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Britain is now the second biggest arms dealer in the world just behind the U.S

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Britain is now the second biggest arms dealer in the world


Exclusive: Two-thirds of UK weapons have been sold to Middle Eastern countries since 2010

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Saudi Arabia - which is leading a coalition conducting a bombing campaign in Yemen - has been sold fighter jets and missiles by BritainKhaled Abdullah/Reuters


Britain is now the second biggest arms dealer in the world, official government figures show – with most of the weapons fuelling deadly conflicts in the Middle East.

Since 2010 Britain has also sold arms to 39 of the 51 countries ranked “not free” on the Freedom House "Freedom in the world" report, and 22 of the 30 countries on the UK Government’s own human rights watch list.

A full two-thirds of UK weapons over this period were sold to Middle Eastern countries, where instability has fed into increased risk of terror threats to Britain and across the West.

Meanwhile statistics collated by UK Trade and Investment, a government body that promotes British exports abroad, show the UK has sold more arms than Russia, China, or France on average over the last 10 years. Only the United States is a bigger exporter.

“The UK is one of the world’s most successful defence exporters, averaging second place in the global rankings on a rolling ten-year basis, making it Europe’s leading defence exporter in the period,” the body boasted in a report released this summer.

Ministers, who must sign-off all arms export licences, say the current system is robust and that they have revoked permission to export defence equipment in the past – for example in Russia and Ukraine.

But the Government has also ignored calls to stop selling weapons to repressive regimes, including Saudi Arabia, which has been accused by UN bodies of potentially committing war crimes in its military operation in Yemen against Houthi rebels.

Both the European Parliament and the House of Commons International Development Committee have called for exports to the autocracy to stop, but the Government says it has not seen evidence of Saudi war crimes.


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David Cameron on arms trading with Saudi Arabia

The Saudi-led coalition has bombed multiple international hospitals run by the charity Médecins Sans Frontières, as well as schools and wedding parties. Food factories have also been hit, as Yemen faces severe food shortages. Human rights groups say there is evidence civilian targets are being deliberately hit. The coalition has opened investigations into a number of incidents and has repeatedly claimed in statements that the coalition "is committed to full respect for international humanitarian law in the conduct of our operations in Yemen".

A joint analysis conducted by the Independent and Campaign Against the Arms Trade found £10bn in arms licences were issued 2010-2015 to regimes designated “unfree” by Freedom House, including China, Oman, Turkmenistan and UAE.

Meanwhile £7.9bn worth of arms were sold to countries on the “human rights priority countries” list, which is maintained by the Foreign Office and includes countries judged by the FCO to have “the worst, or greatest number of, human rights violations”.

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Only the United States is a bigger arms exporter than Britain

Customers on this list included Saudi Arabia, which was sold bombs, missiles, and fighter jets, Israel, which was sold drone components and targeting equipment, and Bahrain, which was sold machine guns.

Assault rifles and pistols were sent to the Maldives, while Turkmenistan was sold guns and ammunition.

Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms Trade warned that the dependence of British exporters on unsavory regimes could make the UK less likely to intervene against human rights violators.

“These terrible figures expose the hypocrisy at the heart of UK foreign policy. The government is always telling us that it acts to promote human rights and democracy, but it is arming and supporting some of the most repressive regimes in the world. The impact of UK arms sales is clear in Yemen, where British fighter jets and bombs have been central to the Saudi-led destruction,” he told The Independent.

“These regimes aren't just buying weapons, they're also buying political support and legitimacy. How likely is the UK to act against human rights violations in these countries when it is also profiting from them?

“There is no such thing as arms control in a war zone and there is no way of knowing how these weapons will be used. The fact that so many weapons were sold to Russia and Libya is a reminder that the shelf-life of weapons is often longer than the governments and situations they were sold to.”

A Government spokesperson said its approach to arms export control was “sufficiently tough”.

“The Government takes its arms export control responsibilities very seriously and operates one of the most robust regimes in the world. We rigorously examine every brokering application on a pre-licensing case-by-case basis against the Consolidated EU and National Arms Export Licensing Criteria.

