"The US is also mulling sales of advanced weapons and equipment to Kuwait, Oman, the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf countries."
On October 21 Washington announced a $60 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia for advanced jet fighters, helicopters, missiles and other weaponry and equipment. It includes the sale of 84 new F-15 jet fighters and the upgrading of 70 more as well as 178 military helicopters and advanced missiles, bombs, radar and other equipment.
Earlier in the year reports surfaced of American plans to sell Patriot and other interceptor missiles to Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
This September the Financial Times reported that planned American arms sales to the Persian Gulf will amount to $123 billion: A $67.8 billion package for Saudi Arabia, $35.6 billion for the United Arab Emirates, $12.3 billion for Oman and $7.1 billion for Kuwait.
A major expansion of U.S. arms sales to the nations of Southeast Asia will follow suit and just as NATO expansion has opened almost all of Europe to American weapons manufacturers, so the new U.S. Africa Command will allow the Pentagon and affiliated arms merchants to further penetrate an entire continent.
Subjugated and occupied lands like Iraq and Afghanistan are captive markets for U.S. arms firms.
SIPRI states that in boosting arms exports from $6,795 billion in 2008 to $6,795 billion in 2009 and in so doing securing 30 percent of the world market, the U.S. sold weapons to 70 nations and NATO, with the Asia-Pacific region accounting for 39 percent of the sales, the Middle East for 36 percent and Europe for 18 percent. Revealingly, "Combat aircraft and associated weapons and components accounted for 48 per cent of the volume of US deliveries of major conventional weapons during this period." [18]
An integral aspect of supplying weapons to over a third of the world's nations is to ensure military interoperability for joint actions, including war, and to bring the receiving countries more firmly and inextricably into Washington's political orbit.
Providing arms is intimately related to and is often a precondition for developing closer diplomatic, financial, trade and comprehensive military ties with other nations. No country has more influence over international lending agencies than the U.S. and weapons aren't supplied free of charge.
Over the past decade the Pentagon has constructed and gained access to new military bases, camps, airfields, training centers and surveillance and missile shield installations in at least thirty nations, bilaterally and through NATO: Afghanistan, Australia, Bahrain, Bulgaria, Colombia, Djibouti, Estonia, Ethiopia, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Lithuania, Macedonia, Mali, Pakistan, the Philippines, Poland, Oman, Qatar, Romania, Seychelles, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uganda, the United Arab Emirates and Zambia among them.
Weapons sales necessarily entail training and instruction, joint military exercises, parts replacement, maintenance and repairs, and upgrading and other modifications. In short, an integral and long-term partnership between the supplier and the purchaser. A mechanism for eliminating competitors in Washington's drive for worldwide military and political dominance.
Notes:
[1]. Pentagon’s Christmas Present: Largest Military Budget Since World War II, Stop NATO, December 23, 2010
Pentagon’s Christmas Present: Largest Military Budget Since World War II
[2]. Obama Doctrine: Eternal War For Imperfect Mankind, Stop NATO, December 10, 2009
Obama Doctrine: Eternal War For Imperfect Mankind
[3]. McClatchy Newspapers, July 29, 2010
[4]. Ibid
[5]. Obama, Gates And Clinton In Asia: U.S. Expands Military Build-Up In The East, Stop NATO, November 7, 2010
Obama, Gates And Clinton In Asia: U.S. Expands Military Build-Up In The East
[6]. Global Times, July 13, 2010
India,US to ink huge military deal: report - GlobalTimes
[7]. Anika Anand, The Real Reason For Obama’s Trip To India: The Sixth Biggest Arms Deal In U.S. History, Business Insider, November 6, 2010
The Real Reason For Obama's Trip To India: The Sixth Biggest Arms Deal In U.S. History
[8]. Germany: World Arms Merchant In First Post-WW II Combat, Stop NATO, July 24, 2009
Germany: World Arms Merchant In First Post-WW II Combat
[9]. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Yearbook 2010
Chapter 5. Military expenditure — www.sipri.org
[10]. Han Xudong, Arms sales help US extend its sphere of influence. Global Times, December 28, 2010
Arms sales help US extend its sphere of influence - GlobalTimes
[11]. Pentagon's New Global Military Partner: Sweden, Stop NATO, August 25, 2010
Pentagon
[12]. The Financiarul, September 9, 2009
[13]. Sofia Echo, June 29, 2010
[14]. U.S.-China Military Tensions Grow, Stop NATO, January 19, 2010
U.S.-China Military Tensions Grow
[15]. U.S. Builds Military Alliance With Japan, South Korea For War In The East, Stop NATO, December 14, 2010
U.S. Builds Military Alliance With Japan, South Korea For War In The East
[16]. Global Times, December 28, 2010
[17]. Arabian Business, December 26, 2010
US is Gulf region's top weapons supplier
[18]. SIPRI Fact Sheet, March 2010
http://tinyurl.com/yjc3gg8
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