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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Arms bazaar: "Peacekeeping 93"
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.091510.18023@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 09:15:10 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 91
-
- The ACTivist Volume 9 #1, January 1993.
-
- The ACTivist is published monthly by the ACT for Disarmament
- Coalition, 736 Bathurst St., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2R4, phone
- 416-531-6154, fax 416-531-5850, e-mail web:act. Hard copy
- subscriptions are available with a donation of $10 or more to ACT for
- Disarmament. Reprint freely, but please credit us (and send us a copy!)
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 129.5 **/
- ** Written 11:42 pm Jan 9, 1993 by web:act in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- ARMX 93: NEW NAMES FOR KILLING
-
- As more details become available about 1993's version of the ARMX
- arms sales fair -- now billing itself as 'Peacekeeping 93' -- it is
- increasingly clear that the line between peacekeeping and outright
- war is, at least in the minds of the Canadian military industry, very
- thinly drawn.
-
- This is evident first of all from the material sent by ARMX organizers
- Baxter Publishing to potential exhibitors, stating that future
- 'peacekeeping' missions can be "expected to reflect the more
- interventionist temper of the international community, accepting the
- risk of having to use force to achieve the objectives of the mission's
- mandate. Peacekeeping forces involved in these will have to be more
- heavily equipped, to fight if necessary, and may include air and naval
- combat missions as well."
-
- This, in fact, sounds very much like conventional warfare; a
- suspicion greatly reinforced by a look at Baxter's list of companies
- interested in exhibiting at 'Peacekeeping 93.' The line-up is
- remarkably similar to that of ARMX 89, including ten of Canada's
- top military contractors -- such notorious merchants of death as
- Spar Aerospace and Pratt & Whitney Canada. In fact, retired
- Brig.-Gen. Al Geddry, the organizer of the show, admitted that all
- previous Canadian exhibitors had been invited to return.
-
- Ken Epps of Project Ploughshares notes that some companies on
- the list manufacture only one product, which would be difficult to
- include under any definition of 'peacekeeping' -- Oerlikon Aerospace,
- for instance, which specializes in air defence anti-tank weapons.
-
- We can wonder whether companies like CAE Electronics, General
- Motors and McDonnell Douglas will refrain from exhibiting
- merchandise which has mostly aggressive uses, or whether Pratt &
- Whitney (notorious for selling helicopter engines to every single
- military dictatorship outside the Warsaw Pact) will take steps to
- ensure that their hardware is used only in peacekeeping missions.
-
- Indeed, it is valid to question the sort of 'peacekeeping' that
- requires the purchase of large quantities of killing equipment -- rifles,
- tanks, helicopter gunships, and so on -- and which apparently requires
- the involvement of no civilian products or skills whatsoever.
-
- The list of foreign exhibitors at 'Peacekeeping 93' is also interesting.
- It is true that a few countries have been refused participation --
- ex-Yugoslavia (apparently still considered by ARMX organizers to
- be one country), Libya, South Africa, Israel, Iraq, Haiti, Spain, Iran
- and Jordan -- the acceptable enemies of the moment, though the
- barring of Israel is a surprise, and the barring of Spain is pretty
- much inexplicable. This has been compensated for, however, by
- inviting exhibitors from the formerly excluded Warsaw Pact countries.
- The list of former Warsaw Pact exhibitors includes Romtechnica State
- Establishment of Romania -- not a country noted for its respect for
- human rights. Five companies may exhibit from Russia (currently at
- war in border areas). Pakistan, India and Singapore may exhibit also.
-
- No information is available as to who has been invited to view
- 'Peacekeeping 93' -- previously, ARMX visitors have included
- government delegations from Indonesia, Chile and El Salvador, among
- others. It seems that all of them will be welcome to come back for a
- look at 'Peacekeeping 93', since they are not on the list of the nine
- banned countries.
-
- It is more and more clear that 'peacekeeping' -- once a
- sincerely-meant idea, even if one questions the concept of keeping
- peace with guns -- is becoming nothing more than a cover for
- military interventions around the world. And 'Peacekeeping 93' is
- a component in this cover-up. It must not be allowed to go
- unchallenged.
-
- Several groups are planning protests against 'Peacekeeping 93'.
- The Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade hopes to stage a rally
- and/or other events, while the Alliance for Non-Violent Action is
- planning to organize a civil disobedience campaign. Contact:
-
- COAT, 489 Metcalfe St., Ottawa, Ont K1S 3N7, (613) 231-3076
-
- ANVA, (416) 651-5930
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-
-