Al Jazeera & Reuters – 2009-06-08 23:02:17
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2009/06/200968154751145374.html
(June 8, 2009) — Global military spending surged to a record $1,464bn last year, with the US maintaining its position as the world’s leading arms spender, a report by a Swedish monitoring group has said.
China became the world’s second biggest military buyer, increasing its spending by 10 per cent to an estimated $84.9 bn last year, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) said on Monday.
“The idea of the ‘war on terror’ has encouraged many countries to see their problems through a highly militarised lens, using this to justify high military spending,” Sam Perlo-Freeman, head of the Military Expenditure Project at Sipri said in a statement. “Meanwhile, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost $903bn in additional military spending by the USA alone.”
US military expenditure rose 9.7 percent last year to $607 billion, accounting for 42 percent of total global arms spending, the report said.
France overtook Britain to become the world’s third biggest arms spender while Russia climbed to fifth place from seventh in 2007. Other countries such as India, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Israel, Brazil, South Korea and Algeria also contributed substantially to the total increase.
Arms shipments rose 4 percent worldwide from 2007 and 45 per cent higher than in 1999, the report said.
The security situation in Afghanistan was likely to worsen and warned that expectations for the US strategy for the region may be too high, according to Sipri.
“Regrettably, Afghanistan’s fate over the next few years still looks to be finely balanced. Progress will continue to be slow, flawed and fragile,” the report said.
About 8,400 operational nuclear warheads were held in global military stockpiles, according to Sipri estimates. Of those, almost 2,000 were kept on high alert and capable of being launched within minutes.
About 23,300 nuclear weapons were held in the arsenals of eight states: the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France, India, Pakistan and Israel, the report said.
Top Ten Arms Buyers
1. US – $607bn
2. China – $84.9 billion*
3. France $65.8 billion
4. UK – $65.3 billion
5. Russia – $58.6 billion*
6. Germany – $48.6 billion
7. Japan – $46.3 billion
8. Italy – $40.6 billion
9. Saudi Arabia – $38.2 billion
10. India – $30 billion
*Estimates
Source: Sipri
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
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