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U..S. exports fantasies and weapons systems

by Frida Berrigan Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 1:36 PM

In fact, 20 of our top 25 arms clients in the developing world in 2003 were undemocratic regimes or governments with records as major human-rights abusers. All too often, U.S. arms transfers fuel conflict, give weapons to human-rights abusers or fall into the hands of our adversaries. Far from serving as a force for security and stability, these sales frequently empower unstable, undemocratic regimes.

U.S. exports fantasies and weapons systems

What if we marketed guns like movies?

- Frida Berrigan

Sunday, August 6, 2006

Oh, the stars! We're riveted by their clothes, their suntans, what they do (and don't) eat for breakfast. We're titillated when they appear too fat, disheveled or lumpy. We're envious when they're expectably sleek, well muscled and well coiffed. Christie Brinkley's heartbreak is front page news. Britney's baby gaffes are carefully dissected.

America exported .5 billion worth of film and television in 2004. The world's favorite TV show is a soap opera, "The Bold and the Beautiful." Every day, in almost every corner of the globe, people stream to movies made in the United States. They watch Halle Berry conjure up a storm with her eyes, Johnny Depp swashbuckle his way through the Caribbean, and Keanu Reeves swoon and mope in the company of Sandra Bullock. (Sorry about that last one, world).

But in Uzbekistan, those same movie fans are denied the rights of free speech and assembly, while President Islam Karimov tightens his grip on power with an array of arms made in the United States. In the Philippines, they watch the country's debt skyrocket as President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo gobbles up American weaponry at startling prices and an alarming rate.

Like American entertainment, American arms are a multibillion-dollar industry that leans heavily on foreign sales. In fact, the United States exported .6 billion in fighter planes, attack helicopters, tanks, battleships and other weaponry in 2005. All signs point to 2006 being another banner year for exports.

Just as in the movie, TV and music businesses, we dwarf the competition. Russia is the next largest arms exporter with a measly billion in yearly sales. In fact, U.S. arms exports accounted for more than half of total global arms deliveries -- .8 billion -- in 2004, and we export more of them ourselves than the next six largest exporters combined.

Given the huge payoffs and even larger payloads delivered, isn't it strange how little attention the American arms industry gets? Maybe, in some small part, that's because the industry's magazines all have the word "Defense," or some equivalent, prominently displayed on the cover -- Defense Week, Defense News -- instead of Glamour or Allure.

Maybe it's because of the Pentagon's predilection for less than magnetic PowerPoint presentations, unbearably unexpressive acronyms, and slightly paunchy, very pasty, older white men in business suits. Maybe the arms trade just doesn't seek the plush of the red carpet or the jittery pulse of flashing paparazzi cameras. Or maybe, it's a business that just loves to revel in profitable anonymity.

But don't be fooled. Like Hollywood, the arms industry has sex to spare. After all, the weapons themselves are all gleaming golden curves and huge thrusting spikes; they move at breath-robbing speed, make ear-splitting noise and are capable of performing with awesome lethality.

It's common to say that "You are what you eat"; but, at the level of nation-states, "You are what you export" may be no less true. We think of ourselves as trendsetters and style arbiters because of our best-known export -- mass culture. But weapons are our most deadly and potent export; they help determine who controls key regions of the world and shape how those regions are governed; they create jobs, extinguish lives and sometimes obliterate whole neighborhoods.

In the mountains of Turkey, Kurdish kids may not have a chance to drink Coke, listen to American rap or play Street Fighter, but they do know two things from English, "Cobra" and "Black Hawk," the names of the U.S.-made attack helicopters the Turks have used to strafe their villages. We should at least know as much about the weapons our country sells as they do, and more about the arms industry as whole than we do about Lindsay Lohan's brush with anorexia and addiction.

What if we did? What if American girls grew up reading Jane's Defence Weekly instead of (or in addition to) Jane? What if Vince Vaughn and Colin Farrell labored on their craft in virtual obscurity, while Cameron Diaz and Scarlett Johansson did their own laundry after a hard shift on the film set? What if the attention these stars now get went to the arms trade? Then, Jeffrey Kohler and Robert Joseph would be household names, their every move tracked by a voracious media.

Perhaps then we would watch A! (as in "A! Today in the Arms Trade") instead of E! Of course, I wouldn't even have to write this next sentence, because everyone would already know that Jeffery Kohler is the director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency within the Defense Department and Robert Joseph is undersecretary of state for arms control and international security -- and that the arms business wouldn't be its sexy self without them.

Even though we know that A! will never replace E!, nor will a magazine named Power replace People in those supermarket racks, there's still plenty to talk about. It's just that you have to read Aviation Week or Sea Power (or the Business pages of major newspapers) to know about it.

Take but one relatively modest example: In March 2003, the United States and Poland inked a Pentagon-brokered agreement worth .5 billion with U.S. arms companies. The emerging power and new member of the European Union bought a whole new military in a box: including 48 Lockheed Martin F-16 fighter planes, Raytheon advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles, Sidewinder short-range air-to-air missiles and Maverick air-to-ground missiles.

Putting aside what Poland actually needed all this firepower for, how about a Power magazine in-depth investigation on how the big U.S. arms makers tempted Poland with .3 billion in investments. As one of Lockheed Martin's directors explained, the deal wasn't really about selling weapons to Poland. Nope, they were interested in "enhancing Poland competitively in the global economy, creating jobs and enhancing local labor market skills." Kinda sweet, right?

