Sale of the century

Hartung, William D

SALE OF THE CENTURY BILL CLINTON'S AMAZING ARMS BAZAAR WILLIAM D. HARTUNG Bill Clinton didn't say much about foreign policy dunng the 1992 election campaign, but he did promise to change one...

...moratonum on exports of these weapons for three years, is a prime example of what is possible if the nght connections are made The land mines moratonum, which is the first step in a campaign aimed at implementing a worldwide ban on the production, export, and stockpiling of these systems, is the result of an unprecedented alliance of organizations that includes the Vietnam Veterans of America, Human Rights Watch, Handicapped International, and the International Committees of the Red Cross To address the broader problem of runaway U S arms sales, a coalition of 110 local and national peace, human rights, and development organizations, spearheaded by the Washingtonbased Arms Transfer Working Group, has joined together in support of legislation that would establish a "code of conduct" for U S arms transfers The code, which is embodied in proposed legislation co-sponsored by Senator Mark Hatfield (R-Oreg ) and Representative Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga), would prohibit arms sales to governments that violate the human nghts of their own citizens, engage m aggression against their neighbors, come to power through undemocratic means, or ignore international arms-control arrangements like the United Nations Arms Register The president would have the right to ask for a waiver if he argued that it was in the national security interest to arm a nation that does not meet these standards, but the Congress would have to pass a law approving that waiver The code of conduct would not end arms sales in our time, but it would introduce a long-overdue measure of democracy and accountability into decisions over what kinds of regimes and organizations receive U.S weaponry Setting 15 higher standards of scrutiny for U S arms sales could in turn set the stage for serious multilateral discussions designed to limit sales by all major arms suppliers Now that the United States sells more arms to the third world than all other nations combined (57 percent of the market as of 1992), a change in policy is a prerequisite for any meaningful international agreement to stem the flow of weapons to regions of potential conflict...
...If anything, there are signs that Clinton policymakers have reverted to the cold-war view that arms sales are an all-purpose foreign policy instrument that can be used to solve almost any problem, no matter how complex or intractable...
...A few billion dollars in sales of smaller weapons systems are made through direct commercial channels, but even these deals must be blessed with a license from the State Department In theory, Congress can block a major sale if both houses pass resolutions of disapproval that can withstand a presidential veto, but in practice Congress has never voted down a sale Has the Clinton administration used its leverage over the arms WILLIAM D HARTUNG is a senior research fellow at the World Policy Institute at the New School for Social Research and the author of And Weapons for All (HarperCollins, 1994), a critique of U S arms-sales policies from the Nixon through the Clinton administrations business to fulfill the promises of restraint that were made in 1992...
...arms exports violate the principle of Congress's "power of the purse" in defense and foreign policy issues, the same principle that was violated by the Irancontra initiatives7 There is no evidence yet that questions of this sort are troubling Bill Clinton or his key advisers as they engage in a longpromised review of U S arms transfer policy, scheduled for release later this year...
...Economically, arms sales are far less beneficial than the defense industry's public relations machinery would have us believe The government spends roughly $7 billion per year subsidizing arms exports, for everything from direct grants and loans to finance weapons exports to maintaining a staff of over 5,000 Pentagon and military personnel involved in promoting and processing arms sales...
...Beyond the question of how successful citizens' initiatives like the code of conduct campaign will be in changing the terms of the debate over arms-sales policy, the Clinton administration may ultimately be persuaded to change its ways for the simple reason that its current approach makes no sense in the violent and disorderly world that has evolved in the wake of the cold war By even the narrowest of strategic and economic calculations, a policy of active arms-sales promotion has far more costs than benefits On the strategic front, unbridled weapons sales help to fuel regional arms races that increase the likelihood that U S forces will face heavily armed adversaries when they are sent into battle, either as peacekeepers or in unilateral interventions The last three times the United States sent troops into combat in significant numbers—in Panama, Iraq, and Somalia— they faced adversaries that had received U S weapons or military technology in the period leading up to the conflict Of four dozen ethnic and territorial conflicts that were under way as of mid-1993, combatants in thirty-nine of those wars had received U S weapons during the 1980s U S weapons that were supplied to anti-Communist rebel groups in Angola and Afghanistan as part of the Reagan Doctrine have been used to carry out devastating civil wars, in the Afghan case, U S -supplied Stinger missiles have turned up on the international black market as prized items sought by all manner of rebel groups and terrorist organizations...