“Export licensing requires us to consider how the equipment will be used by the end-user and risks around human rights abuses are a key part of our assessment. We consider this approach to be sufficiently tough but where there is evidence of a need for further action we have the powers to do so under existing legislation”.


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...iggest-arms-dealer-in-the-world-a7225351.html


I love the way these human rights advocates and leftist like to cry foul about our weapon sales, but you hardly hear them say such things when it comes to other non western countries like Russia or even China. Seems it's only U.S/U.K that sell evil weapons, while other non-western countries sell flowers.:lol: Busness is busines. If we dnt sell, other will sell. changes NOTHING whatsoever, only these foolish leftists will think otherwise. lol. @waz , @Steve781 , @Hamartia Antidote , @Blue Marlin , @Arefin007 , @Kaptaan , et al.
 
Britain is now the second biggest arms dealer in the world



I love the way these human rights advocates and leftist like to cry foul about our weapon sales, but you hardly hear them say such things when it comes to other non western countries like Russia or even China.

Better for us to keep our industries afloat by having some of the expensive R&D money paid back by foreign sales since those same liberals complain about the high cost of funding.
 
Better for us to keep our industries afloat by having some of the expensive R&D money paid back by foreign sales since those same liberals complain about the high cost of funding.
These idiots are actually our biggest threat. They will complain about unemployment if workers are laid off, they will complain about exports when our defence companies export these equipment as well. This idiots will always complain, yet they have no solution . Wanna eat their cake and have it. lol
 
Busness is busines. If we dnt sell, other will sell. changes NOTHING whatsoever, only these foolish leftists will think otherwise. lol.



That's what drug dealers always say when being interviewed. Can't blame them though... money make the world go round. :enjoy:
 
These idiots are actually our biggest threat. They will complain about unemployment if workers are laid off, they will complain about exports when our defence companies export these equipment as well. This idiots will always complain, yet they have no solution . Wanna eat their cake and have it. lol


Same for our Leftists scum
 
That's what drug dealers always say when being interviewed. Can't blame them though... money make the world go round. :enjoy:
No, it's not the case here. Other powers are already selling arms to all these countries we are selling to. The only difference is that we sell much more than them. If we don't sell of course these powers will fill in the vacuum. It's normal, I can't blame them. It's business.
You think Russia or China will refuse to sell weapons to any country for whatever reason? Lol.
They will be more than happy if we stopped our arms sales.

Same for our Leftists scum
Lol don't mind this dumb leftists. For them to be satisfied every country in the world will have to stop producing weapons/arms. Countries will unite under one utopian equality system.......yes a DREAM WORLD:rofl::angel:.
 
Simple demand and supply and if you don't provide, someone else will. Arms is massive business and looks like the UK's a dark horse!
 
Is Eurofighter made in UK? Is Eurofighter only British product ?
 
I would like to know what type of arms they sold?
 
arms ? damn make something which bring peace and benefit humanity sir
 
No, it's not the case here. Other powers are already selling arms to all these countries we are selling to. The only difference is that we sell much more than them. If we don't sell of course these powers will fill in the vacuum. It's normal, I can't blame them. It's business.
You think Russia or China will refuse to sell weapons to any country for whatever reason? Lol.
They will be more than happy if we stopped our arms sales.


I didn't say it's not normal to do it or that it's something wrong... of course that someone else will do it if you don't and I am not blaming anyone- it's just business. I am just saying that it's the same with selling drugs. It's the same mentality- selling something that we know is killing a lot of people and destroying their lives but money are pretty good so who cares, right.

If you are not dealing it someone else will do it instead of you. If you have a better product you will have more customers. Those who can't buy the best one will buy a cheaper version. Bribing and connections with the right people can take you far. Most of these stuff are not being learned in business schools but that's how it all works. :D
 
this will only increase after brexit... brits wont be bound by EU rules and will sell weapons left right and center... tony blair can have another career here..
 
