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- <text id=90TT0800>
- <title>
- Apr. 02, 1990: The Arms Merchants' Dilemma
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 02, 1990 Nixon Memoirs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 29
- CZECHOSLOVAKIA
- The Arms Merchants' Dilemma
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Havel tightens controls on the lethal explosive Semtex, but what
- about the rest of Prague's thriving weapons market?
- </p>
- <p>By Kenneth W. Banta/Prague
- </p>
- <p> In a secluded wood 55 miles east of Prague, smoking chimneys
- rise above the East Bohemian Chemical Enterprise. A large
- complex of ramshackle sheds and concrete buildings, the factory
- looks unprepossessing enough. But a "special production unit"
- is mixing batches of one of Czechoslovakia's most lethal
- exports: Semtex, the odorless, colorless plastic explosive of
- choice for terrorists the world over.
- </p>
- <p> Semtex's most famous target was Pan Am Flight 103, which
- exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, in December 1988, killing
- all 259 on board and eleven people on the ground. Scottish
- officials have concluded that a terrorist group called the
- Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command
- blew up the plane by concealing Semtex in a radio-cassette
- player and smuggling it aboard in a suitcase. Semtex is also
- thought to have been used to destroy a French DC-10 over the
- Sahara last September, killing 170 people. While visiting
- London last week, President Vaclav Havel acknowledged that his
- Communist predecessors sold Libya alone 1,000 tons of the
- stuff. Said Havel: "If you consider that it takes 200 g [6 oz.]
- to blow up an aircraft, this means world terrorism has enough
- Semtex to last for 150 years."
- </p>
- <p> Other plants in Czechoslovakia are engaged in similar
- businesses, producing all manner of weaponry and components--hand grenades, automatic rifles, tanks, armored personnel
- carriers--almost all for export. In a high-security compound
- outside the industrial city of Brno, trainees from such
- countries as Angola, South Yemen and the People's Republic of
- the Congo are being drilled in what officials describe as
- "police methodology and criminology," a euphemism for
- paramilitary training.
- </p>
- <p> In the four months since they came to power, Havel and his
- democratically inclined colleagues have practically erased
- communism from political life. They are finding it far harder,
- however, to do away with another legacy: Czechoslovakia's
- extensive role as arms supplier to Communist regimes,
- liberation movements and outright terrorists. Says an Interior
- Ministry official: "The Communists may be gone, but they have
- locked us into a web of arms deals and even terrorism that may
- be impossible to escape."
- </p>
- <p> Over the past 15 years, arms exports outside the Warsaw Pact
- have earned Czechoslovakia an average of $850 million annually
- in cash or such essential raw materials as oil and mineral
- ores; additional revenues flow in from the sale of ammunition.
- All told, the arms trade accounts for a quarter to a half of
- Czechoslovakia's foreign exchange earnings. Havel said last
- week his country would continue to sell arms to democracies but
- not to totalitarian regimes. However, cautions Foreign Ministry
- spokesman Lubos Dobrovsky, "we have existing obligations that
- we must honor."
- </p>
- <p> Current clients include India, China, Cuba, Vietnam, Syria,
- Iran and, biggest of all, Muammar Gaddafi's Libya. A
- large-scale purchaser on its own, Libya has long been known to
- be a conduit for Czechoslovak-made arms to such terrorist
- groups as Abu Nidal's Fatah Revolutionary Council, Italy's Red
- Brigades and the Irish Republican Army.
- </p>
- <p> Czechoslovakia's niche in the arms trade has been dependent
- on customers who are too poor to afford Western weapons, which
- are generally of higher quality, and those who for political
- reasons are denied access to them. Thus Prague has done a
- thriving business in exporting the L-39 jet trainer ($1.9
- million apiece) to Ethiopia and other countries; the plane can
- easily be converted into a fighter or fighter-bomber for
- customers unable to pay for Western or Soviet aircraft. The
- lightweight Skorpion machine pistol sells for less than $220,
- the Israeli-made Uzi at least twice that. Czechoslovakia
- annually sells about 500 T-72 tanks, at $250,000 apiece;
- three-fourths have gone to Libya and other Arab clients, the
- balance to China. America's M-1 Abrams tank, by comparison,
- sells for $2.5 million and, under U.S. law, cannot be sold to
- such countries as Libya, Syria or Iran.
- </p>
- <p> To their credit, earlier this year Czechoslovakia's new
- leaders halted exports of Semtex until chemical markers,
- detectable by airport and other security devices, could be
- added to the explosive. The government also claims to have shut
- down its tank plant in the Slovak town of Martin.
- </p>
- <p> While officials pledge to convert most of the country's
- military production capacity to civilian use, industry experts
- in Prague doubt that it can be done. "You can't just turn a
- tank factory into a car factory," says one specialist.
- "Besides, as we try to revive this economy, we'll need all the
- hard currency we can get."
- </p>
- <p> It has evidently been easier for the government to reduce
- other forms of military assistance. According to members of the
- country's Red Berets antiterrorist unit, there were often so
- many clandestine arms buyers in Prague under the old regime
- that the unit spent much of its time guarding hostile factions
- against one another. Today the Communist Party hotel just
- outside the city center, once reputed to be a safe haven for
- terrorists of the I.R.A., the Red Brigades and other European
- groups, is closed. At the Police Academy Foreign Branch, as the
- training camp outside Brno is called, 60 Afghans were sent home
- before Christmas, and there is speculation that the entire
- operation, which once trained up to 600 men at a time, will
- soon be shut down.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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