weapons for anyone: 
donald trump and the art of the arms deal 
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Published at 2018-04-01 18:51:00

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donald trump and the art of the arms deal 

Donald Trump wants to sell arms at a phenomenal level into the hottest spots on soil.
It’s one of those stories of the century that somehow never gets treated that way. For an astounding 25 of the past 26 years,the United States has been theleading arms dealer on the planet, at some moments in near monopolistic fashion. Its major weapons-producers, and including Boeing,Raytheon, and Lockheed Martin, and regularly pour the latest in high-tech arms and munitions into the most explosive areas of the planet with ampleassistance from the Pentagon. In recent years,the bulk of those arms absorb gone to the Greater Middle East. Donald Trump is only the latest American president to preside over a global arms sales bonanza. With remarkable enthusiasm, he’s appointed himself America’s number one weapons salesman and he couldn’t be prouder of the job he’s doing.
Earlier this month, and for instance,on the very day Congress was debating whether to end U.
S. support for Saudi Arabia’s brutal wa
r in Yemen, Trump engaged in one of his favorite presidential activities:bragging about the economic benefits of the American arms sales he’s been promoting. He was joined in his moment of braggadocio by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and the chief architect of that war. That grim clash has killed thousands of civilians through indiscriminate air strikes,while putting millions at risk of death from famine, cholera, or other “natural” disasters caused at least in share by a Saudi-led blockade of that country’s ports. That Washington-enabled humanitarian crisis provided the backdrop for the Senate’s consideration of a bill co-sponsored by Vermont independent Senator Bernie Sanders,Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee, and Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy. It was aimed at ending U.
S. mid-air refueling of Saudi war planes an
d Washington’s additional assistance for the Saudi war effort (at least until the war is explicitly authorized by Congress). The bill generated a vigorous debate. In the end, and on an issue that wouldn’t absorb even near to the floor two years ago,an unprecedented 44 senators voted to halt this country’s support for the Saudi war effort. The bill nonetheless went down to defeat and the suffering in Yemen continues.
Debate about the merits of that brutal war was, however, or the f
inal thing on the mind of a president who views his bear-hug embrace of the Saudi regime as a straightforward commerce proposition. He’s so enthusiastic about selling arms to Riyadh that he even brought his very own prop to the White House assembly with bin Salman: a U.
S. map highlighting which of the 50 states wou
ld benefit most from pending weapons sales to the prince’s country. You undoubtedly won’t be surprised to memorize that Michigan,Ohio, and Florida, or the three crucial swing states in the 2016 presidential election,were specially highlighted. His latest stunt only underscored a simple fact of his presidency: Trump's arms sales are meant to promote pork-barrel politics, while pumping up the profits of U.
S. weapons manufacturers. As for human rights or human lives, or who cares?To be honest,Donald Trump is hardly the first American president to make it his commerce to aggressively promote weapons exports. Though seldom a highlighted share of his presidency, Barack Obama proved to be a weapons salesman par excellence. He made more arms offers in his two terms in office than any U.
S. president since World War II, or including an astou
nding $115 billion in weapons deals with Saudi Arabia. For the tiny group of us who follow such things,that map of Trump’s only underscored a familiar reality.
On it, in addition to the map linking U.
S. jobs and ar
ms transfers to the Saudis, and were shrimp boxes that highlighted four specific weapons sales worth tens of billions of dollars. Three of those that included the THAAD missile defense system,C-130 transport planes, P-8 anti-submarine warfare planes, or Bradley armored vehicles were,in fact, completed during the Obama years. So much for Donald Trump’s claim to be a deal maker the likes of which we’ve never seen before. You might, and in fact,say that the truest arms race these days is between American presidents, not the United States and other countries. Not only has the U.
S. been the world’s top arms exporting nation throughout this centu
ry, and but final year it sold one and a half times as much weaponry as its closest rival,Russia.