...The loophole for "small tests" has been shelved for the moment, and the U S is continuing to adhere to the moratonum on nuclear testing while pursuing an international agreement for a comprehensive test ban While the economic and political forces behind the U S arms sales boom are stronger than those favoring nuclear testing, a powerful coalition in favor of controlling the arms trade can be built to counteract the arms export lobby The successful campaign to ban U S exports of antipersonnel land mines, which won a 100 to 0 vote in the Senate last year that extended the U.S...
...A case in point is Undersecretary of State Lynn Davis's recent proposal to deliver thirty-eight F-16 fighter aircraft to Pakistan as part of a deal in which Pakistan would agree to "cap" its nuclear weapons program The plan would not only require an override of the Pressler Amendment, which bars arms sales to Pakistan as long as it is pursuing a nuclear weapons capability, but it would provide Pakistan with a plane that its own military and intelligence officials acknowledge is the most likely delivery vehicle for a Pakistani nuclear bomb' Billions 14 of dollars mUS military assistance during the 1980s didn't deter Pakistan from its nuclear program, and a few dozen fighter planes now are even less likely to do so What the sale probably would do is spur a conventional arms race between Pakistan and India that would make it even harder to get either nation to renounce its nuclear ambitions Despite all these signs to the contrary, the battle to get Bill Clinton to honor his campaign promises to curb the weapons trade is far from lost On another important secunty issue, the lll-conceived proposal to end the U S moratorium on nuclear testing and allow a loophole for so-called "small nuclear tests" that surfaced in the spring of 1993, the Clinton administration beat a hasty retreat in the face of an outpouring of opposition on editorial and op-ed pages, in the Congress, and from peace and arms-control organizations across the nation...
...Arms manufacturers further diminish the benefits of arms sales to the economy by offenng "offset" arrangements on most major deals Offsets involve a pledge by the manufacturer to steer business to the purchasing country worth anywhere from 50 to 100 percent of the original sale—an arrangement that often takes business from American companies and gives it to overseas suppliers As noted above, arms sales fuel regional arms races that in turn are used to justify additional Pentagon spending for "regional contingencies," costing taxpayers tens of billions of dollars in added military budget costs every year And last but not least, pushing arms on third-world countries stunts their economic growth, reducing demand for other goods and services in the process An International Monetary Fund study released in late 1993 demonstrated that a 20-percent coordinated reduction in military spending worldwide would stimulate increased markets for consumer goods worth up to $190 billion per year, a sum fourto-five times the size of the entire international arms market...
...The cold-war notion of using arms sales as a way to maintain regional "balances of power" or support trusted allies has been thoroughly and decisively discredited by the experience of the 1990s, when alliances, governments, and boundaries in large parts of the world are in a state of flux It doesn't take an arms-control expert to recognize that pouring more weapons onto the world market at this moment in history is a dangerous gamble A call to put stronger controls on who gets U S arms could appeal to a broad, mainstream audience, now that fear of the "Soviet threat" has been eliminated as a knee-jerk rationale for arms sales and military spending...
...When all these direct subsidies and indirect costs are taken into account, the benefits of the arms trade to the overall U S economy are marginal at best The oft-heard rationale of last resort for U S arms sales— "If we don't do it, somebody else will"—is even less persuasive now than it was during the cold war The U S so dominates the market now that even a unilateral change in policy would have important short-term impacts in stemming the flow of arms to regions of tension...
...SALE OF THE CENTURY BILL CLINTON'S AMAZING ARMS BAZAAR WILLIAM D. HARTUNG Bill Clinton didn't say much about foreign policy dunng the 1992 election campaign, but he did promise to change one of the most pernicious aspects of U.S policy this country's role as the world's number-one weapons trafficking nation The Clinton/Gore team ran on a platform that pledged to "press for strong international limits on the dangerous and wasteful flow of weapons to troubled regions " And in November 1992, President-elect Clinton told a Capitol Hill news conference that he planned to "review our arms sales policy and to take it up with the other major sellers of the world as part of a long-term effort to reduce the proliferation of weapons of destruction in the hands of people who might use them in very destructive ways " More than a year into Clinton's term, the rhetoric of restraint has given way to an unprecedented arms-selling spree In fiscal year 1993, the United States sold over $31 billion worth of weaponry to more than 140 nations, the first time any nation had topped the $30-billion barrier This is not a case of private enterprise run amok—the federal government is directly involved in the vast majority of these sales, and changes in government policies and practices can have a tremendous impact on the scope of the weapons trade The primary channel for U S. arms sales is the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program, under which the Pentagon serves as a middleman by negotiating the deal with the foreign purchaser, collecting the funds, and disbursing the money to weapons manufacturing firms...