Britain is now the second biggest arms dealer in the world
Exclusive: Two-thirds of UK weapons have been sold to Middle Eastern countries since 2010

SIPRI TIV of arms exports from all, 2015
Generated: 05 September 2016
Figures are SIPRI Trend Indicator Values (TIVs) expressed in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
A '0' indicates that the value of deliveries is less than US$0.5m
For more information, see http://www.sipri.org/databases/armstransfers/background

2015 trend-indicator value (TIV)
Total = 28626 US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
  1. United States 10484
  2. Russia 5483
  3. Germany (FRG) 2049
  4. France 2013
  5. China 1966
  6. Spain 1279
  7. United Kingdom 1214 (4.24%)
  8. Israel 710
  9. Italy 570
  10. Netherlands 444
  11. Switzerland 369
  12. Ukraine 323
  13. Canada 312
  14. Turkey 291
  15. Sweden 186
  16. Norway 155
  17. Czech Republic 120
  18. Australia 113
  19. South Korea 105
  20. UAE 63
  21. Singapore 48
  22. Brazil 41
  23. South Africa 39
  24. Uzbekistan 34
  25. India 33
  26. Unknown country 23
  27. Egypt 22
  28. Serbia 19
  29. Jordan 18
  30. Finland 16
  31. Denmark 15
  32. Austria 14
  33. Belarus 14
  34. Poland 14
  35. New Zealand 7
  36. Portugal 7
  37. Malta 5
  38. Indonesia 4
  39. Taiwan (ROC) 4
  40. Bahamas 0
  41. Estonia 0
  42. Belgium
  43. Bulgaria
  44. Chile
  45. Ecuador
  46. Iran
  47. Ireland
  48. North Korea
  49. Romania
  50. Slovakia
TIV of arms exports from all, 2010-2015
Generated: 05 September 2016
Figures are SIPRI Trend Indicator Values (TIVs) expressed in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
A '0' indicates that the value of deliveries is less than US$0.5m
For more information, see http://www.sipri.org/databases/armstransfers/background

2010-2015 trend-indicator value (TIV)
Total = 168747 US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
  1. United States 55006
  2. Russia 42404
  3. China 9943
  4. Germany (FRG) 9467
  5. France 8932
  6. United Kingdom 7627 (4.52%)
  7. Spain 5310
  8. Italy 4360
  9. Ukraine 4156
  10. Israel 3280
  11. Netherlands 3180
  12. Sweden 2753
  13. Canada 1734
  14. Switzerland 1678
  15. South Korea 1249
  16. Turkey 928
  17. Norway 872
  18. South Africa 683
  19. Belarus 612
  20. Australia 561
  21. Uzbekistan 452
  22. Finland 389
  23. Brazil 339
  24. Jordan 290
  25. Poland 240
  26. Romania 220
  27. Czech Republic 214
  28. Belgium 207
  29. Iran 206
  30. Austria 171
  31. Singapore 164
  32. UAE 142
  33. Unknown country 108
  34. Denmark 103
  35. Serbia 103
  36. India 102
  37. Ireland 90
  38. New Zealand 82
  39. Saudi Arabia 64
  40. Bulgaria 41
  41. Hungary 41
  42. Libya 28
  43. Portugal 25
  44. Brunei 24
  45. Egypt 22
  46. Chile 20
  47. Syria 20
  48. Montenegro 18
  49. Bosnia-Herzegovina 17
  50. Indonesia 12
  51. Moldova 11
  52. Sudan 11
  53. Slovakia 10
  54. Botswana 8
  55. Ecuador 6
  56. Taiwan (ROC) 6
  57. Malta 5
  58. Argentina 1
  59. North Korea 1
  60. Albania 0
  61. Bahamas 0
  62. Estonia 0

BUT WHO IS BUYING?

TIV of arms exports to all, 2014-2015
Generated: 05 September 2016
Figures are SIPRI Trend Indicator Values (TIVs) expressed in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
A '0' indicates that the value of deliveries is less than US$0.5m
For more information, see http://www.sipri.org/databases/armstransfers/background