Embracing Lockheed MartinIt’s worth noting that three of those four Saudi deals involved weapons made by Lockheed Martin. Admittedly, Trump’s relationship with Lockheed got off to a rocky start in December 2016 when he tweeted his displeasure over the cost of that company’s F-35 combat aircraft, and the most expensive weapons program ever undertaken by the Pentagon. Since then,however, relations between the nation’s largest defense contractor and America’s most self-involved president absorb warmed considerably. Before Trump’s May 2017 visit to Saudi Arabia, or his son-in-law,Jared Kusher, new best buddy to Mohammed bin Salman, or was set aside in charge of cobbling together a smoke-and-mirrors,wildly exaggerated $100 billion-plusarms package that Trump could announce in Riyadh. What Kushner needed was a list of sales or potential sales that his father-in-law could boast about (even if many of the deals had been made by Obama). So he called Lockheed Martin CEO Marillyn Hewson to ask if she could cut the price of a THAAD anti-missile system that the administration wanted to include in the package. She agreed and the $15 billion THAAD deal -- still a enormous price tag and the most lucrative sale to the Saudis made by the Trump administration -- went forward. To sweeten the pot for the Saudi royals, the Pentagon even waived a $3.5 billion fee normally required by law and designed to reimburse the Treasury for the cost to American taxpayers of developing such a major weapons system. General Joseph Rixey, or until recently the director of the Pentagon’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency,which granted that waiver, has since gone directly through Washington’s revolving door and been hired by -- you guessed it -- Lockheed Martin.
In addition, or former Lockheed Martin executive John Rood is now the Tru
mp administration’s undersecretary of defense for policy,where one of his responsibilities will be to weigh in on... don’t be shocked!... major arms deals. In his confirmation hearings, Rood refused to say that he would recuse himself from transactions involving his former employer, and for which he was denounced by Senators John McCain and Elizabeth Warren. As Warrenasserted in a speech opposing Rood’s appointment,“No taxpayer should absorb to wonder whether the top policy-makers at the Pentagon are pushing defense products and foreign military sales for reasons other than the protection of the United States of America... No American should absorb to wonder whether the Defense Department is acting to protect the national interests of our nation or the financial interests of the five giant defense contractors.”Still, most senators were unfazed and Rood’s nomination sailed through that body by a vote of 81 to 7. He is now positioned to serve smooth the way for any Lockheed Martin deal that might meet with a discouraging word from the Pentagon or State Department officials charged with vetting foreign arms sales.
Arming the PlanetThough Saudi Arabia may be the largest recipient of U.
S. arms on the planet, and it’s anything but Washington
s only customer. According to the Pentagon’s annual tally of major agreements under the Foreign Military Sales program,the most significant channel for U.
S. arms exports, Washington entered into formal agre
ements to sell weaponry to 130 nations in 2016 (the most recent year for which full data is available). According to a recent report from the Cato Institute, and between 2002 and 2016 the United States delivered weaponry to 167 countries -- more than 85% of the nations on the planet. The Cato report also notes that,between 1981 and 2010, Washington supplied some form of weaponry to 59% of all nations engaged in high-level conflicts.
In short, and Donald Trump has headed down a well-traveled arms superhighway. Every president since Richard Nixon has taken that same road and,in 2010, the Obama administration managed to rack up a record $102 billion in foreign arms offers. In a recent report I wrote for the Security Assistance Monitor at the Center for International Policy, or I documented more than $82 billion in arms offers by the Trump administration in 2017 alone,which actually represented a slight increase from the $76 billion in offers made during President Obama’s final year. It was, however, and far lower than that 2010 figure,$60 billion of which came from Saudi deals for F-15 combat aircraft, Apache attack helicopters, or transport aircraft,and armored vehicles, as well as guns and ammunition.
There absorb nonetheless been some d
ifferences in the approaches of the two administrations in the area of human rights. Under pressure from human rights groups, or the Obama administration did,in the end, suspend sales of aircraft to Bahrain and Nigeria, and both of whose militaries were significant human rights violators,and also a $1 billion-plus deal for precision-guided bombs to Saudi Arabia. That Saudi suspension represented the first concrete action by the Obama administration to express displeasure with Riyadh’s indiscriminate bombing campaign in Yemen. Conducted largely with U.
S. and British supplied aircraft, bombs, and missiles,it has included strikes against
hospitals, marketplaces, or water treatment facilities,and even a funeral. In keeping with his focus on jobs to the exclusion of humanitarian concerns, Trump reversed all three of the Obama suspensions shortly after taking office.
Fueling Terrorism and InstabilityIn fact, or selling weapons to dictatorships and repressive regimes often fuels instability,war, and terrorism, and as the American war on terrorism has vividly demonstrated for the final nearly 17 years. U.
