Surplus arms will come to
the market when armed forces are shrinking because of budget
limitations or are restructuring due to major strategic changes. This
happened for example in the nineties after the Cold War, when NATO
armies shifted their focus towards intervention forces. It is also
happening now; Cold War 2.0 comes with new generations of ships,
vehicles and fighter planes making arms already in use obsolete and
for sale.
In 2013, during the
aftermath of the economic crisis, Europe was even called world
leader on surplus arms trade. Although surplus
trade in small arms and light weapons and ammunition attracted the
attention of governments, less vigilance was devoted to surplus major
conventional weapons, although they “can
be used in human rights violations or in build-ups to regional
conflicts breakouts. Surplus conventional weapons raise similar
issues as newly exported weapons.”
Transparency
-
Table showing surplus defence equipment export totals 2003-2017YearTotaal x miljoenYearTotaal x miljoen2003€ 672011€ 122004€ 6272012€ 252005€ 4942013€ 172006€ 2702014€ 4002007€ 932015€ 212008€ 902016€ 112009€ 1102017€ 172010€ 95
Source: annual reports on The Netherlands arms export policy
Transparency
In surplus or second
hand arms sales governments adopt the role of arms exporters while at
the same time they are tasked with export control. For that reason in
the Netherlands this kind of trade is more transparent and better
controlled than commercial arms sales. In 2017 Dutch F-16 spare parts
were sold to ILN
Technologies in Los Angeles. ILN stores F-16
items, acquired from the US Government, Israel, the UK, the
Netherlands and Belgium and sells them to customers. It is involved
in repair and overhaul. In this case – and not for the first time –
the company sold them to the Indonesian air force for the F-16 fleet.
Those fighter jets play a major role in the build up of the
archipelago's growing defence force. The deal is an example of the
detailed Dutch surplus arms exports facts in the annual report on the
arms exports (see for a complete overview Table
showing surplus defence equipment disposals 2003-2017).
Since the first
annual
arms export report in 1997: “Netherlands
exports of complete weapons systems in recent years can be virtually
entirely accounted for by disposals of surplus Netherlands defence
equipment.” Governmental
exports run from small spare parts to major and complex weapon
systems like tanks, helicopters, fighter jets and naval vessels.
Hundreds of millions may be involved in such transactions. The Dutch
Government declared, already in 1997, that: “the
regular licence procedure has to be completed for the export of
surplus matériel as well.”
Jordan
Sometimes the Dutch
government uses flexible arguments to defend its own arms exports.
The Hague asked the King of Jordan for a promise not to use Dutch
delivered F-16 fighter jets in Yemen (the Kingdom is involved with
F-16's in the Saudi led operations). According to the Dutch
government the king has given his promise on paper, but this paper
remains secret. However the parliament's concerns about Jordan and
the Yemen war were eliminated. If
Jordan does not keep its promise the issue can only be addressed in
Jordan, the Dutch Minister or Foreign Affairs said during the
latest arms export policy debate,
but “that is all we have.” Not
any sanction is part of the deal.
Europe
Nowadays EU-members
France,
Germany and the UK also provide specific
information on deliveries of surplus arms in their export reports.
And the SIPRI trade register database contains many second hand arms
and equipment deals from many EU member states. See table Transfers
of major second hand weapons: Deals with deliveries or orders made
for 2013-2017 for recent sales and
donations of surplus arms from a selection of Western European
countries (Austria, Belgium, Czech rep. Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK). Only
Austria and Finland had no second hand exports.
Some examples:
- Belgium transferred military vehicles to Bahrain and the Philipines;
- Azerbaijan got a multiple rocket launcher from the Chech Republic after it was refurbished in Israel;
Turkish Leopard 2A4 in Al Bab, Syria, Germany sold them second hand (table). Denmark shipped a patrol craft to Lithuania;- Fokker transport aircraft were exported by the Netherlands to Peru and Myanmar;
- Nigeria got helicopters from France;
- Germany sold second hand submarines to Colombia and lots of equipment to Iraq;
- Italy delivered armoured personnel vehicles to Libya;
- Spain sold transport aircraft to Pakistan;
- Sweden delivered radar planes to Saudi Arabia; and
- the Ukraine got UK armoured personnel carriers.
Considerations
Political affiliations, historical ties and
previously established arms trade relationships play a major role in
the transit of surplus arms. Sales and donations of second hand
equipment smooth ties between Ministries of Defence in the European
capitals and in the customer countries. There are no (or only
minimal) private business considerations, thus the Government can not
hide behind industry interests. Maybe there is refurbishment
involved, providing some jobs and some private profits, but that is
not a major argument to defend these sales. So one can wonder how the
Saudi's and Bahrain became customers for surplus arms; how European
second hand arms ended in the Caucasus and the Congo. Foreign policy
(or just sales) arguments seem to weight more heavy than arms
control.
Control to be strengthened
In Germany, the Budgetary
and Foreign Affairs committees of the Bundestag are notified in
advance of transfers of surplus equipment and military assistance. In
the Netherlands, Parliament is informed on large sales of surplus
arms, including information on how the sale is considered against the
EU arms export control criteria. And contrary to information on sale
of new equipment, surplus equipment is reported in advance of
providing an export license. This is not only make the sales more
transparent but gives parliament also the possibility to react.
However only a handful of EU member states report and debate surplus
arms sales. But in most EU member states, transparency and control of
surplus or second hand arms export must be strengthened.
Written for Stop Wapenhandel.
Further reading:
- Lucie Béraud-Sudreau (Université Paris ) and Paul Holtom (Arms Transfers programme, SIPRI), 'The Cascade Continues: International Transfers of Surplus Weapons as a Consequence of Defence Reform in Europe', paper presented at European Consortium for Political Research General Conference, Bordeaux 4 – 7 Sep. 2013.
- Sibylle Bauer and Paul Holtom, 'Options for increasing the openness and transparency of Sweden’s arms exports and arms export controls', SIPRI, 2013.
- Diederik Cops, Nils Duquet, and Gregory Gourdin, 'Towards Europeanized arms export controls? Comparing control systems in EU Member States', Flemish Peace Institute, 15 June 2017.
- Martin Broek, 'Long road to arms exports transparency, the Dutch case', Explosive stuff blog, Stop Wapenhandel, August 2016.