WASHINGTON (Agencies) -- US government-brokered
overseas arms sales are expected to total about $34
billion in the current
fiscal year, up more than 45 percent from the year before, the Pentagon agency in charge said on Wednesday.
"Our program is growing by leaps and bounds," Jeanne Farmer of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency told an international defense industry conference.
Among the biggest government-to-government buyers in
fiscal 2008, which wraps up at the end of this month, were Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Egypt and Iraq, Farmer said.
Overseas arms sales are a key instrument of US foreign
policy as well as a boon to defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin Corp, Boeing Co, Northrop Grumman Corp, General Dynamics Corp and Raytheon Co.
In
fiscal 2007, such sales totaled $23.3
billion, up from $21
billion in
fiscal 2006, according to the security agency's figures.
Farmer, at the conference known as ComDef 2008, said her agency was playing a growing role in the US-declared global war on terrorism and national security.
The security agency was currently working with 207 countries and had 12,262 "open cases" totaling $274.3
billion as of last month, she said. Open cases include those in which orders have been filled but which could still involve exercise of options among other things.
"In the current
environment, everybody needs everything right now," Farmer said. "We do expect to continue to have large, large sales."
The United States carries out government-to-government
conventional arms transfers through the Defense Department's Foreign Military Sales program, which operates on a no-profit, no-loss basis.
In 2007, the Pentagon notified Congress of more than $39
billion in such
potential sales to 23 countries and regions, including some funded by grant aid.
This year's notifications are expected to be a record high, led by Iraq. Not all notifications result in final sales such as those now being reported for this year. Buyers pay a fee, currently 3.8 percent of the cost of the purchase, to cover the cost of administering the program.
The US government says arms sales strengthen US national security by tightening bilateral defense ties, supporting coalitions and enhancing US ability to operate with foreign militaries.
Critics say booming sales reflect a failure of US
diplomacy and show a need for the United States to rethink how it handles foreign
policy.
"Instead of spending millions or
billions of dollars on weaponry, many US arms customers should be funding education, health, and infrastructure programs that would go much further in improving the long-term
stability of their countries," said Wade Boese, research director of the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan group aimed at curbing the spread of weapons.
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