words, our most successful (and
most deadly) export remains our most invisible one.
Maybe the only way to break through this paralysis of analysis would be to stop
talking about weapons sales as a trade and the export of precision-guided
missiles as if they were so many widgets. Maybe we need to start thinking about
them in another language entirely — the language of drugs.
After all, what does a drug dealer do? He creates a need and then fills it. He
encourages an appetite or (even more lucratively) an addiction and then feeds
it.
Arms dealers do the same thing. They suggest to foreign officials that their
military just might need a slight upgrade. After all, they'll point out, haven't
you noticed that your neighbor just upgraded in jets, submarines and tanks? And
didn't you guys fight a war a few years back? Doesn't that make you feel
insecure? And why feel insecure for another moment when, for just a few billion
bucks, we'll get you suited up with the latest model military, even better than
what we sold them — or you the last time around.
Why do officials in Turkey, which already has 215 fighter planes, need 100
extras in an even higher-tech version? They don't, but Lockheed Martin, working
with the Pentagon, made them think they did.
We don't need stronger arms control laws, we need a global sobriety coach and
some kind of 12-step program for the dealer-nation as well.
Frida Berrigan is a
senior research associate at the World Policy Institute's Arms Trade Resource
Center. A longer version of this article appears on tomdispatch.com.