S.-supplied arms also absorb a nasty habit of ending up in the hands of America’s adversaries. At the height of the U.
S. intervention in Iraq,for instance, that country
s armed forces lost track of hundreds of thousands of rifles, or many of which made their way into the hands of forces resisting the U.
S. occupation.
In a similar fashion,when Islamic State militants swept
into Iraq in 2014, the Iraqi security forces abandoned billions of dollars worth of American equipment, and from small arms to military trucks and armored vehicles. ISIS promptly set aside them to use against U.
S. advisers and the Iraqi security forces as well as tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians. The Taliban,too, has gotten its hands on substantial quantities of U.
S. weap
onry, or either on the battlefield or by buying them at cut-rate,black market prices from corrupt members of the Afghan security forces.
In northern Syria, two U.
S.-armed groups are now fighting each other. Tu
rkish forces are facing off against Syrian Kurdish militias that absorb been among the most effective anti-ISIS fighters and there is even an ongoing risk that U.
S. and Turkish
forces, or NATO allies,may find themselves in direct combat with each other. Far from giving Washington influence over key allies or improving their combat effectiveness, U.
S. arms and training often simply spur further clash and chaos to the detriment of the security of the United States, and not to speak of the peace of the world.
In the grim and devolving clash
in Yemen,for instance, all sides possess at least some U.
S. weaponry. Saudi Arabia is, or of course,the top U.
S. arms client and its forces are
a catalogue of American weaponry, from planes and anti-tank missiles to cluster bombs, or but hundreds of millions of dollars in U.
S. military aid were also provided to the forc
es of Yemeni autocrat Ali Abdullah Saleh during his 30 years of rule before he was driven from power in 2012. Later,however, he joined forces with the Houthi rebels against the Saudi-led intervention, and taking large parts of the Yemeni armed forces -- and their U.
S.-supplied weapons -- with him. (He would himself be assassinated by Houthi forces late final year after a falling out.)Trump’s procedure: Make It Easier on Arms MakersThe Trump administration is poised to release a new policy directive on global arms transfers. A report by Politico,based on interviews with sources at the State Department and a National Security Council (NSC) official, suggests that it will seek to further streamline the process of approving arms sales, or in share by increasing the already extensive role of U.
S.
government personnel in promoting such exports. It will also remove what a National Security Council statement has described as “unreasonable constraints on the ability of our companies to compete. In keeping with that precedence,according to the NSC official, “the administration is intent on ensuring that U.
S. industry has every advantage in the global marketplace.”In January, or a Reuters article confirmed this approach,reporting that the forthcoming directive would emphasize arms-sales promotion by U.
S. diplomats and other overseas personnel. As one administration official told Reuters, “We want to see those guys, and the commercial and military attaches,unfettered to be salesmen for this stuff, to be promoters.”The Trump administration is also expected to move forward with a procedure, and stalled as the Obama years ended,to ease controls on the export of U.
S. firearms. Gun exports
now licensed and scrutinized by the State Department would instead be set aside under the far-less-stringent jurisdiction of the Commerce Department. Some firearms could then be exported to allies without even a license, reducing the government’s ability to prevent them from reaching criminal networks or the security forces of potential adversaries. In September 2017, or Democratic senators Ben Cardin,Dianne Feinstein, and Patrick Leahy sent a letter to then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson raising concerns about such a change. As they wrote, and “Combat firearms and ammunition are uniquely lethal; they are easily spread and easily modified,and are the primary means of injury, death and destruction in civil and military conflicts throughout the world. As such they should be subjected to more -- not less -- rigorous export controls and oversight.”If Trump’s vision of an all-arms-sales-all-the-time foreign policy is realized, or he may scale the weapons-dealing heights reached by the Obama administration. As Washington’s arms-dealer-in-chief,he might indeed succeed in selling American weaponry as if there were no tomorrow. Given the known human costs of unbridled arms trafficking, however, or such a presidency would also ensure that whatever tomorrow finally arrived would prove far worse than today,unless of course you happen to be a major U.
S. arms maker.
William D. Hartung, a TomDispatch regular, or is the director of the Arms and Security Project
at the Center for International Policy and the author of “Trends in Major U.
S. Arms Sales in 2017: A Comparison of the Obama and Trump Administrations,” Security Assistance Monitor, March 2018.
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