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Ending Tyranny, The Bush Way

By Frida Berrigan, AlterNet. Posted September 13, 2005.


The U.S. has a long-standing (and accelerating) policy of arming, training and aiding some of the world's most repressive regimes.

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As insecurity mounts from Najaf to New Orleans, more weapons and high-tech military equipment are flowing into some of the globe's most vulnerable and war-torn regions.

The Congressional Research Service recently found that global arms sales rose to $37 billion in 2004 -- the highest level since 2000. U.S. companies such as Lockheed Martin and Boeing rang up $12.4 billion in weapons contracts -- more than one-third of the total and more than twice what Russia -- the second largest exporter -- sold. The Departments of State, Commerce and Defense are all involved in different aspects of approving licenses, managing logistics and (in many cases) loaning or granting funds to nations as they seek weapons from U.S. corporations.

The findings, published in the annual "Conventional Weapons Transfers to Developing Nations" report, were released against the backdrop of the global war on terror in which many countries are increasing military spending as insecurity rises. They also came in the wake of rampant and irresponsible use of guns in the hurricane-ravaged Southeast that hindered aid delivery, increased tension and led to more misery and suffering.

The U.S. has a long-standing (and accelerating) policy of arming, training and aiding some of the world's most repressive regimes. Close anti-terrorism allies include the authoritarian Uzbekistan and the thinly veiled military dictatorship of Gen. Pervez Musharraf in Pakistan. In the Philippines, Colombia and elsewhere, U.S. weapons and military training have been turned against civilians. From Indonesia to the Sudan, U.S. geopolitical interests and access to resources are trumping concerns about human rights, ongoing conflict and the pressing need for development.

The U.S. transfers more weapons and military services than any other country in the world. In the last decade, the U.S. sold $177.5 billion in arms to foreign nations. In 2003, the last year for which full data is available, the Pentagon and State Department delivered or licensed the delivery of $5.7 billion in weaponry to countries which can ill afford advanced weaponry -- nations in the developing world saddled with debt and struggling with poverty.

Despite having some of the world's strongest laws regulating the arms trade, almost half of these weapons went to countries plagued with ongoing conflict and governed by undemocratic regimes with poor human rights records. In 2003, $2.7 billion in weaponry went to governments deemed undemocratic by the U.S. State Department's Human Rights Report, in the sense that citizens of those nations "did not have a meaningful right to change their government" in a peaceful manner. Another $97.4 million in weapons went to governments deemed by the State Department to have "poor" human rights records.

The U.S. transferred weaponry to 18 of the 25 countries involved in active conflicts in 2003, the last year for which full Pentagon data is available. From Chad to Ethiopia, from Algeria to India, transfers to conflict nations through the two largest arms sales programs totaled more than $1 billion. When poor human rights records, serious patterns of abuse and histories of conflict are all factored in, 20 of the top 25 U.S. arms clients in the developing world in 2003 -- a full 80 percent -- were either undemocratic regimes or governments with records of major human rights abuses.

That's unacceptable. It's time that President Bush begin to honor his pledge to "end tyranny in our world" as part of the war on terrorism by overhauling U.S. weapons transfer policy. Greater global security will follow.

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Frida Berrigan is a Foreign Policy In Focus scholar and a senior research associate with the Arms Trade Resource Center, a project of the World Policy Institute. This article originally appeared in the Ft. Worth Star-Telegram.

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Gregory Chamberlin
Posted by: Greg on Sep 13, 2005 4:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Among the many interesting facts is one that leaps out; our government loans or grants money to those countrys too poor to buy outright weapons made by American arms manufacturers. Yet another example of our tax money ending up in the coffers of profitteers!

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» RE: Gregory Chamberlin Posted by: Colin
» The US is the 'company store' Posted by: Sojourner
agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Sep 13, 2005 5:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WAR is the ultimate form of terrorism.

Forty years ago MLK warned: "Any nation that year after year continues to increase the Defense budget as it cuts services to the neediest and most vulnerable, is a nation APPROACHING spiritual death."

We have past the approaching: we are now gasping for life and the very soul of America!

The greatest fallacy Americans have swallowed is that nuclear weapons will protect us.

The greatest threat of the 21st century is nuclear weapons in the hands of radical extremists who are a country unto themselves.

Who will the USA bomb in retaliation of such an attack?

Who would Jesus bomb?

www.wearewideawake.org

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» RE: agitator church and state Posted by: Basenjis
chickens
Posted by: brasilaron on Sep 13, 2005 6:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
will come home to roost. Who can doubt why terr'ists from around the world want to harm Amerika? When we arm their despotic regimes (Pakistan, Egypt, Sudan), when we assassinate their democratically elected leaders (i.e., the Congo, Chile, Vietnam etc. etc.), support insurgents against democratic governments (Nicaragua) fund CIA coupts of foreign governments (Brasil, Venezuela, Bolivia, Argentina) fund and arm outright oppression (Israel) and continually whine/rant/threaten regimes that we don't like (Venezuela, Iran, Syria, Jordan), is their any wonder that non-Americans would doubt our intentions and hate our overt actions and despise our desire to supplant their cultural values with our corporatist ideological poison? Amerika has devolved into a spiritually nebulous and nauseatingly cynical and self-righteous devourer of the dreams of the world. I want the old America to come back, if it ever existed.....

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» RE: chickens Posted by: symeonakis
» RE: chickens Posted by: nakis
» RE: chickens Posted by: Doubtom
» Or buck-passing hypocrites Posted by: Bic Pentameter
» For your amusement Posted by: Bic Pentameter
» RE: I am amused Posted by: downyocean
WWJD
Posted by: nakis on Sep 13, 2005 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A lot of good posts here.

Sorry, I have to keep going back to the Christian aspect of what is going on.

Doesn't Jesus have a parable that supports massive global arms sales to tyrants? Pre-emptive war? Policies that kill and maim tens of thousands of children a day?
No? I didn't think so.

And yet, Bush and his cronies are all so very Christian. I'm not bashing Christians. I'm just once again making a point on what these criminals do while claiming to be good men of religious standing. And that so many 'good' Christians support and believe in the policies of death and war.

Enough said.

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» RE: WWJD Posted by: Basenjis
» Good comment ShaSpirit! Posted by: Olympiada
Bush end Tyranny?!
Posted by: woodford54 on Sep 13, 2005 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What planet do you live on?! Actually, tyrant is not a strong enough word to describe him. He passed tyrant around late 2000! Don't look for any help there. Impeach, impeach, IMPEACH!!!!!!

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» RE: Bush end Tyranny?! Posted by: Selwynn
Wrong priorities US
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 13, 2005 8:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But everybody knows that. What else is new? There is nothing new under the sun.

The thing is, what can we change? Well, there is a link to "Foreign Policy in Focus" which I intend to investigate. And I notice the article was written by a woman, a scholar.

I was raised to be critical of US Foreign Policy, even the Peace Corps. When I was a youth, I had a book entitled "Alternatives to the Peace Corps".

I have not made it out of this country yet, but I live in an immigrant community.

I am shocked at the weapons massing on this globe. It indicates to me an ideology clearly different then the one I was raised with, and one I feel utterly powerless against.

Lord have mercy.

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