...In 1992, the most recent year for which full statistics are available, U S sales to the third world were three-and-one-half times greater than those of France, ten times greater than those of Russia, and a hundred times greater than those of China For the most advanced systems such as top-ofthe-hne fighter planes and main battle tanks, only a few West European allies sell equipment comparable to that offered by the United States, so it would be relatively easy to limit access to these systems given the requisite political will...
...True to his word, Brown held meetings at the air show with defense officials from France and Malaysia at which he urged each of those nations to purchase U S military aircraft At the February 1994 Asian aerospace arms exhibition in Singapore, the Clinton administration went a step further, sending seventy-five U.S military personnel and twenty military aircraft to the show to help convince Asian military officials to buy Amencan weaponry This move toward an open partnership between the Pentagon and industry in pushing U S weapons overseas was all done at taxpayer expense, to the tune of more than half a million dollars Close on the heels of the Clinton administration's decision to have a strong U.S military presence at the exhibition in Singapore, Air Force Vice-Chief of Staff David Cams floated an even more aggressive marketing scheme...
...But even at this level, the United States could exert enormous political and diplomatic leverage if it were to adopt a true policy of controlling arms sales and pressuring other major suppliers to do the same Once the underlying realities of the arms trade are taken into account, the Clinton administration's arms-sales policy boils down to a combination of pork barrel politics and outmoded cold-war strategic thinking Only a concerted campaign of public pressure will persuade Bill Clinton to abandon this misguided approach and redeem his campaign pledge to work toward controlling this deadly business ? 16...
...In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, he advocated a plan to sell as many as 400 upgraded F-16 fighter planes out of Air Force stocks to countries such as Egypt, Malaysia, Morocco, Singapore, Thailand, and several Eastern European countries Proceeds from the sales would then be used by the Air Force to buy new, top-of-the-hne F-16s from Lockheed's production line in Fort Worth, Texas While the plan would clearly offer a boost to the defense industry—both on the front end through contracts to upgrade the planes and on the back end when the revenues from exports are plowed back into new Pentagon procurement— it raises serious questions on both security and constitutional grounds At a time when regional conflicts in the Middle East and Asia are cited by the Pentagon as the most likely threats to U S interests, does it make sense to be doling out sophisticated fighter planes to these areas at bargain prices'' Furthermore, doesn't the plan to give the Air Force direct control over the proceeds of U.S...
...The short answer is no, and the reason for this inaction can be summed up in a familiar phrase—pork barrel politics Even during the 1992 campaign, Bill Clinton demonstrated his willingness to put aside his commitment to arms transfer controls if he thought it might cost him political support in key states When a Saint Louis television reporter asked him in August 1992 whether he would back the sale of seventy-two McDonnell Douglas F-15 combat aircraft to Saudi Arabia, Clinton not only said yes, his Missouri campaign office immediately put out a press release broadcasting his support for the deal The F-15 is built in Saint Louis, and it was clear that Clinton's decision had more to do with the political realities of Missouri than it did with the strategic realities of the Middle East Amazingly, Clinton's endorsement of the sale came two-and-one-half weeks before President George Bush formally announced his decision to go ahead with it This tendency to sacrifice the long-term security benefits of arms-sales restraint for the short-term political and economic benefits of arms-sales promotion has earned over into the 13 Clinton administration's first fifteen months in office At the June 1993 Pans Air Show, Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown assured a gathering of U S. aerospace executives that "we will work with you to help you find buyers for your products in the world marketplace, and then we will work with you to help close the deal...
...For the broader trade in guns, missiles, and other "small arms" that are fueling many of the world's ethnic conflicts, a multilateral effort would be required to achieve meaningful controls...

Vol. 121 • May 1994 • No. 10


 
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