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- <text id=91TT0550>
- <title>
- Mar. 18, 1991: Choose Your Weapons
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 18, 1991 A Moment To Savor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 58
- ARMAMENTS
- Choose Your Weapons
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Will hope of reducing Middle East arsenals be doomed by a
- shopping spree for arms, especially those showcased in the
- gulf?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Michael Duffy/Washington and
- Jon D. Hull/Jerusalem
- </p>
- <p> Any postwar calculation of power in the Middle East must now
- reckon with two contradictory axioms. One is that most
- countries in the area support some form of regional arms
- control. The other is that they all want billions of dollars'
- worth of additional weapons for themselves. Though the trauma
- of facing down Saddam's war machine made clear the folly of
- Western and Soviet arms sales to Iraq, it also left Arab
- nations and Israel no less apt to conclude that happiness--or at least security--is a warm gun.
- </p>
- <p> As he makes his swing through the Middle East this week,
- U.S. Secretary of State James Baker brings a further
- contradiction with him. In a region that is the most heavily
- armed in the world, the U.S. would like to see smaller arsenals
- on all sides. But Washington is poised to rearm its friends
- heavily, in some cases as the payoff for their membership in
- the alliance against Iraq. It doesn't help matters that Western
- arms dealers are ready to capitalize on a war that sometimes
- seemed like a giant trade show for smart bombs, Patriot missiles
- and F-16s. As the eager buyers reach out to the no less eager
- sellers, the chance for meaningful arms control slips away.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the Bush Administration seems content to discourage
- chemical, biological and nuclear arsenals while assisting the
- conventional buildup. Last week it tightened Commerce
- Department regulations restricting the export of materials that
- could be used to produce chemical and biological weapons and
- missile-delivery systems. The new rules also apply to "dual
- use" chemicals and equipment, which have legitimate commercial
- uses but might serve in making chemical and biological weapons
- as well.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, however, the White House informed Congress
- of its plans to sell advanced weapons worth $1.6 billion to
- Egypt, including 46 F-16 warplanes and 80 air-to-ground
- missiles. The Administration describes the sale as the final
- part of a 10-year series that was an element of the deal in
- which Egypt agreed to the 1978 Camp David peace accords. The
- White House has also submitted a classified report informing
- Congress that it is considering more than $18 billion in new
- military sales to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates,
- Bahrain, Egypt, Israel and Turkey. Saudi Arabia alone would get
- a $10 billion wish list that includes 25 F-15 fighters, 36
- Apache attack helicopters, 2,400 Maverick missiles and 235 M1A1
- tanks. For American defense contractors, these sales promise
- an escape from the gloomy fate spelled out in the budget
- package adopted by Congress last fall, in which U.S. defense
- spending is slated to shrink 25% over the next five years.
- </p>
- <p> Israel is scheduled to receive more than $3 billion in
- military aid from the U.S. this year. Meanwhile, its supporters
- in Congress will be closely watching any sales to Arab
- countries of weapons that might be turned against Tel Aviv or
- Haifa. But the alliance between the U.S. and Arab states during
- the war against Iraq has complicated matters. Last fall Israeli
- officials remained uncharacteristically silent when the U.S.
- provided Saudi Arabia with a multibillion-dollar infusion of
- advanced arms. Though pro-Israel lobbyists do not yet plan to
- oppose the sale to the Saudis, they are beginning to raise
- questions. "The Iraqi military machine no longer exists," says
- one. "Yet we're still willing to sell the same amount of stuff
- to the Saudis."
- </p>
- <p> There are signs that Israel, hard pressed by the cost of
- absorbing hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jewish immigrants,
- is open to arms-limitation proposals that would help keep down
- its military outlays, which have already shrunk about 15% in
- the past three years. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir has
- proposed a regional limitation on "nonconventional" weapons--presumably meaning chemical and biological--as a
- confidence-building measure between Israel and the Arab states.
- But so long as he gives no sign that Israel would bargain away
- its nuclear arsenal, Arab nations are unlikely to agree.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration knows that the U.S. cannot impose
- conventional-arms limitations on its own and that coordinated
- restraint by the major arms-supplying nations is essential. But
- Western defense industries, particularly in Europe, have become
- heavily reliant on exports to finance research and development
- of new weapons systems. France, which once sent a third of its
- weapons exports to Iraq, is seeking new customers. Britain
- hopes to sell Challenger tanks and Tornado aircraft to Saudi
- Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
- </p>
- <p> Though Soviet weapons were the duds of the gulf war, the
- Kremlin is also in the market to make arms sales. During a
- visit to Moscow last week, British Prime Minister John Major
- appealed to Mikhail Gorbachev for his cooperation. The Soviet
- leader is reported to have intimated that he would agree to an
- embargo against Iraq only for as long as Saddam remained in
- power. That may be the best anyone can hope for. Every major
- war in the Middle East has been followed by a major escalation
- in the regional arms race. This time, too, visions of a new
- world order may be no match for business as usual.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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