WEAPONS FOR THE WORLD
Exporting Arms in the Reagan Era
By William D. Hartung
THE IRAN/CONTRA scandal exposed a world of secret weapons shipments and
shadowy arms dealers to the public, shredding what was left of the Reagan
administration's credibility and calling into question its vision of how
to conduct foreign policy. The attempt to subvert the will of Congress,
the reliance on people like Iranian intermediary Manucher Ghorbanifar
and Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, and the use of weapons sales to
conduct foreign policy are all grounds for public outrage. Nevertheless,
the scandal accounted for a relatively small portion of the multi-billion
dollar international arms trade. The largest deals have been conducted
in full public view, rubber stamped by the U.S. Congress. The benefits
skimmed off the top by the Ghorbanifars and the Khashoggis pale in comparison
with the billions that General Dynamics, McDonnell Douglas and other large
defense contractors have earned from government sponsored and subsidized
sales under the Pentagon's Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. These
corporations are the real arms traders, and any attempt to restrict the
deadly international traffic in weapons will eventually run up against
their considerable financial and political clout.
The Reagan years have been a boon to the corporate arms merchants. The
administration's strong anti-communist and anti- terrorist rhetoric, along
with its commitment to arming and training anti-communist governments
and rebel movements, have helped create a favorable climate for arms sales.
James Buckley, the conservative who President Reagan put in charge of
arms exports at the State Department, immediately took the message of
the new administration's commitment to deregulate the arms trade to the
most sympathetic audience-the arms manufacturers themselves. In a May
1981 speech to the Aerospace Industries Association at Williamsburg, Virginia,
Buckley attacked the Carter administration's policy of arms transfer restraint
as a "naive" approach which "substituted theology for a healthy sense
of self-preservation." He ridiculed legislative restrictions on arms sales
and aid to countries which violated nuclear non- proliferation safeguards
and internationally accepted standards of human rights as "well-intentioned"
but ineffectual. And, he said, such efforts undercut important allies
like Pakistan and Argentina, whose support in the global confrontation
with communism was essential. Military contractors looking to increase
their exports could not help but leave the meeting feeling that the Reagan
administration would be a strong ally.
The first sign that this pro-export rhetoric would indeed become official
policy came with the release of the July 1981 Presidential Directive on
arms transfer policy. Carter administration controls--some of which had
been quietly shelved in the more conservative second half of the Carter
term--were openly repudiated in the Reagan directive. Ceilings on the
total volume of U.S. arms sales to the Third World, restrictions on being
the first nation to introduce a more advanced level of weaponry into a
region, and the so-called "leprosy letter" which had prevented U.S. government
personnel overseas from actively promoting the sale of U.S. weapons to
host governments were all eliminated in favor of a "case-by-case" approach.
"When in doubt, sell" seemed to be the new motto. The words of the directive
were unequivocal: "The United States... views the transfer of conventional
arms and other defense articles and services as an essential element of
its global defense posture and an indispensable component of its foreign
policy."
It didn't take long for the administration's commitment to its stated
policy to be put to the test. The proposed sale of six advanced Boeing
Airborne Warning and Control Systems (AWACS) radar planes to Saudi Arabia
spurred a pro-Israeli lobby to take exception with Reagan's new policy.
Opponents of the sale argued that the AWACS would allow the Saudi regime
to conduct surveillance of Israel which could be used to mount an air
attack with its expanding Air Force--the Saudis were already in the process
of receiving F-15 fighter planes they had ordered from the United States
in 1978. In the face of a 311 to 11 House of Representatives vote against
the sale and mounting Senate opposition, President Reagan personally took
up the Saudi's case. He lobbied key swing votes in the Senate and was
able to muster enough support to win a 52 to 48 vote in favor, clearing
the way for the sale. Thus was an $8.5 billion weapons deal, and a business
bonanza for Boeing, the manufacturer of the AWACS, snatched from the jaws
of political defeat.
Only much later was it revealed that there was considerably more riding
on the deal than met the eye. As the Iran/Contra scandal broke, a number
of former administration officials involved in the AWACS deal told the
New York Times that U.S. officials had received a pledge from the Saudi
leadership that they would stand ready to provide financial support to
the Nicaraguan contras, the Afghan resistance and other anti-communist
movements as a quid pro quo for Reagan administration persistence in getting
the AWACS deal through Congress. The secret and public uses of arms sales
in the Reagan foreign policy were apparently linked from the beginning.
Neither the public nor the Congress was fully aware of what was being
exchanged.
Another early corporate beneficiary of Reagan's deregulation of the arms
industry was General Dynamics, whose F-16 fighter was offered to Venezuela,
South Korea and Pakistan within the first year of the new guidelines.
The Carter restrictions on introducing more sophisticated weaponry into
regions where it had yet to be deployed had kept F-16s from being offered
for sale to most Third World governments. With the "sophistication barrier"
broken, F-16s have also been offered for sale to Thailand, Indonesia,
Singapore and Bahrain. This seemingly technical policy change has meant
over 100 additional orders and well over $3 billion in additional business
for General Dynamics since 1981.
With spiralling debt, unstable commodity prices and even drought and
famine pressing for the attention and resources of most Third World governments,
it may seem surprising that so many countries are willing and able to
purchase advanced combat aircraft like the F-16 - prices for the F-16
alone range from $20 to $40 million depending on the kind of weaponry
and training included in the package. Military aid and U.S. government
subsidized loans under the Pentagon's Foreign Military Sales program provide
part of the answer: the two forms of assistance combined more than doubled
in the first Reagan term, from $3.2 billion in 1981 to over $6.4 billion
in 1984. Although budgetary pressures pulled this total down to $5.9 billion
in fiscal year 1986, the proportion offered on subsidized terms--direct
aid, "forgiven" loans which never have to be repaid and concessionary
loans with interest rates as low as 5 percent or lengthy "grace periods"
of up to 10 years before repayment begins--has continued to grow steadily.
