dinsdag 30 juni 2020

Arms watch or arms control

Annual reports on arms exports (see list) are published by almost all EU governments, but mostly not very timely. Reporting on arms exports is a mandatory part of EU transparency policy. Amazingly the reports concerning international trade are often published in national languages only. They also have different formats, sometimes caused by unwillingness to provide information, sometimes because differences of size of military industries and arms exports between EU countries. Only Germany, France and the UK are really large exporters of arms, smaller exporters include Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and Sweden. Knocking on the door now and then are Belgium, Poland and the Czech Republic. Different formats of reporting have a reason.

After publication of French figures Aymeric Elluin, Amnesty International France's expert on arms trade notes that arms export policy itself does not change by reporting and transparency. US periodical Defense News reports that Paris signed €8.3bn worth of contracts, notably with European partners Belgium, Netherlands, Hungary and Spain, to-be-expected trading partners because allied NATO countries. The Amnesty expert however points out continuing deliveries to the Middle East: vehicles, tanks, and artillery for Saudi Arabia, missiles and launchers for Egypt, and Qatar. The UAE, involved in the war in Yemen, was an important client. Orderly listed facts give an overview, but what you pick from the facts makes a difference, as Defense News and Amnesty show.

Publication of Italian figures (I and II) led to respons of the Italian disarmament network. Egypt is leading with € 872 million of arms export licenses. Italian researcher Giorgio Beretta who studied the report pointed also at sales of 89,9 million and 105,4 million respectively to the UAE and Saudi Arabia (10 licenses including small arms, bombs and missiles). And at a thousand bombs, worth almost € 25 million, still exported from RWM Italia to Saudi Arabia despite suspension of sales to Riyadh. Leading news story in Italy however is the potential € 11 billion sale of frigates to Cairo announced by the Italian Foreign Minister. When an export license is provided the deal will only be officially reported in the annual export report of next year. Opposition cannot wait that long.

The European Commission itself also publishes annual figures on arms exports and licenses. It gives the most basic facts: a) the number of licences; b) value of licences and of c) arms exports; and the d) number of denials and the e) criteria from the EU common position on military exports motivating them. Currently Green MEP Hannah Neumann demands more transparency, because: “We have a right to know sufficient details about arms exports and be able to compare and assess the exports. With the information we currently receive from member states, this is not always possible.” Hence the European Parliament should be informed about “the exact type of weapon and the quantity exported, denomination of the munitions, the lot size and the specific end-user, revoked licences, and the value and duration of contracts regarding post-delivery services such as training and maintenance”.

The word 'convergence' is used over a hundred times in the amandments and convergence would certainly help in comparing information from different EU countries. But national reports are published earlier and have more information than the European report. Some countries even report more than the usual annual report (half year, individual licenses, transit etc.). The Netherlands reports individual arms and dual use exports and arms transits passing Dutch harbours on a monthly basis since 2005. A system which suits the Netherlands well, because 70% of arms exports are components or systems to be assembled on larger weapon systems. This is essential for understanding the Dutch role as a hub in the international arms trade (see e.g. the overview on tear gas exports, table 2) The same might apply for Denmark. Some countries publish nationally only what they also report to the EU and even that in a delayed way. The countries exporting most already have reports far ahead of the current EU report. A major step forward would be official translation for all national reports to leading EU languages, something the EU, with all its translation capacity, should be able to provide.

When police brutality in the US started against the anti-racist movement the NGO Vredesactie reacted to a report in US media on how Belgian developed weapons were used for crowd control: “Those are either foam-tipped projectiles fired from a 40mm launcher or a plastic projectile containing an inert powder and non-toxic chemical called bismuth that’s fired from an FN 303 air-powered launcher.” British organisations called to end exports of anti-riot gear and tear gas grenades to the US. Newspaper The Independent concluded from UK arms export records: “Ministers have issued export licences for such arms [tear gas, rubber bullets and riot gear] since 2010 to countries including Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Brunei and Bahrain, all of which have had concerns raised about human rights.” Action is taken, not in Brussels, but at a national level, because arms exports differ by member state, as does the political history and space for action. Not the information an sich is important, but how effectively it can be used in political action.

