No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade, 2nd edition
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About this ebook
One of the few up-to-date works on the whole of the arms trade, this No-Nonsense Guide explores not just the movement of weaponry across borders, but also the problematic activities that sustain the trade, such as espionage, government corruption, and shady taxpayer subsidies.
This Guide reveals that despite Western governments’ preaching of the evils of the arms trade, they are the biggest exporters of weapons and they often sell them to repressive regimes throughout the world.
This revised second edition uses the latest statistics and information available to provide a critical introduction to this most destructive business.
Nicholas Gilby
Nicholas Gilby led the Campaign Against Arms Trade's efforts to expose corruption in Britain's arms deals with Saudi Arabia. He is the author of Deception in High Places: A History of Bribery in Britain's Arms Trade (Pluto, 2014) and The No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade (2009). His research has featured in the Guardian, BBC's Newsnight and Al Jazeera.
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No-Nonsense Guide to the Arms Trade, 2nd edition - Nicholas Gilby
Introduction
THE ARMS BUSINESS in today’s world tries to maintain a friendly, respectable face, but it is as murky, secretive and amoral as it has always been. So when I was offered the chance to build on the excellent work done by Gideon Burrows when he wrote the first edition of this book, I was pleased to accept.
This updated edition of the No-Nonsense Guide to The Arms Trade, like the previous one, attempts to give some background, and provide campaigners and others with material for more questions to arms companies, governments and the military industrial complex the world over. It aims to be a useful tool for spreading information and for future campaigning.
The world is much smaller today, thanks to globalization, with arms companies becoming bigger even than some countries. The response of campaigners has to be similar, if we are to keep up the pressure, linking up with other movements, campaigners and individuals pressing non-violently for peace, justice and a fairer world.
To anyone who asks, ‘what is the point?’, I have only one reply. We must keep pushing the issues because if we do not, who knows what could happen next? Who knows how many more Tiananmen Squares, East Timors, or Congos would have taken place had not campaigners agitated for arms sales to be restricted, and for action to bring a more just and stable world?
To borrow, but turn around, the weak old challenge of the arms business – ‘if we don’t sell arms, someone else will’ – if we do not keep up the questioning, challenging, direct action, protesting and political lobbying, are we sure someone else would?
I tried to keep changes to the first edition to a minimum, but inevitably quite a lot has changed. Some material needed to be updated, new issues included, and words cut for reasons of brevity. Occasionally, I did not share Gideon’s opinion or perspective. However, as will be apparent to anyone comparing the two editions, I am greatly indebted to the work he did six years ago.
As will be clear from the text and references, I have drawn on a wide range of material from many organizations in what is, inevitably, a brief summary of many issues. The scope and quality of the reports, articles and books available to someone wishing to research a wide variety of arms trade issues is testament to the excellent work of many organizations and individuals. I would like to express my heartfelt thanks to them for making this task much easier than it could have been.
In particular I would like to thank Helen Close and Ian Prichard for their thoughts on the structure when I started work, and to Helen for her comments on the draft manuscript. Albert Beale kindly agreed to check the list of NGO groups at the end of the book. Thanks also to Troth Wells for being a supportive commissioning editor, and to Chris Brazier for his thoughtful editing. Any omissions, errors, or other faults with the book are, of course, entirely my responsibility.
Nicholas Gilby
London, March 2009
1 War in the 21st century
A picture of the changing security environment… The nature of war today… Trends which will affect the level and nature of future conflict… The relevance of the traditional military-industrial complex.
THE ARMS TRADE is no ordinary business. Inextricably linked to the production of weapons, it will therefore have a major influence on war and international relations in this century, directly impacting the lives of many millions of people around the world.
The former senior British and NATO General Sir Rupert Smith has written in his book The Utility of Force ‘conflict has been, is, and probably always will be an integral element of human society’.¹ As Oxfam has said, ‘arms transfers alone do not cause armed conflict. Extensive research, however, shows how the availability of, and access to, conventional arms and ammunition can aggravate, intensify, and prolong armed violence’.² This is why the arms trade is a serious problem.
This chapter looks at the world the arms companies and dealers operate in. How has the security environment changed since the Second World War and Cold War? What does this mean for the arms industry? What are the trends that will affect levels of conflict and violence in the world in the future?
The changing security environment
The 20th century was the most violent one in human history. Not only did it witness two world wars, and 45 years of major arms-fueled tension between the world’s superpowers, it also featured hundreds of localized conflicts, armed border disputes, civil wars, military coups and counter-coups, revolutionary struggles and armed invasions.
Nevertheless, the nature of conflict has changed radically over the last 70 years. Smith has argued that the Second World War marked the culmination of the concept of ‘industrial war’, a test of each belligerent’s military industrial complex, state organization and popular will. The advent of nuclear weapons meant such a conflict could never happen again, for, had a war broken out, within weeks it would have escalated to a nuclear confrontation, resulting in a global holocaust. The vast military machines and industries of each side would have served little purpose. The collapse of Communism across eastern Europe in 1989-91 means the prospect of another major ‘industrial war’ is now greatly reduced.