2015 trend-indicator value (TIV)
Total 28626 in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices
  1. Saudi Arabia 3161 (11.04%)
  2. India 3078 (10.75%)
  3. Australia 1574
  4. Egypt 1475
  5. UAE 1289
  6. Iraq 1215 (4.24%)
  7. China 1214
  8. Viet Nam 870
  9. Greece 762
  10. Pakistan 735
  11. Indonesia 683
  12. Taiwan (ROC) 681
  13. Qatar 655
  14. Bangladesh 653
  15. Algeria 636
  16. Israel 617
  17. Italy 596
  18. United States 565
  19. Mexico 500
  20. Turkey 448
  21. Kazakhstan 419
  22. Canada 395
  23. United Kingdom 382
  24. Kuwait 366
  25. Myanmar 320
  26. Japan 310
  27. Brazil 289
  28. Azerbaijan 285
  29. South Korea 245
  30. Finland 228
  31. Colombia 215
  32. Jordan 198
  33. Malaysia 190
  34. Nigeria 188
  35. Thailand 185
  36. Peru 169
  37. Belarus 164
  38. Venezuela 162
  39. Philippines 158
  40. Spain 153
  41. Oman 148
  42. Norway 143
  43. Poland 131
  44. Turkmenistan 122
  45. Chile 114
  46. Germany (FRG) 102
  47. Singapore 98
  48. Russia 88
  49. Netherlands 86
  50. Afghanistan 74
  51. Uzbekistan 62
  52. Angola 61
  53. New Zealand 56
  54. Unknown country 51
  55. Lebanon 50
  56. Belgium 49
  57. Trinidad and Tobago 46
  58. Libya 44
  59. Sweden 43
  60. Morocco 42
  61. Ireland 41
  62. Brunei 36
  63. France 34
  64. Guatemala 33
  65. Kenya 30
  66. Sudan 27
  67. Zambia 24
  68. Argentina 23
  69. Bahamas 22
  70. Estonia 22
  71. Romania 22
  72. South Sudan 22
  73. Lithuania 21
  74. Tanzania 20
  75. Nepal 14
  76. Ghana 13
  77. Iran 13
  78. Mongolia 13
  79. Yemen 12
  80. Croatia 11
  81. Portugal 11
  82. Senegal 11
  83. Ukraine 10
  84. Niger 9
  85. Uruguay 8
  86. Albania 7
  87. Bolivia 7
  88. Djibouti 7
  89. Laos 7
  90. Rwanda 7
  91. Burkina Faso 6
  92. Cote d'Ivoire 6
  93. Honduras 6
  94. Tunisia 6
  95. Tonga 5
  96. United Nations** 4
  97. Bulgaria 3
  98. Gabon 3
  99. Suriname 3
  100. Uganda 3
  101. African Union** 2
  102. Cameroon 2
  103. Jamaica 2
  104. Switzerland 2
  105. Bhutan 1
  106. Burundi 1
  107. Dominican Republic 1
  108. Ecuador 1
  109. Latvia 1
  110. Czech Republic 0
  111. Denmark 0
  112. Somalia 0
  113. Austria
  114. Bahrain
  115. Chad
  116. Congo
  117. Costa Rica
  118. El Salvador
  119. Equatorial Guinea
  120. Ethiopia
  121. Georgia
  122. Guinea
  123. Hamas (Palestine)*
  124. Hungary
  125. Kosovo
  126. Malawi
  127. Malta
  128. Mauritania
  129. Mauritius
  130. Mozambique
  131. Namibia
  132. Papua New Guinea
  133. PRC (Israel/Palestine)*
  134. Seychelles
  135. South Africa
  136. Sri Lanka
  137. Syria
  138. Syria rebels*
  139. Togo
  140. Ukraine Rebels*

TIV of arms exports to all, 2010-2015
Generated: 05 September 2016
Figures are SIPRI Trend Indicator Values (TIVs) expressed in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
A '0' indicates that the value of deliveries is less than US$0.5m
For more information, see http://www.sipri.org/databases/armstransfers/background