Subsidized terms accounted for less than 20 percent of all assistance
in 1981, but rose to over 75 percent in 1986. These financial subsidies
quickly find their way back into the coffers of the major arms contractors
when recipient nations spend them on fighter planes, tanks, guided missiles
and other weapons and services. While domestic farmers or students from
low income families have been finding it harder and harder to get government
subsidized loans, dictators in search of the latest in U.S. weapons technology
have had a considerably easier time of it during the Reagan years.
General Dynamics and Boeing have not been the only firms to cash in on
the Reagan arms sales boom, which actually got a running start during
the final year of the Carter term. From 1980 to 1985, nine firms made
$1 billion or more in sales under the Pentagon's Foreign Military Sales
program, while a tenth, Westinghouse, had $992 million in FMS contracts.
From the General Dynamics F-16s used by Israel in its invasion of Lebanon,
to the Westinghouse radar systems being used by Morocco to defend its
illegal efforts to annex the Western Sahara, to the proposed sale of Northrop
F-5 fighters to Honduras, to the Hughes TOW anti-tank missiles that served
as the basis of the arms-for-hostages swap with Iran, these firms have
benefited directly and indirectly from the Reagan policy of war by proxy
and its "supply side" foreign policy centered on arms sales.
Now that world financial conditions and the budget crunch in the United
States have finally begun to slow down exports under the Foreign Military
Sales program, which dropped to $9 billion in fiscal year 1986, the corporate
arms traders will have to work harder to keep their sales figures in the
multi-billion dollar range. The corporate response to a shifting market
will involve pursuing more direct commercial deals, selling more "upgrade
kits," spare parts, and military services, and offering more "offsets"
in the form of transfers of arms production technology and agreements
to steer commercial business to the governments buying their weapons.
It will also entail vigorous lobbying against any attempts to impose stricter
controls on arms exports and in favor of further increases in military
assistance.
The biggest potential thorn in the side of the corporate arms traders
is the Arms Export Reform Act, a bill cosponsored by Rep. Mel Levine,
D-Calif., Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Claiborne Pell,
D-R.I., and Senator Joseph Biden, D- Del. The bill would reverse the current
arms sales oversight process by requiring a vote of approval by both houses
of Congress for any foreign sale of advanced weaponry, including military
aircraft, missiles, artillery, combat helicopters, combat ships and tanks.
NATO allies, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Israel and Egypt would be
exempted from the new, more rigorous approval process. This would mark
a major step forward in congressional responsibility over arms sales.
In the 14 years since a form of legislative veto was first introduced
in 1974, Congress has never directly voted down an arms sale proposed
by the Executive branch, although a number of deals have been scaled down
or withdrawn in the face of overwhelming opposition. The closest calls
have come in proposed deals with Saudi Arabia. In May 1986 both houses
voted down a $354 million package of Sidewinder, Stinger and Harpoon missiles
for Saudi Arabia, but Congress was unable to override President Reagan's
veto when 34 Senators voted to sustain his position. Most of the 50 to
100 major arms sales proposals that pass through congressional review
each year are barely debated, much less voted upon. Passage of the Biden-Pell-Levine
bill would increase public knowledge of and leverage over major arms sales.
Far from "micro-managing" foreign policy, the bill would force members
of Congress to take positions on what have increasingly become the main
vehicles for making foreign policy-arms sales. The pitfalls of letting
the Executive branch go it alone in this field have already been amply
demonstrated in the Iran/Contra scandal. Military contractors are anxious
to head off attempts by Congress to renew congressional oversight of arms
sales. Their trade association and lobbying arm, the American League for
Exports and Security Assistance (ALESA)--which includes major FMS contractors
Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop, Raytheon and United Technologies among its
24 corporate members--has made action aimed to "prevent changes in the
Arms Export Control Act which would require affirmative action for specific
arms transfers" one of its top priorities. Only pressing for more government
subsidies for arms exports rates higher. If the Biden-Pell- Levine approach
garners enough support that passage is a practical possibility, the corporate
arms traders and the Pentagon can be expected to resort to good old fashioned
pork barrel politics. The Pentagon has already commissioned several studies
which assert that foreign military sales support 265,000 to 371,000 jobs
in the United States. While the figures may be exaggerated, the fact remains
that in regions where major contractors dominate the employment market--as
in St. Louis (McDonnell Douglas), Fort Worth (General Dynamics), Seattle
(Boeing) and Hartford, Connecticut (United Technologies)-- members of
Congress will be hard pressed to turn down major arms sales which might
help keep local production lines open in a period of level or declining
Pentagon procurement.
Until such time as the public takes a greater interest in the arms trade
which is being carried out in their name and subsidized by their tax dollars,
the corporate arms merchants will probably continue to find ways to prosper
from the regional wars and local arms races which continue to proliferate
throughout the Third World . It may be a long time before they have as
good a friend and ally in the White House as they have had in Ronald Reagan,
but it remains to be seen whether all the talk of "peace and prosperity,"
"leadership," and "character" in the 1988 presidential campaigns will
come to encompass putting some long overdue controls on the international
arms trade.
William D. Hartung is a fellow with the Council
on Economic Priorities.
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