Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Foreign Sales by U.S. Arms Makers Doubled in a Year

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Foreign Sales by U.S. Arms Makers Doubled in a Year

    Foreign Sales by U.S. Arms Makers Doubled in a Year
    By LESLIE WAYNE

    New York Times, p. B3
    November 11, 2006

    Sales of military weapons by United States contractors to foreign
    governments doubled in the last year, as countries like Pakistan, Australia
    and Greece stepped up purchases of armaments and the United States
    government loosened policies to allow more American weapons to be sold on
    the world market.

    A total of $21 billion in arms sales agreements were signed from September
    2005 to September 2006, compared with $10.6 billion in the previous year,
    according to new data compiled by the Pentagon. Foreign military sales
    agreements have typically ranged from $10 billion to $13 billion a year
    since 2001.

    A number of factors are behind the surge in sales. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the
    Bush administration has used arms sales as a way to reward allies and cement
    international relationships. Middle Eastern countries, flush with oil
    revenues, have become big buyers.

    Countries like India, Pakistan and Indonesia that were once barred from
    buying American weapons have had those bans lifted, and some have placed big
    orders.

    For military contractors, the sales have provided a welcome source of new
    revenue at a time when the Pentagon has indicated that the era of record
    military budgets is ending.

    Because many of the weapons sold overseas are mature products, the profit
    margins to American arms makers are high, since the initial development
    costs have long been recuperated.

    And in the case of some planes, like the F-16 Fighting Falcon fighter jet
    and the C-17 Globemaster cargo plane, foreign military sales are a way to
    keep open production lines that might close for lack of Pentagon orders.

    `There have been a remarkable number of orders placed,' said Howard Rubel,
    an analyst at Jeffries & Company. `It's another arrow in the quiver of
    military contractors.'

    One of the biggest orders was placed by Pakistan, which had been barred from
    buying most American weapons because of its nuclear program. That ban was
    lifted last year and the country placed a $5 billion order for advanced F-16
    jets made by the Lockheed Martin Corporation.

    A similar ban on India was also lifted, opening up a potentially lucrative
    market to American contractors. India is currently looking to buy up to 126
    new fighter jets, and American contractors have been flying to India to show
    off their wares.

    Oil profits are also behind some of the orders. Saudi Arabia said in July
    that it planned to spend $5.8 billion on American weapons to modernize its
    National Guard and will also put in more than $3 billion in orders for Black
    Hawk helicopters, Abrams and Bradley armored land vehicles, new radio
    systems and other weapons.

    In the gulf region, Bahrain, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have filed
    plans to buy Black Hawk helicopters - for a total of $1 billion. Oman plans
    to buy a $48 million anti-tank missile system. The Emirates plans to buy
    rocket artillery equipment and military trucks for $752 million and Bahrain
    will purchase Javelin missiles for $42 million.

    Bahrain alone has accounted for $1 billion in foreign military sales in the
    five years since 9/11.

    `The rise in oil prices has allowed countries like Saudi Arabia and the
    United Arab Emirates to increase their arms purchases dramatically,' said
    William Hartung, director of the arms trade project at the World Policy
    Institute, which is part of the New School in New York.

    For contractors, Mr. Hartung added, these sales `are a welcome windfall, not
    just icing on the cake.'

    These new big gulf region orders, like the Saudi deal, were not included in
    the $21 billion tally for 2006. They will be carried over into the 2007
    tally and are a sign that next year will be as robust as this one.

    `We've got a good start on 2007,' said Lt. Gen. Jeffrey B. Kohler, director
    of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, which manages foreign military
    sales.

    Besides Pakistan and India, since 9/11, bans on arms sales have been lifted
    on Tajikistan, Serbia and Montenegro, Armenia and Azerbaijan as these
    countries have been identified by the State Department as critical allies in
    the war on terror. They have turned into buyers, although on a much smaller
    scale than the big Pakistani or Saudi orders.

    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Tajikistan had no American arms purchases before
    9/11. But as a group, they have bought $32 million in weapons under the
    foreign military sales program, according to statistics from the Center for
    Defense Information.

    Foreign military sales are negotiated directly between the United States and
    other governments and are overseen by the State Department, the Pentagon and
    Congress.

    Other strategically situated countries have also stepped up their purchases.
    Nepal, for instance, bought $1.1 million of American weapons in the full
    decade before 9/11, and $22 million in the five years since.

    Similarly, Yemen, Djibouti and Uzbekistan bought $16.4 million combined in
    the decade before 9/11, and $73 million of American weapons since.

    `Foreign military sales are a good hedge against potential further cuts in
    Pentagon procurement,' said Mark T. Esper, executive vice president for
    defense and international affairs at the Aerospace Industries Association, a
    trade group.

    In a conference call with analysts, Christopher E. Kubasik, chief financial
    officer of Lockheed, estimated that foreign sales account for 15 percent -
    or $5.5 billion - of Lockheed's sales, which were $37 billion in 2005.

    `They're valued customers, and we plan to continue to grow in that area,' he
    said.

    Foreign sales have importance to military contractors beyond the dollar
    value of the contract. Once a country buys a weapon system, it will need to
    continue to buy spare parts or upgrades.

    `In the next couple of years,' said Cai von Rumohr, an analyst with Cowen &
    Company, `foreign sales as a percentage of company revenues will be tracking
    up.'

    Foreign sales can also keep endangered weapons programs alive.

    For instance, when Boeing made some announcements that it might begin to
    close production of its C-17 cargo line, Canada and Australia quickly
    stepped in to place orders: Canada's deal is valued at $1.3 billion and
    Australia's at $2 billion. Orders for the F-16 from Turkey, Greece and
    Pakistan are pumping $11 billion into that program at a time when the Air
    Force is phasing out of it.

    For that reason, the Aerospace Industries Association has been pressing
    Congress to relax rules so more foreign deals can be done outside of
    government scrutiny - an effort that has, so far, been rebuffed in Congress.

    Last month, the industry association, along with representatives from the
    Boeing Company and the Northrop Grumman Corporation, met at the Heritage
    Foundation, a conservative Washington research group, to outline their plans
    to pursue this effort.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/11/busines s/11military.html?ex=1163912400&en=536ae1f1aee f4bce&ei=5070
Working...
X