2010-2015 trend-indicator value (TIV)
Total = 168747 US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
  1. India 23124 (13.7%)
  2. Saudi Arabia 11002 (6.51%)
  3. China 7726
  4. UAE 7156
  5. Pakistan 6899 (4.09%)
  6. Australia 6711
  7. Turkey 5410 (3.2%)
  8. United States 5220
  9. South Korea 5011
  10. Singapore 4344
  11. Algeria 4328
  12. Viet Nam 4297
  13. Egypt 4115
  14. Iraq 3749 (2.22%)
  15. Indonesia 3313
  16. Morocco 3226
  17. Taiwan (ROC) 3037
  18. Venezuela 2982
  19. United Kingdom 2552
  20. Azerbaijan 2322
  21. Afghanistan 2155
  22. Bangladesh 2117
  23. Japan 2083
  24. Myanmar 2061
  25. Greece 1782
  26. Brazil 1738
  27. Canada 1693
  28. Israel 1551
  29. Oman 1544
  30. Italy 1465
  31. Syria 1413 (0.84%)
  32. Kuwait 1362
  33. Qatar 1330
  34. Thailand 1277
  35. Mexico 1268
  36. Colombia 1173
  37. Spain 1164
  38. Norway 1150
  39. Netherlands 1145
  40. Chile 1142
  41. Portugal 1128
  42. Jordan 1006
  43. Poland 996
  44. Germany (FRG) 852
  45. Finland 848
  46. Kazakhstan 846
  47. Malaysia 806
  48. Sudan 758
  49. Uganda 749
  50. Nigeria 703
  51. Turkmenistan 658
  52. Sweden 586
  53. Russia 578
  54. South Africa 576
  55. Ethiopia 506
  56. Peru 490
  57. Brunei 457
  58. Belarus 449
  59. France 386
  60. Yemen 382
  61. Denmark 345
  62. Tanzania 331
  63. Philippines 327
  64. Ecuador 312
  65. Iran 311
  66. Belgium 282
  67. Libya 277
  68. New Zealand 267
  69. Romania 248
  70. Equatorial Guinea 244
  71. Kenya 234
  72. Bahrain 217
  73. Ghana 207
  74. Cambodia 179
  75. Argentina 177
  76. Lebanon 176
  77. DR Congo 163
  78. Chad 159
  79. Cameroon 157
  80. Unknown country 125
  81. Czech Republic 121
  82. Croatia 117
  83. South Sudan 108
  84. Lithuania 106
  85. Tunisia 100
  86. Angola 94
  87. Trinidad and Tobago 94
  88. Bolivia 93
  89. Mongolia 93
  90. Switzerland 93
  91. Cyprus 91
  92. Zambia 90
  93. Ireland 89
  94. Congo 75
  95. Armenia 73
  96. Namibia 68
  97. Slovenia 68
  98. Dominican Republic 64
  99. Uzbekistan 62
  100. Latvia 61
  101. Estonia 59
  102. Laos 58
  103. Bahamas 51
  104. Iceland 50
  105. Senegal 48
  106. Bulgaria 45
  107. Mauritius 45
  108. Panama 45
  109. Uruguay 44
  110. Mauritania 40
  111. Honduras 39
  112. Rwanda 37
  113. Albania 36
  114. Hungary 36
  115. Guatemala 35
  116. Gabon 33
  117. United Nations** 32
  118. Austria 31
  119. Seychelles 31
  120. Sri Lanka 31
  121. Burkina Faso 30
  122. Djibouti 29
  123. Malta 27
  124. Niger 25
  125. Ukraine Rebels* 24
  126. Benin 22
  127. El Salvador 22
  128. NATO** 22
  129. Nepal 21
  130. Togo 21
  131. Hezbollah (Lebanon)* 20
  132. Mozambique 20
  133. Botswana 18
  134. Paraguay 18
  135. Timor-Leste 18
  136. Serbia 16
  137. Slovakia 16
  138. Guinea 14
  139. Mali 14
  140. Cote d'Ivoire 11
  141. Ukraine 11
  142. Cape Verde 10
  143. Maldives 9
  144. Suriname 9
  145. Burundi 8
  146. Georgia 8
  147. Luxembourg 8
  148. Central African Republic 7
  149. Palestine 6
  150. Malawi 5
  151. Tonga 5
  152. African Union** 4
  153. Hamas (Palestine)* 3
  154. Jamaica 3
  155. Papua New Guinea 3
  156. Sierra Leone 3
  157. Somalia 3
  158. Tajikistan 3
  159. Costa Rica 2
  160. Syria rebels* 2
  161. Bhutan 1
  162. Comoros 1
  163. Kosovo 1
  164. Macedonia (FYROM) 1
  165. North Korea 1
  166. Madagascar 0
  167. NTC (Libya)* 0
  168. PIJ (Israel/Palestine)* 0
  169. PRC (Israel/Palestine)* 0

