The document discusses concerns around weapons sales and the risk of weapons ending up in the hands of terrorist and rebel groups. It notes that a small number of countries dominate global weapons sales and questions whether enough oversight is given to where the weapons ultimately end up. While governments often claim weapons used by undesirable groups were old weapons left over from past conflicts or sold through illegal arms dealers, the document argues more should be done to monitor weapons and prevent them from enabling violence. It suggests governments could allocate a small portion of defense budgets to increase regulation and tracking of weapons sales and stop their acquisition by terrorist organizations.
Original Description:
A power point based on the U.S's weapon sales to terrorist and rebel groups we do not support
The document discusses concerns around weapons sales and the risk of weapons ending up in the hands of terrorist and rebel groups. It notes that a small number of countries dominate global weapons sales and questions whether enough oversight is given to where the weapons ultimately end up. While governments often claim weapons used by undesirable groups were old weapons left over from past conflicts or sold through illegal arms dealers, the document argues more should be done to monitor weapons and prevent them from enabling violence. It suggests governments could allocate a small portion of defense budgets to increase regulation and tracking of weapons sales and stop their acquisition by terrorist organizations.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document discusses concerns around weapons sales and the risk of weapons ending up in the hands of terrorist and rebel groups. It notes that a small number of countries dominate global weapons sales and questions whether enough oversight is given to where the weapons ultimately end up. While governments often claim weapons used by undesirable groups were old weapons left over from past conflicts or sold through illegal arms dealers, the document argues more should be done to monitor weapons and prevent them from enabling violence. It suggests governments could allocate a small portion of defense budgets to increase regulation and tracking of weapons sales and stop their acquisition by terrorist organizations.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
support? By George Witte Facts Below are the percentages and the number in billions of weapon sales in the world. Ø United States $ 154.882 41% Ø Russia $ 63.823 17% Ø France $ 31.247 8% Ø England $ 26.914 7% Ø China $ 10.125 3% Ø Germany $ 16.261 4% Ø Italy $ 11.053 3% Ø Other European $ 40.291 11% Ø Others $ 22.849 6% Ø http:// www.globalissues.org/article/74/the-arms-trade-is-big-business#GlobalArmsSalesBySupplierNation The Problem • My point is with all of these sales and trades only controlled by mainly a few countries we need to make sure that we keep a close watch on whose hands these weapons are getting into. Because countries and governments always have allies and enemies and • In this photo you see a member of a terrorist group holding an ak-47. The ak- 47 is the most popular and one of the most cheap and powerful guns you can buy and behind the old soviet union, The usual denying and not finding the solution to the problem • When someone asks the governments how come this group has weapons that were made and sold by us and the governments argument to that is that they didn’t sell them to the terrorist group. But what they don’t understand is that when countries have wars and weapons, when the wars are over the leave the weapons behind. So the killing “toys” are left around to • The other really big problem is that these terrorist and rebel groups get more than just guns they get missiles and weapons of mass destruction, which are the worst of all. Now I must argue that most of these missile were left over by the Soviet Union. But I believe it is our duty to make sure we find all these weapons and make sure they do not get into the wrong hands. • Most countries say There Argument that the weapons that are in the hands of the terrorist and rebel groups are either old weapons left over from previous wars and or weapons sold to countries by private and might I ad illegal arms dealers as shown in the Hollywood production Lord of War. And that they My Argument • Now yes there are very big problems out there but this is one of the biggest, For gosh sakes almost all of the genocides and terrorist attacks are supplied by these weapons which enables them to do these horrible things. The fact that millions have been killed through these things and most of the time the actual gun used to kill was sold to them by on of the big sellers. Small Arms= Big Problems http://www.iansa.org/media/wmd.htm
• Each year there are
around 3 million killed by small arms, that is like having the city of Chicago be destroyed each year. Why would you let this go on. The problem is in many countries it is very easy to get small arms and sometimes the people that get them lets just say have different views My Proposed Conclusion • People would argue that to monitor these weapon and whose hands they get into would cost quite a bit of money that we don’t have. Well out of the U.S’s 291 billion dollar defense budget, we could take a billion or so X Continued Conclusion • Why don’t we get the attackers at the source or not even give them the option to attack. This would help so much and we wouldn’t have to worry about these surprise attacks. And we could also make contracts so that we sell the weapons, that the buyers must not Thanks for watching my Slide Show comments concerning the topic would be much appreciated along with comments and reviews of the slide show. Works Cited Page • http://www.globalissues.org/article/74/the-arms-trade-is-big-business • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-47 • http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2007/0704/hamas_war0402.jpg • http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/images/redduster.jpg • http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/11_02/iraniannuclearAP_468x312.jpg • http://images.forbes.com/media/lifestyle/2006/02/16/4_0216feat2.jpg • http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-02/02/xin_3820206030857437674215.jpg • http://moproblems.files.wordpress.com/2009/04/rebel-group.jpg • http://www.foxnews.com/images/180132/0_22_101305_child_soldier3.jpg • http://www.dragunov.net/action/mideast/iraq_Box_O_Guns_med.jpg • http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-top-ten/world-top-ten-countries-with-largest-defence-budget-map.html • http://www.iansa.org/media/wmd.htm • http://img262.imageshack.us/img262/4028/batufahj3.jpg • http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-top-ten/world-top-ten-countries-with-largest-defence-budget-map.html • http://www.truemajority.org/aggressiveprogressive/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/f22_09.jpg • http://www.spiegel.de/img/0,1020,640433,00.jpg • http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0fa0gXKeok2SX/610x.jpg • http://www.worldrevolution.org/projects/webguide/images/CatPics/smallarms1.jpg • http://www.butwhatthehelldoiknow.com/storage/post-images/kids-with-guns_1243524i.jpg • http://www.fas.org/programs/ssp/asmp/index.html • http://www.au.af.mil/au/aul/bibs/armsales06.htm • http://www.taiwansecurity.org/TSR-Arms.htm • http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36-b/36b_index.htm