So, to put this in a simple way, in order to sell Warsaw .5 billion in military hardware, we gave them .3 billion in goodies. Think about that for a moment. Isn't it just a bit too much of a good thing -- like the 0,000 gift-bags movie stars get at parties after their 0 million movie premieres? Poland gets a General Motors plant (wait, didn't one just close in Muncie, Ind.?) and a Motorola communications system in addition to a Lockheed Martin factory and billions more in U.S. investment. As the American ambassador to Poland said, "It's the deal of the century." For Poland yes, for American workers -- like the ones who don't make Pontiacs and Caddies in Detroit and Muncie anymore -- maybe not.

And you want sex, lies and videotape? OK, maybe not the sex part -- and it was e-mail, not videotape, that provided the incriminating evidence -- but there were plenty of lies in a 2003 domestic arms scandal that bilked taxpayers of millions of dollars. Boeing -- the bomber behemoth -- tried to sucker the Air Force into leasing 100 airborne refueling tankers at a cost of perhaps billion dollars, more than it would have cost the government to buy the (unnecessary) planes outright.

The scheme landed Darleen Druyun, a former Air Force weapons buyer, in a Florida prison after she pled guilty to giving Boeing special treatment on a .5 billion government contract in exchange for a post as senior vice president at the company and perks for her family members. Talk about a cheap date! As a Boeing veep, Druyun pulled in a mere 0,000 a year, while the company would have taken in billions in revenue.

Any flak could warn you about how a reputation for late-night carousing can sully a star's squeaky-clean reputation. You can't act like Paris Hilton at night and land roles for Mandy Moore the next morning. The same goes for arms sales. But the United States keeps trying. While boasting about democracy, security and peace, we sell weapons to dictators, human rights abusers and countries at war or at the edge of war (sometimes with each other).

In fact, 20 of our top 25 arms clients in the developing world in 2003 were undemocratic regimes or governments with records as major human-rights abusers. All too often, U.S. arms transfers fuel conflict, give weapons to human-rights abusers or fall into the hands of our adversaries. Far from serving as a force for security and stability, these sales frequently empower unstable, undemocratic regimes.

America's arms trade won't be spoon-fed to us the way model Naomi Campbell's run-ins with the law are. Unfortunately, it takes work on our part to discover how our arms trade functions. But knowing where our weapons are going and what sort of havoc they are wreaking in our name seems worth the effort -- even if it doesn't offer the promise of the perfect tan or six-pack abs.

Frida Berrigan (berrigaf@newschool.edu) is a senior research associate at the World Policy Institute's Arms Trade Resource Center. This piece appeared on TomDispatch.com. Contact us at insight@sfchronicle.com.

Page E - 1

URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2006/08/06/INGVUK9TIT1.DTL

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This is a great article addressing the hypocrisy

by Researcher Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 1:37 PM

This is a great article addressing the hypocrisy, corporate greed and coruption around WMD's in the U.S.

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Topic is about U.S. selling weapons to human rights violators

by Reader Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 2:57 PM

Topic is about U.S. selling weapons to human rights violators

Here's a great link on the topic:

http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/reports/wawjune2005.html

Great fast facts:

http://www.fas.org/asmp/fast_facts.htm

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Us ells arms to Saudis, Egypt, etc

by many human rights violators Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 2:58 PM

Anything for a buck

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Exactly, corporate greed runs wild

by Did you know that? Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 3:02 PM

Did you know that the U.S. sold WMD's to Iraq/Saddam?

Also, of course, then there's Israel, and we see them obliterating Lebanaon right now. Colombia is the 3rd largest recipient of US military aid, with devastating results--much military aid has been given under the guise of the "War on Drugs" to the right wing piece of shit that is running Colombia now.

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Not true

by was an excuse Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 3:39 PM

Did you know that the U.S. sold WMD's to Iraq/Saddam?

Right wing lying horseshit. There were no WMD found in Iraq- that was a pretense to war

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re: Not True

by TW Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 5:40 PM

You've got a weird mish-mash of "facts" going here. Nobody's saying the WMD excuse for this war was anything oher than a pile of treasonous lies. The US *DID* in fact sell Saddam chemical weapons technology and germ strains for biological weapons back in the '80s. Look it up

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more

by terror exports Tuesday, Aug. 08, 2006 at 5:34 PM

From Xinhuanet.com:

A group of 200 men calling themselves members of the "Jihad Bombers Force" (PBJ) in Pontianak, capital of Indonesia's West Kalimantan province, are ready to leave for Palestine and Lebanon to paralyze Israeli vital facilities if the latter fails to abide by a 4-days deadline.

"We give Israel 4-days deadline as of now to stop its military aggression against Palestine and Lebanon. If this ultimatum is ignored, we will not be responsible for the 200 voluntary jihad bombers who are going to leave for the two Middle Eastern countries," Antara news agency quoted Indonesian Human Rights spokesman Suib Didu as saying in Pontianak on Saturday.

He said the jihad bombers would not only launch attacks in Palestine and Lebanon but also in countries allied with Israel.

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"Sold"?

by johnk Tuesday, Aug. 08, 2006 at 5:53 PM

I thought we gave him money to fight a war against Iran, and he could use those dollars to buy those chemical weapons. If I'm correct, "we" indirectly paid for those chemical weapons, by paying our taxes. Some chemical weapons company sold him the weapons.

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Uh, not quite

by TW Wednesday, Aug. 09, 2006 at 3:24 AM

At least one US federal agency was involved directly

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/12/31/world/main534798.shtml

"Congressional investigations after the Gulf War revealed that the Commerce Department had licensed sales of biological agents, including anthrax, and insecticides, which could be used in chemical weapons, to Iraq."

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