AND WHAT WHERE THE BIG TICKET ITEMS? (percent UK in brackets)

2010-2015 trend-indicator value (TIV)
Total = 168747 US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
  1. Aircraft 75332 (5.1%)
  2. Air defence systems 8236 (0%)
  3. Armoured vehicles 19622 (0.1%)
  4. Artillery 2945 (20.6%)
  5. Engines 7699 (7.1%)
  6. Missiles 20251 (4.5%)
  7. Naval weapons 937 (0%)
  8. Other 1460 (14.1%)
  9. Satellites 100 (0%)
  10. Sensors 9414 (1%)
  11. Ships 22751 (6.2%)
Total 168747 (4.5%)
 
Last edited:
What did UK deliver to Middle East 2010-2015
http://armstrade.sipri.org/armstrade/page/trade_register.php

Afghanistan
Mi-8MT/Mi-17 Transport helicopter 2009 2010 2 Second-hand Mi-17 version bought by UK for 'Project Curium' training of Afghan pilots in UK and donated to Afghanistan after end of programme
Jordan
AT-105 Saxon APC 2009 2010 12 Second-hand
Kuwait
RMTS IFV turret 2007 2010-2011 (10) For Desert Chameleon IFV from USA
Oman
Al Shamikh Frigate 2007 2013-2014 3 $700 m 'Khareef' programme
Hawk-100 Trainer/combat ac 2012 8 Part of GBP2.5 b ($4 b) deal; Hawk-166 (Hawk AJT) version; delivery 2017
Typhoon Block-20 FGA aircraft 2012 12 Part of GBP2.5 b ($4 b) deal; Typhoon Block-30N (Tranche-3A) version; delivery 2017
Saudi Arabia
Typhoon Block-20 FGA aircraft 2007 2015 10 (24) Part of GBP4.4 b deal (part of up to GBP20 b 'Project Salam'); Typhoon Block-25C (Tranche-3A) version
Typhoon Block-8 FGA aircraft 2007 2009-2015 (48) Part of GBP4.4 b deal (part of up to GBP20 b 'Project Salam'); Typhoon Bloch-8BC, Block-8C, Block-9C, Block-10C, Block-11C and Block-15C (Typhoon Tranche-2) versions
Air refuel system Air refuel system 2008 2011-2012 (3) For 3 A-330 MRTT tanker/transport aircraft from Spain
Brimstone ASM (2008) 2011-2014 (1000) For Tornado combat aircraft
Air refuel system Air refuel system 2009 2014-2015 (3) For 3 A-330 MRTT tanker/transport aircraft from Spain
Storm Shadow/SCALP ASM (2009) 2011-2013 (350) For modernized Tornado combat aircraft
Paveway Guided bomb 2013 2015 (2400) GBP150 m ($250 m) deal; Paveway-4 version; for Typhoon and modernized Tornado combat aircraft
Storm Shadow/SCALP ASM 2013 (100) For Tornado and/or Typhoon combat aircraft
Meteor BVRAAM (2014) (?) EUR1 b deal; for Typhoon combat aircraft
Hawk-100 Trainer/combat ac 2015 (22) Hawk-165 (Hawk AJT) version
Somalia
AT-105 Saxon APC (2012) 2013 (25) Second-hand; aid; Saxon Patrol version; delivered via Djibouti
Turkey
Rapier-2 SAM 1999 2002-2010 (840) $130-150 m deal; delivery 2002-2010
Type-2093 MCM sonar 1999 2005-2010 6 For 6 Frankenthal (Aydin) MCM ships from FRG
UAE
Air refuel system Air refuel system 2008 2013 3 For 3 A-330 MRTT tanker/transport aircraft from SpainTrent Turbofan 2008 2013 6 For 3 A-330 MRTT tanker/transport aircraft from Spain; Trent-772B version
 
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