Wars between states have still occurred since the Second World War, but they have been in decline. As Smith writes, ‘war no longer exists. Confrontation, conflict and combat undoubtedly exist all around the world… [but] war as battle in a field between men and machinery, war as a massive deciding event in a dispute in international relations: such war no longer exists’. Over the last 10 years, only four wars between countries have been fought: Eritrea/Ethiopia (1998-2000), India/Pakistan (in Kashmir, 1997-2003), Iraq/US and allies (2003), and Russia/Georgia (2008).³ Indeed, the one international war since 2004 only lasted six days. And wars between countries have become less lethal. In 1950 the average such war killed 38,000 people, but in 2006 killed just over 500.⁴
If we look at wars within countries too and define war as a conflict with more than 1,000 battle-related deaths, then the number of wars reported in 2007 (Iraq, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Somalia) was the lowest since 1957.⁵
War today
War today is primarily fought within states, either as conflicts over territory or groups fighting against their own government. Indeed, World Bank economist Paul Collier notes, ‘civil wars are around ten times as common as international wars’.⁶
These sorts of war do not involve the scale of killing that characterized major 20th-century wars. Between 1946 and 2006, the average war between countries killed 34,677 people per year, while the average internal conflict killed 2,430 people per year.⁷
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)⁸ records that, over the period 1997-2006, two-thirds of the major armed conflicts that were not international disputes were conflicts over governmental power, with the remainder conflicts over territory. Some of these conflicts are ‘internationalized’ in that they include troops from a country external to the basic conflict aiding one of the belligerents. Examples today include the NATO intervention in the conflict between the Afghan Government and the Taliban, and the US/British intervention in the conflict between the Iraqi Government and the insurgency.
War today cannot therefore be understood in the traditional sense. It is a confusing picture. As SIPRI has pointed out, there is a ‘diversity of armed violence and the erosion of the boundaries between, for example, insurgency, terrorism, sectarian violence and one-sided violence against civilians… in 2007 there was a clear trend towards the further fragmentation of violence in the locations of some of the world’s deadliest armed conflicts… this has been accompanied by the diversification of armed groups and the further erosion of the boundaries between different forms of violence’.⁹
Governments increasingly fight groups relying on paramilitary violence or violence from militias. Weak governments in many conflict regions of the world mean the state has often lost its monopoly on violence. Increasingly governments rely on state-backed militias or private contractors to fight their wars.¹⁰ In addition, conflicts less frequently end in ‘victory’ for one side; since the 1990s there has been an increase in the number of negotiated settlements to conflicts.¹¹
Source: Armed Conflicts Report 2008, Project Ploughshares (www.ploughshares.ca/imagesarticles/ACR08/MapACR08.pdf)
According to the Armed Conflicts Report 2008, there were 30 armed conflicts in progress in 26 different countries in 2007. For the first 20 years after 1945, the number of armed conflicts in the world averaged around 20 per year. This rose steadily so that, by the late 1970s, it was at the same level as today. Despite the numbers of armed conflicts having fallen since their post-war peak around 1990, the trend of decline since then appears to have stopped.¹²
Prospects for the future
So what of the future? What are the main threats to peace in the world this century?
There are three primary threats, closely linked.¹³
The first is climate change.¹⁴ Compared to preindustrial times, the world is getting warmer, and almost all scientists agree this is due to human activities. The warming is caused by the increasing amounts of so-called greenhouse gases (chiefly carbon dioxide) in the atmosphere. Warming causes significant changes to the environment, but on balance most of these are negative.
These create potentially very significant security problems. For example, the 0.75°C of warming that has occurred so far has resulted in 10 to 25 million people being displaced in Africa due to desertification.¹⁵ One of the causes of the war in Darfur, Sudan, relates to environmental degradation and conflict over resources (see chapter 3).
Even if there were no more greenhouse gas emissions from tomorrow, the world will still warm to 1.4°C above the level in pre-industrial times. There are currently around 430 parts per million carbon dioxide equivalent in the atmosphere. If, as seems certain, the level rises to 450 parts per million carbon dioxide equivalent, the probable eventual level of global warming will be between 2 and 3.5°C, with the likeliest rise around 2.5°C. If nothing much changes between now and 2035 (likely on current policies), there will then be 550 parts per million in the atmosphere, with a likely temperature rise of 3.5°C.
These highly probable levels of warming will bring dramatic environmental changes, which will create enormous problems for the world. If, as seems certain, the level of global warming is eventually 2°C above pre-industrial times, this will result in increased water scarcity for between 0.4 billion and 1.7 billion people. This level of warming will therefore very likely produce environmentally driven migration and exacerbate conflicts over resources. US intelligence believes ‘climate change is unlikely to trigger interstate war, but it could lead to increasingly heated interstate recriminations and possibly to low-level armed conflicts’.¹⁶
However, if the world warms by 3.5°C or more, then the prospects are much worse, though the reader can be thankful they will be unlikely to be alive to witness their full realization. A major redrawing of the world map due to rising sea levels, major species extinctions, and a global fall in food production are all likely prospects. For example, a study in the US journal Science found half the world’s population could face severe food shortages by the end of the century due to falling food production.¹⁷ The full effects may not be felt for many decades, but the trends will start to become noticeable in our lifetimes, with likely disastrous consequences for human well-being and security.
For example, the United Nations Development Programme states: ‘climate change is the defining human development challenge of the 21st century. Failure to respond to that challenge will stall and then reverse international efforts to reduce poverty. The poorest countries and most vulnerable citizens will suffer the earliest and most damaging setbacks, even though they have contributed least to the problem’.¹⁸
The second, related, security threat is increasing competition over resources. Climate change will very likely reduce the ‘productivity’ of the world, leading to fewer resources. Unfortunately, even before this happens, humanity is already