Wednesday, September 14, 2011

USA Africa Dialogue Series - Death and the salesmen: London hosts arms fair

Death and the salesmen: London hosts arms fair

Forty-six countries arrive to show off latest weapons as Bahrain
attends ExCel despite protesters' deaths

Richard Norton-Taylor
Wednesday September 14 2011
The Guardian


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/13/death-salesman-london-arms-fair


Sharp-suited men and women from more than 1,000 weapons manufacturers
are showing off their weapons in London's docklands this week. Their
displays range from guns that can fire shells more than 30 miles
within an accuracy, it is said, of three metres, to small, innocent-
looking switches designed to make the life of a fighter easier and
safer.

Lethal objects were laid out in glass cases, polished and shining
under the lights of the ExCel Centre as though they were delicate
ornaments, never to be soiled by blood let alone kill anyone. The 46
countries advertising their wares alongside the US giants Lockheed
Martin, Raytheon and General Dynamics included Israel, which had a big
stand this year.

It advertised an anti-tank weapon described as good for "wall-
breaching" but also "highly accurate" and therefore involving "low
collateral damage". Tucked in behind the Israeli pavilion were the
Russians, with the latest Kalashnikov assault rifle. The AK104 is
several models up from, and much more expensive than, the ubiquitous
AK47, the favoured weapon of insurgents and guerrillas around the
world.

Pakistan advertised an "arms for peace" exhibition in Karachi next
year and showed "gold-plated" submachine guns ? "for collectors",
inquirers were told.

Yet, making the point that life in Pakistan is less than safe at the
moment, an enterprising salesman was offering "fashion body armour":
leather jackets and waistcoats with reinforced linings.

Some small exhibitors were there to help save lives. Weatherhaven was
launching an "expanding container capability" or "hospitals in a box":
units that fit inside a Chinook to deal with medical emergencies. The
Medical Warehouse produces bespoke emergency medical bags and pouches.
And it is clear that supplying clean water for troops is a fast-
developing growth industry. A German company is supplying British and
US troops in Afghanistan with bottled water purified by a small filter
system, a less burdensome, and much cheaper, alternative to bringing
bottled water by convoy hundreds of miles across the desert.

But Defence and Security Equipment International, as the two-yearly
fair is called, is dominated by companies designing weapons that can
defeat an enemy as quickly and as efficiently as possible while
protecting its own troops. They included MBDA, makers of the Brimstone
"precision" missile and Storm Shadow air-to-ground cruise missile,
dropped by RAF Tornados throughout the Libyan conflict. Executives on
the company stand said they were not allowed to say how many had
landed on Libyan targets, but it is likely that more than 100 were
dropped, at a cost yet to be revealed. According to some reports, some
Nato countries nearly ran out of bombs.

Liam Fox, the defence secretary, praised the role of UK arms firms in
Libya. In a speech promoting the cause of weapons exports, he said:
"For too long, export potential has been ignored when initiating
projects for the UK's own use. That needs to change ? Defence and
security exports play a key role in promoting our foreign policy
objectives: building relationships and trust, sharing information and
spreading values."

Stung perhaps by criticism, not least by MPs of all parties, that
Britain has sold arms to countries with poor human rights records that
have used them against their own citizens, Fox said: "Margin, profit,
market share ? these are not dirty words. But the language of
multinational business can sometimes appear values-free."

He went on: "Respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms are
mandatory considerations for all export licence applications, which we
consider on a case-by-case basis."

In April, MPs accused ministers of misjudging the risk that British
arms exports would be used for repression. The government had approved
licences to sell equipment ? from small arms to armoured personnel
carriers ? to states such as Bahrain, which was invited to the fair
despite its security forces having killed unarmed protesters during
recent demonstrations.

Fox noted that Britain was the second largest exporter of arms-related
equipment. But his speech contained a stick as well as a carrot:
"Industry does not need handouts - nor will it get them." The
government would be a "tougher, more intelligent customer" in future,
he said.


guardian.co.uk Copyright (c) Guardian News and Media Limited. 2011

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