... text continues under table ...
Table 2: Dutch export and transit of tear gas (items 2010-2020)
Export licenses
Date
No.
SGP
CAT
description
Def/
Temp
Export/
Transit
origin
country of destination
country of final destination
value (€)
31-1-2012
28950969
ML7d
B05
tear gas grenades
D
T
UK
Oman
Oman
420,522
31-10-2013
29330433
ML4a
A09
tear gas grenades
D
T
Macedonia
Kenia
Kenia
68,587
27-8-2019
NL0074
CDIU
0122039
ML7d2
B5
Several tear gas items
D
E
Netherlands
(also Dutch origin)
Italia
Italia
1,100,000
Source: https://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/exportcontrole-strategische-goederen/documenten/rapporten/2016/10/01/overzicht-uitvoer-militaire-goederen
Consents for transit
Date
Consent no.
No. itmes
description
Country of origin
country of destination (**)
Mode of transport
Place of exit
29-11-2010
28712375
1,500
500 tear gas grenades cal .38mm and 1000 hand grenades
UK
Oman
Plane
Schiphol
28-10-2011
28908628
14,640
7320 tear gas grenades, 4320 fuzes and 3.000 delay elements
France
Cameroun
Plane
Schiphol
11-11-2011
28940440
9,400
tear gas cartridges
France
Indonesia
Plane
Schiphol
25-11-2011
28946589
5,336
tear gas cartridges
France
Indonesia
Plane
Schiphol
12-12-2011
28948662
8,008
480 tear gas grenades and 2.304 Smoke grenades and 1.344 pyrotechnical items and 196 torches and 3.684 signal cartridges
UK
Oman
Plane
Schiphol
30-12-2011
28969112
15,000
tear gascartridges
France
Indonesia
Plane
Schiphol
23-5-2012
29061998
0
16530 tear gas grenades, 6105 delay elements, 1250 Rubber bulets, 25 Smoke grenades and 10 flashlight grenades
France
Qatar
Plane
Schiphol
13-6-2012
28987293
1,280
1000 cartridges cal. 5.56x45mm and 280 tear gascartridges cal. 12
UK
Oman
Plane
Schiphol
13-12-2012
29200467
200
tear gas ammunition cal. 40mm
US
Oman
Plane
Schiphol
22-11-2018
NL0074CDIU0099215
10
tear gas grenades
Spain
Jordan
Plane
Schiphol
Source: https://www.rijksoverheid.nl/onderwerpen/exportcontrole-strategische-goederen/documenten/rapporten/2016/10/01/overzicht-doorvoer-militaire-goederen

Arms export reports show transactions with a delay often of more than a year. The weapons may already be used in war of to quell social unrest. Knowing which export licenses for riot control equipment were granted in 2018 is valuable information (according the EU report mainly France – generously handing out export licenses –, but also Austria, Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands, Romania, and the UK provided licenses for over one million Euros). But even more important is what is sold right now. Timely reporting, as asked in amendment 113 to the EP report, is thus essential. The ultimate goal of reporting is to oppose exports which are hampering development or have negative consequences for human rights or security, and this is something that cannot have delay.


Martin Broek 06/2020

List of EU member states' annual reports as on June 11, 2020

Austria Last 2010
Belgium Flanders last 2018
Wallon last 2018
Brussels last 2014
Bulgaria Last 2017
Croatia Last 2019
Cyprus None
Czech Republic Last 2018
Denmark Last 2017
Estonia Last 2015
EU Last 2018
Finland Last 2018
France Last 2019
Germany Last full year 2018 /Last 1st half 2019
Greece NA
Hungary Last 2018
Ireland Last full year 2018 /Last 1st half 2019
Italy Last 2019 Volume (I and II)
Latvia NA
Lithuania NA
Luxemburg NA
Malta NA
Netherlands Last in 2018
Poland Last in 2018
Portugal Last in 2014
Romania Last in 2017
Slovakia Last in 2018
Slovenia Last in 2019
Spain Last full year 2018 /Last 1st half 2019
Sweden Last in 2019
UKLast in 2018

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