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  • In March 2016, the United States approved a deal to sell nearly $700 million dollars

  • worth of smart bombs to the Turkish government. This purchase is part of the US’s Foreign

  • Military Sales program, which uses the US government as an intermediary in facilitating

  • arms sales to foreign countries. Not only do these weapons bring in revenue for the

  • United States, but they are a key part of the US’s foreign policy. With arms playing

  • such an integral role in the world’s economy and stability, we wanted to know: what are

  • the biggest countries in the global arms trade?

  • Well, first of all, “the arms traderefers to more than just weapons or armaments. It

  • includes military information, vehicles, and technology alongside traditional guns, bombs,

  • and bullets. Most countries are unable to produce or develop modern military technology,

  • so there are only a handful of countries which supply the rest of the world. According to

  • the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the global total for military expenditures

  • for 2014 was roughly $1.7 trillion dollars, making up more than 2% of the entire world’s

  • GDP. That’s nearly $250 for every person on earth. There are nearly 900 million small

  • arms and light weapons estimated in circulation, and almost one million small arms alone produced

  • annually. This is on top of thousands of tanks, aircrafts, and warships. So who is making

  • all this equipment? Well, the biggest weapons and technology exporter

  • in the world, by a large margin, is the United States. It supplies roughly one third of the

  • global arms trade, and in 2015 saw nearly $50 billion dollars in foreign military sales.

  • Four of the top five largest defense contractors in the world are American companies. With

  • such a massive military budget, the US economy is actually optimized to profit off of global

  • conflict. American weapons made by American companies bring in billions, and help to outgun

  • anti-American interests by supplying allied forces. The next four largest exporters combined,

  • Russia, Germany, France, and China, barely outspend the United States. So where do these

  • weapons go, and why? Well, the single largest purchaser of military

  • equipment is Saudi Arabia, which spent roughly 6.5 billion dollars in 2014. Although Saudi

  • Arabia is not a particularly large country compared to others on the list, it holds a

  • unique and potentially dangerous position in the Middle East. With nearby Iran dwarfing

  • the Saudis in military size, Saudi Arabia is forced to compete by using the latest military

  • equipment, primarily bought from the United States.

  • But although the arms trade is intended to support allied nations, it is also how dangerous

  • groups are able to get their weapons. For example, while Iraq is the 6th largest recipient

  • of foreign arms, there have been many reports that ISIS members are buying or seizing American

  • made weapons. Recent videos show ISIS using M-16s, manufactured in the US.

  • So while it may not be the case that the arms trade keeps everyone safe, there’s no question

  • that it makes its participants a huge amount of money.

  • But while the arms trade takes up a huge portion of the US’s budget and revenue, few weapons

  • are as expensive or as dangerous as nuclear weapons. To find out exactly who has them,

  • and who is suspected of having them, check out this video. Thanks for watching Test Tube

  • News, don’t forget to like and subscribe for new videos every day.

In March 2016, the United States approved a deal to sell nearly $700 million dollars

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